Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Tory Frye on why parents are so angry about testing & how we can fight back!


The following is by Tory Frye, a NYC public school parent and a member of the Community Education Council in District 6.  She explains why  parents are so angry about the systematic erosion of learning conditions at their children’s schools in recent years and what we can do about it:
Why have so many parents across New York City decided that this year’s state standardized tests have finally crossed the line from distracting, educationally valueless, and overly determinative experiences to damaging, twisted and intolerable ones?  How have they become this year’s radicalizing experience for thousands of new parent-activists determined to change the direction that education policy is taking in New York? 
Last year, the threatened teacher lay-offs and across the board budget cuts galvanized organized opposition and sparked the realization among tens of thousands of NYC public school parents that the Governor and the Mayor’s Office do not hold the interests of “students first.”  This year new parents are joining a growing and increasingly organized activist group that is opposed to high stakes standardized testing.  The parents and guardians of whom I write, from Williamsburg, Bed-Stuy and Park Slope in Brooklyn, East Tremont and Riverdale in the Bronx, Washington Heights/Inwood and the Lower East Side in Manhattan, and all over Queens, have independently concluded that high stakes standardized testing is this year’s assault on quality public education.   And we have had enough.  So, what is it exactly about this year’s tests that have pushed us to the breaking point?   
To start, one must recall that these tests come on the heels of the failure of the state to truly deliver on the settlement associated with a 17-year Campaign for Fiscal Equity (CFE) battle on behalf of New York City public school children to receive equitable education funding. On top of this, we have witnessed at least four years of budget cuts that have directly hit our children’s classrooms. 
As an example, my son’s school in Washington Heights has lost nearly a million dollars over 4 years with little drop in enrollment.  Because of this, the school lost the Elementary School art and science teachers, a middle school assistant principal and class sizes in the first and second grades swelled to 28 students. Other schools in our district, District 6, the birthplace of the CFE, have classes with 32 students sitting in them. 
In this context of growing class sizes and dwindling budgets, we’ve seen little evidence that the supports that the city Department of Education offers our schools counterbalance the negative effects of the budget cuts.  School Support Organizations that may be trying to support teachers to differentiate instruction are rendered impotent in the context of large classes.  Other losses are also illustrative. Again my son’s K to 8 is an excellent example; in the spring of 2010 our school was to set to receive the second installment of a GE Fund grant to improve science and math instruction in the middle school. 
Instead we awoke one morning to learn that the grant, intended originally for upper Manhattan schools, had been rescinded by the Fund for Public Schools, and redirected towards training teachers in 80 city-wide schools how to teach to the “new and improved” science tests under development.  Thus the parents at our school learned that funds that could have actually helped our children’s teachers teach science and math more effectively were spent instead on standardized test prep training.    
Yet the discontent of many parents was softened in recent years as we watched our schools lauded for state test score increases ; it seemed that our children were achieving unprecedented gains in performance.  When the state admitted that these gains were fictional, that there had been rampant score inflation, and re-set the proficiency cut-points, we learned how subjective, at best, and political, at worst, these tests scores were.  Trust in the state’s ability to administer reliable tests began to crumble, as well as in the policies that had been imposed by DOE in the name of improving education.  
This year, despite the lack of credibility in the state’s competence to reliably design and score tests, the stakes were ratcheted up for children, especially English Language Learners, who now must perform at proficiency level (in a non-native language) within a year of entrance into the system.  Parents new to the system knew that the stakes associated with test performance were high for their children; failing to be at least proficient triggered a portfolio review, or even being held back.  Knowing that portfolio review was required probably allayed some concern for parents of children who were truly struggling to master the material; the review would clearly identify areas of weakness and would result in a corrective plan – they are educationally useful.  For children in certain grades the scores determined a shot at admission to selective middle schools or a chance for a seat in a citywide gifted and talented school.  
This year, the state also raised the stakes for teachers and schools dramatically, moving towards a system in which a teacher’s rating would be determined in large part on their students’ change in test scores from one year to the next, resulting in potential job loss. This occurred in the context of an acceleration of the DOE’s efforts to close scores of struggling schools.  A test run of the value-added statistics, which teachers had been promised would not be publicly released, were publicly released.  Major news outlets, including the New York Times , Wall Street Journal, New York Post  and the Daily News published the teacher data ratings, based on unstable value-added models.  Normally parents might be pleased at the possibility that an objective measure of teacher quality had been identified, as many of us have had direct experiences with principals who use their power inappropriately.   But these models are so unstable and narrowly construed that all they do was add a new and warped dimension to the teacher-child relationship. 
Thus, this year, if a child did poorly or failed to improve their score enough, their teachers would be labeled as ineffective and would be in danger of losing their jobs.  This was layered on top of the existing threat schools already face of being labeled “in need of improvement. The pressure was on and children knew it.   It was all over the news; parents were talking about it; teachers were talking about; children were talking about it.   
What were the results?  Well, first it is again important to put this year’s tests in context.  This year - all year - our children were being subjected to various “formative,” “predictive” and “performance” tests, such as the Scantron Performance Series (at least 3 times per year), the Acuity (at least once), the school-created state practice tests (at least once).  Rarely were results used to guide teaching and learning, rather to inform further test prep activity in anticipation of the state exams.  Then, in the period between the end of February break and the tests themselves, students experienced a tractor beam-like focus on English Language Arts (ELA) and math (because results in these subjects alone help determine the DOE’s school report card grade).
The visual, performing and musical arts were pushed to the side, as were programs that focused on areas outside of the mainstream, like architecture, environmental studies, and video design.  Schools that have special focus, like music, dual language or interdisciplinary or social studies-based education, found that there was insufficient time to successfully execute their programs.   
Next, the test preparation began, with worksheets and practice sessions on how to fill in a bubble test answer form.  Up until the February break, my fourth grader had up spent his time in ELA doing interdisciplinary writing projects, such as writing a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder about the effectiveness of incarceration for non-violent offenders as a criminal justice policy, and a research project where he wrote a 9-page report on Thomas Jefferson and acted the part in a wonderful “wax museum” event at the school.  Now, he became much less enthusiastic about school as the test prep began to dominate his days.  During test season, the project-based, authentic learning stopped, so that watered-down, multiple-choice word problems could be tackled and “tricky” questions could be identified and avoided.  At least his ELA teacher had them reading Alice in Wonderland so they’d be prepared for trippy passages like the now infamous “pineapple and the hare,” or, in his case, a talking yam
Then came the tests themselves.  They were long, 90 minutes each day, for children as young as eight years old, over three days in two subjects per grade.  Double time was allotted for children in need of accommodations, and children with such problems as attention difficulties were asked to sit still for 180 minutes to take these exams.
And it was not just the test time, which in isolation does not seem that bad until you realize it exceeds the time allotted to the SAT that many of us took in high school, it is that the entire school building revolved around the tests, for weeks on end.  In co-located schools, as one school tests, the other does not, such that no children enjoy recess or other school-wide, noise-producing activities during the test weeks.  Then there is the stress it placed on the children.  They knew how intense the pressure was both on them and their teachers and schools; one student who produces her own newsletter at our school wrote a piece on how stressful the tests had become, despite being easy, and how she wishes everyone good luck so that they don’t have to go to summer school.   
Finally, the test content was revealed to be problematic, with at least 30 errors identified so far, including nonsensical, recycled passages with questions that had no correct answers , or those with multiple correct answers, as well as multiple translation problems, (blamed by Pearson, the testing company on the “women and minority-owned” translation company.)   Beyond the problems that have plagued this year’s tests, parents find it off-putting that they have taken on significance so disproportionate to their educational value and are kept completely secret.  We know that these tests cannot possibly be helpful to our children, especially as we parents never see which problems they missed and their teachers are not allowed to use the tests clinically.  From this, parents have concluded that their only use seems to be to evaluate and control teachers, and close schools. 
To add insult to injury, many of our children’s classroom teachers disappear for two entire weeks after the ELA and math test period is complete to grade the tests.  The same teachers that are apparently so ineffective that these tests are needed to evaluate them are the same teachers doing the grading.  My son’s fourth grade teacher just returned to his classroom last week after ten days of grading tests.  And for my son, the testing is not over: science tests are fast approaching.  But don’t worry; they know exactly what is going to be tested because all they have been doing since February is preparing for the test!  Good grief. 
All of this testing and pressure has been too much for some children.  According to various accounts, many children suffered emotional ill effects during the tests.  Some cried; some got sick; some gave up. Apparently there is even guidance on how to handle a vomited-upon test form.  It was saddening as a parent to know that your child was subjected to all this pressure.
Yet oped writers for the tabloids argue that we parents oppose the damaging high stakes test regime because we are actually teacher union drones, incapable of determining what is best for our children!  
But we are not.  We are parents who have the nerve to ask: to what end do we conduct all of this high stakes standardized testing?  Is there any empirical evidence that these tests improve student learning? There is little.  Because teachers, students and parents never see the results, other than a numerical score, they are clinically and educationally value-less. 
To assess the performance of the city’s school system as a whole, we have the NAEPS, the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a standardized test administered across the United States, allowing comparisons among states, urban areas, districts, etc. and tracking population-based trends in test performance.  These tests can help  evaluate our system as a whole, and show little progress in NYC schools under this administration. Most parents don’t even know if their children are taking them or not; students also attach little meaning to them, thus there is no teaching to the test, gaming the system or problems with reliability associated with the state tests.
Most parents are not opposed to their children taking tests that are clinically relevant, such as the ones they take frequently in class. Nor are many of us opposed to limited exposure to high stakes standardized tests so long as they are voluntary (such as the SATs) and occur at ages when children are better able to handle the pressures. But many of us have concluded that the state’s testing regimen is out of control and seriously threatens our children’s education, even as there is talk of testing more often, starting in preK and Kindergarten, and in more subjects, both locally and nationally .  If all of this standardized testing is so wonderful, why don’t the private schools like those that the Mayor enrolled his own daughters in -- Dalton and Spence, Collegiate and Trinity -- assign all these exams?   
Public school parents want to get off this merry-go-round of testing and test prep before it is too late.  The Community Education Council of District 6 recently asked Chancellor Walcott for a policy that would allow parents to opt their children out of these state tests in a non-punitive way.  He replied that he would not support such a policy; in contrast, his deputy Shael Suransky has offered guidance, noting that portfolio reviews will occur for children who opt out, but pointing out that parents of fourth graders who opt out may suffer because their applications to middle school would have “less information” than others. 
But parents need more than this to protect our children from the damage of these tests.  We need a state policy that acknowledges our legal right to opt out children, like the one that exists in California .  And we need a DOE that ceases to use test scores as punishments for teachers and schools, and gate-keepers for children.
What can we do?  The testing is not yet over for this year.  Even more time is to be taken away from authentic teaching and learning with stand-alone “field” tests to be administered in the first two weeks of June .  These will be conducted so that the testing company can test new items for future tests, despite the fact that Pearson already embedded “field” items on the actual tests, accounting for the extended time.  The field tests also ignore the fact that children are aware that these tests do not count, and so do not take these exams as seriously, leading to an additional level of unreliability in the state’s ability to assess how difficult the items on the exam actually are.   
But the field tests also offer a golden opportunity. Parents from all over the city are realizing that we can engage in organized resistance to the testing juggernaut by boycotting these field tests. This action will not negatively affect our children’s chances of admission to middle school or require the brave act of opting-out of the actual state tests.  To learn how to join the boycott or organize your school, contact Change the Stakes: or Parent Voices of New York.
Critics claim that parents who opposing the high-stakes testing offer no alternative to the problem of struggling schools or low student achievement.  But many of us realize that these tests are not the way to improve our schools.  If the goal is to evaluate teachers, then let’s use the peer-review system that has worked so well in Montgomery County, MD. If the goal is to monitor achievement, then let’s expand the NAEPS, or give another no-stakes exam to a statistical sample of students.  If our goal is to ensure that all children experience a high-quality education and emerge as critical thinkers, then we should start by ensuring that they arrive at school ready to learn: by eliminating child poverty, through income and housing supports; offer free, flexible, full-time baby and child care; full-day pre-K and kindergarten with wrap-around care; and other programs.  And it is long past time that the schools that NYC public school children provide what suburban students receive as a matter of right: small classes and a well-rounded curriculum.

6 comments:

  1. tsting is frequently about understanding the technique of test taking - and in the instance of NYCDOE and the state and feds it is actually meant to restrict what is being taught since the objective is to deconstruct publuc school education and what is perceived by some as its liberakl bias - the objective is clearly despite any protests to the contrary to technicalize and at the saME TIME CONSTRAIN WHAT IS TAUGHT.

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  2. Everyone must stop taking the tests. Their only purpose is to justify the privatization of education, the destruction of the unions, and the channeling or resources away from teachers and to consultants and testing companies.

    Just. Stop. Now.

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  3. Allowing taxpayer money to be used to pay for these tests is like buying the weapons that will be used to hijack your children's future

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  5. Bravo. Your article is clear and concise and lays out the very dire problem in our public schools. You have one fact wrong, and that is the assumption that the children in the suburbs are not subjected to the same drain on resources and time. I am an organizer in the "suburbs" and my child has been subjected to the same test prep schedule, the same loss of teacher hours due to marking, the same mind numbing hours of doing nothing while waiting for the testing time to end. Our schools have been eroded by this meaningless practice. Assessment is good, evaluations are good. But these tests are not accurate and are not evaluating the very things they claim to. Here, in the suburbs, we have less choices of public school enrichment and at the same time, our core curriculum has been completely eroded, so our children are sitting and waiting to learn. Make no mistake, we are all in this mess together. It's time for us to join forces and make our voices so loud that Albany will have to listen and enact change.

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  6. For more information about the boycott of the June field tests in NYC, check out Time Out from Testing's website, http://timeoutfromtesting.org/index.php, as well as the two mentioned above (Change the Stakes and PVNY).

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