Dear parents: I know there is a lot of anxiety and concern about the upcoming
ELA state tests next week, which are supposed to be more difficult than
ever.
The DOE has contributed to this anxiety with memos to parents that
advise them to tell their children that the tests “are meant to be really
hard. That’s because that are designed to measure whether students are on
track for college and a good job when they finish high school…That way his
teachers can make sure he is on his way to being whatever he wants to be when
he grows up.”
At the same time, the Commissioner and Chancellor have said that
they expect that the majority of children will flunk these exams; and that in
certain districts up to 80% of students are expected to score below
grade level. As Walcott put it, “It’s time to rip the Band-aid off.”
I was out on Long Island on Wed. at a forum at Hofstra on Long
Island, where parents are rising up en masse against the testing regime, and
where teachers, principals and superintendents openly agree that the
overwhelming focus on standardized high stakes testing is harming their schools, hurting their children, and is likely to stand in the way of preparing students for college. Video here. As of this afternoon, the Long Island opt out Facebook page had 6,280 members.
I am going to write about this extraordinary forum soon; but
wanted to share with you first an email from NYC public school parents, Anne
Stone and Jeff Nichols, who met with DOE Deputy Chancellor Suransky today; the
letter is below. It should reassure you if you do indeed decide to opt
your child out of the testing this year – it reaffirms that neither your child,
nor his teachers, or the school is likely to suffer any consequences for doing
so. More information about how to opt out is on the Change the Stakes website.
Another reason you might want to consider this: As Willa
Powell, an elected school board member from Rochester NY announced today, she
is opting her child out, in part because of the inBloom data sharing scheme:
“Data from state exams, including information about
specific identifiable children, are being forwarded to a corporation (namely
inBloom) without parental consent. “It seems… that pending legislative or court
remedies, the only recourse parents have is to refuse to allow their children
to become “data points”.
…(The ) state education department can impose testing
upon our institution, and demand that principal and teacher evaluations be
based on the results "But as a parent, and let me be very clear that I am
speaking as a parent, in terms that even a pre-schooler can understand: Dr.
King, you aren't the boss of me."”
Anne and Jeff’s letter about their meeting with Suransky is
below. Have a good weekend, and talk to you soon. ---Leonie
_______
From:
Jeff
Nichols <jeff.william.nichols@gmail.com>
Date:
April
12, 2013 2:42:03 PM EDT
To:
Suransky
Shael <SSURANS@schools.nyc.gov>,
Lopatin Adina <ALopatin@schools.nyc.gov>
Dear Shael,
Thank you for meeting with Anne and me this morning. We found the meeting
informative and feel it achieved the purpose for which I contacted you
initially a couple of weeks ago, which was to confirm that although New York
State has no formal opt-out provision for the state tests, there are no
negative consequences to children, teachers and schools that result from any
family's decision to withhold their children's participation.
To summarize what we now understand to be the case:
CONSEQUENCES FOR CHILDREN
1) Children who do not take the state tests will receive a portfolio review for
purposes of promotion, and there will be no prejudice against their standing
within the school resulting from the test refusal. Moreover, all other aspects
of the child's status, such as IEPs, will also be unaffected.
2) Middle and high schools that use state test scores as part of their
admissions process do so at their discretion. Parents of fourth and seventh
graders opting out of the tests should contact the schools to which they are
applying to confirm the admissions criteria of individual schools.
CONSEQUENCES FOR TEACHERS
1) The exact role of student test scores in evaluating teachers is still under
negotiation, but this year teachers' evaluations will be unaffected by the
absence of test scores from their students.
2) The DOE is seeking to move to a balanced and flexible model for teacher
evaluations that will contain a component of quantitative data (among them but
not exclusively test scores) but will remove incentives to "teach to the
test."
CONSEQUENCES FOR SCHOOLS
1) If a school in good standing does not achieve the 95% threshold of student
test-takers, the failure to meet that number will not adversely affect
the school. Even for schools considered in need of improvement, a change of
status triggered by the 95% rule has no deleterious consequences. Parents
considering opting their children out of tests on moral and educational grounds
do not need to worry that this action taken on behalf of their children will
harm their school.
It would be great if all parents were told that their child could opt out of the test and they could use a portfolio of their work to show whether they are ready for the next grade. Teacher judgment would also be more reliable then this test.If parents realized how subjective the actually grading was on the non short answer part they would really be up in arms about their child's grade. As long as we give these exams ,too much time and money will be spent on test prep.
ReplyDeleteAs the person who wrote the title "NO consequences to opting out" I'd like to backpedal slightly and say "unless you're applying to a highly selective middle or high school next year." Some of those schools may require a test score for admission; as we say in the body of the post, anyone considering opting out their 4th or 7th grader should contact the schools they want to apply to next year and ask them what their policy is.
ReplyDeleteI wish this was an option for my child when she was in MS/elemnetry as she was & still is not a good test taker, she has severe anxiety when ever she has to take any test especially A big test, now that she is in H.S. and has to take regents she is already having anxiety issues. I believe they should not stress these kids out with all kinds of tests. If a chidl is a good student does all their hw, class work & participation and passes regular testing than that should be good enough. it was for me and I am fine as an adult..
ReplyDeleteThese tests don't prove anything. As a former teacher I have little use for district- wide tests. Our students habitually got 25% further in our curriculum than the students at other schools. Now that we are retired the students aren't driven and the school's ability to send students to the best school that they qualify for are gone. Why bother testing them? Leave the tests to the schools.
ReplyDeletea child to be eligible for special education, they must be in one ... be reproduced for personal or educational use without written permission..
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