The following was written by Fred Smith, former testing expert for the NYC Board of Education. The list of 169 NYC schools in which another round of field tests will be imposed raises more questions, such as how were these schools chosen? And why do certain districts, like District 1, have nearly twice as many schools required to give them than other districts such as District 2, which is much larger?
Did you know that the New York State Education Department has
assigned 169 schools to administer stand-alone field tests next month?Your child may be in one of these schools and
you will not be notified beforehand.
This is a repeat performance of the way SED handled the field
tests that were given in June.Most
parents only learned about them at the last minute. While it was too late for
them to ask questions, some of us found out, protested at several schools and
boycotted the tests.
That’s why we're posting a list of the schools scheduled to be
tested along with the grade level and subject (ELA or math) involved.Otherwise
parents won’t know in advance that their children will be tested.
Nor will they be told that the
purpose of these exams is to provide the test publisher – Pearson, a
profit-making company – with free data supplied by our children, enabling
Pearson to assemble next April's statewide exams.
The field tests, which are not
mandatory for children, are due to be given on October 23rd, 24th or
25th; the principal of each school selects the date.And there will be still more separate,
stand-alone field tests this spring.
Although your child may not be
slated for field testing now, he or she is likely to be tapped in the spring
and in the next few years, as Pearson’s contract calls for stand-alone field
tests until 2015.
The parents and teachers of Change
the Stakes object to these tests and SED’s blatant disregard of parents’
legitimate concerns:
Students already lose
too much valuable class time to the annual statewide exams and test
preparation activities surrounding them, compromising the quality of our
children’s education. The list of assessments in various stages of
development keeps on expanding...
Not only are the tests
themselves seriously flawed, the already high stakes attached to the tests
are even higher this year. For the first time, teachers will be evaluated
on their students’ test scores even though research shows that the tests
are not a reliable measure of teacher performance.
Parents have the right
to know that their children are spending class time to benefit a
profit-making company. Before proceeding with the field tests, SED should
be required to obtain informed parental consent.
Keeping parents in the dark,
sacrificing learning opportunities to support commercial interests, turning our
schools into testing labs and running our children through a measurement maze
is unacceptable.
For information about which
schools have been assigned to administer the October field tests, see the
attached spreadsheet. To learn more about high-stakes testing and how to join
those of us who are fighting back against test-driven education, please go to www.changethestakes.org
.
One small but significant victory: public outrage has managed to stop the state contract with Wireless Generation, owned by Rupert Murdoch and run by Joel Klein.
As reported in today's Daily News, State Comptroller Di Napoli rejected the egregious $27 million contract that the NY State Education Department wanted to award the company, to build a statewide data system modeled after the highly deficient city system known as ARIS.
We were the first to post a petition to Di Napoli, the Regents, and the feds, after the Daily News broke the story, and many other petitions and letters to the Comptroller followed.
For some of the reasons this contract should have been rejected see here.
If you would like to thank Comptroller Di Napoli, you can send an email to: contactus@osc.state.ny.us
Keep safe everyone on the East Coast, from Hurricane Irene, but savor this win for accountability and for someone who dared to say NO to educrats , apparently intent on wasting taxpayer money and reward their friends and cronies with no-bid contracts.These wins have been few and far between in recent years.
Check out the new website, www.openbooknewyork.com, where you can search spending information on state and local agencies.This includes broad categories of NYC DOE expenditures, but more interestingly, specific State Education contracts.
One of the largest SED contracts is listed as $20,518,160 for McGraw Hill/CTB to “DEVELOP GRADE 3-8 ASSESSMENTS IN MATHEMATICS”from 2004 -2011.
Another $17.8 million is again for CTB McGraw Hill, to “DEVELOP GRADE 3-8 ASSESSMENTS IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS” over the same period.Wonder why math exams are more expensive than the ELA?'
Lots of charter school grants as well, including a $175,000 “planning” grant last June to the RossCharterSchool.
Many of member items listed as well, though the list doesn’t identify which legislators were the sponsors.Check it out, and please share anything interesting you find in the comments section.
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This blog is edited by Leonie Haimson, the Executive Director of Class Size Matters and who was a NYC public school parent for 15 years. If you'd like to write for the blog, please email us at info@classsizematters.org