An Open Letter to the Board of Regents Regarding High-Stakes Testing and the School Reform Agenda of New York State
The
past week has been a nightmare for New York students in Grades 3 through 8,
their teachers and their principals. Not only were the New York State ELA exams
too long and exhausting for young students, (three exams of 90 minutes each),
they contained ambiguous questions that cannot be answered with assurance,
problems with test booklet instructions, inadequate space for students to write
essays, and reading comprehension passages that defy commonsense. In addition, the press reported a passage
that relied on knowledge of sounds and music which hearing-impaired students
could not answer and Newsday reported that students
were mechanically ‘filling in bubbles’ due to exhaustion []. Certainly the most
egregious example of problems with the tests is the now infamous passage about the Hare and the Pineapple.
On
Friday, Commissioner King offered no apologies in what appeared to be a hastily written press release
regarding the Hare and the Pineapple passage. In that release, Commissioner
King faults the media for not printing the complete passage (many did), and
passes the buck by noting that a committee of teachers reviewed the passage. In
short, he distances the State Education Department from its responsibility to
get the tests right. Considering the rigor and length of the exams, as well as
their use in the evaluation of educators and schools, one might have hoped that
the State Education Department and Pearson would have reviewed the tests with
more care.
For
many of us, however, this is but the latest bungle in the so-called school
reform movement in New York State. More than 1400 New York State principals have repeatedly
begged the department to slow down, pilot thoughtful change and
avoid using student test scores as high-stakes measures. The recent ELA test
debacle was foreseeable to those of us who lead schools and know from
experience that you cannot make so many drastic changes to curriculum,
assessment and educator evaluation in a short period of time, especially
without listening to those who lead schools.
The literature on leadership is clear. Effective leadership is about the
development of followership. If truth be told, however, there are fewer and
fewer followers of this State Education Department every day. The Pineapple, like the ‘plane being built in the air’,
is now a symbol of the careless implementation of a reform agenda that will
cost billions of dollars, without yielding the promised school improvement.
There
are many who disparage our public schools in New York State. Although we acknowledge that improvements are
needed, there is also much of which we are proud. We are proud of our tradition
of New York State Regents examinations.
We are proud that New York State students are second in the nation in
taking Advanced Placement exams. We are proud of our Intel winners and the
number of New York high schools on national lists of excellence. We are proud
that our schools are second in the nation according to a
comprehensive analysis of policy and performance conducted by the research
group, Quality Counts.
We also know that too many of our schools are racially and
socio-economically isolated with overwhelming numbers of students who receive
little opportunity and support in their communities as well as in their
schools. We cannot ignore deep-seated social problems while blindly believing
that new tests, data warehousing systems and unproven evaluation systems are
the answer. That view, in our opinion, is irresponsible and unethical.
This
ill-conceived Race to the Top, recently critiqued by the National School Boards Association,
is no more sensible than the race of the Hare and the Pineapple. Yet the New York State Education Department
continues to enthusiastically push its agenda. Our schools are faced with
contradictory and incomplete directives regarding high-stakes testing and
evaluation, our teachers are humiliated by the thought of publicized evaluation
numbers and our students are stressed by the unnecessary
testing that has consumed precious learning time.
We
understand that change is important for school revitalization. We have years of
collective experience successfully leading educational improvement in our
schools, often as partners with the State Education Department. Unfortunately,
our voices have been ignored and marginalized during the past year.
Nevertheless, we believe that we have an ethical obligation to speak out. It is
often said about educational change that it is a pendulum that swings. We are
now watching the pendulum of school reform swing dangerously, and we fear that
this time it is a wrecking ball aimed at the public schools we so cherish.
The
following principals respectfully submit this open letter to the New York State
Board of Regents:
Anna
Allanbrook, Brooklyn
New School, New York City Public Schools
Carol
Burris,South
Side High School, Rockville Centre School District
Gail
Casciano,Nassakeag
Elementary School, Three Village Central School District
Carol
Conklin-Spillane,Sleepy
Hollow High School, Tarrytowns School District
Sean
Feeney,The
Wheatley School, East Williston School District
Sharon
Fougner,Elizabeth
Mellick Baker School, Great Neck School District
Andrew
Greene,Candlewood
Middle School, Half Hollow Hills Central School District
Bernard
Kaplan,Great
Neck North High School, Great Neck School District
Harry Leonardatos,Clarkstown
High School, Clarkstown Central School District
Michael
McDermott, Scarsdale
Middle School, Scarsdale School District
Shelagh
McGinn,South
Side Middle School, Rockville Centre School District
Sandra
Pensak, Hewlett
Elementary School, Hewlett-Woodmere School District
Elizabeth
Phillips,PS
321 William Penn, New York City Public Schools
Donald
Sternberg, Wantagh
Elementary School, Wantagh Public Schools
Katie
Zahedi, Linden
Avenue Middle School, Red Hook Central Schools
Thank you for your courageous leadership in this matter. Many teachers are grateful for your wise words. May they be heard by our Regents, Commissioner, and Governor!
ReplyDeleteA wonderful letter and kudos to these brave and intelligent educational leaders.
ReplyDeleteLeadership Academy my arse.
I continue to applaud the administrators in New York for speaking out for their students. I continue to hope they will serve as a positive example for school leaders around the nation! Thank you for all you are doing for children.
ReplyDeleteParents in New York, if you have not joined over 6000 parents and educators asking for a change at the federal level, please read this petition and consider signing it. Our children will only have ONE childhood! http://dumpduncan.org/
Donna Yates Mace
Florida Public School Teacher
Bravo to the administrators. You are an inspiration to us all. Thank you for taking a stand.
ReplyDeleteThe point is not the questions being used,it is the way the test is used to harm children and teachers and the physiological effect it has on everyone that is the problem. That is the story the media should be reporting.I wish all administrators would band together and refuse to put up with the testing nonsense and the effect it has in destroying our educational system.
ReplyDelete