By unanimous vote, the entire faculty at Garfield High School in Seattle voted not to administer the MAP test of reading and mathematics.
This is the first time, to my knowledge, that the faculty of an entire school refused to give mandated tests.
The action of the Garfield High School faculty could have national ramifications because it shows other teachers that there is strength in unity and that they do not have to endure unethical demands with passivity and resignation.
For their courage, their integrity, and their intelligence, I add the faculty of Garfield High School to the honor roll as champions of public education.
The teachers agreed that the tests are a waste of time and money. Students don’t take them seriously because they don’t count toward their grades. But teachers will be evaluated based on the results of these tests that students don’t take seriously. Even the organization that created the tests say they should not be used for teacher evaluation, but the district requires them anyway.
I hope that the example set by Garfield High School will resonate in school districts across the United States and around the world. High-stakes testing is bad for students, bad for teachers, and bad for education.
This is the statement by the teachers of Garfield High School:
SEATTLE – In perhaps the first instance anywhere in the nation, teachers at Seattle’s Garfield High School will announce this afternoon their refusal to administer a standardized test that students in other high schools across the district are scheduled to take in the first part of January. Known as the MAP test, it purports to evaluate student progress and skill in reading and math. The teachers contend that it wastes time, money, and precious school resources.
“Our teachers have come together and agree that the MAP test is not good for our students, nor is it an appropriate or useful tool in measuring progress,” says Kris McBride, who serves as Academic Dean and Testing Coordinator at Garfield. “Additionally, students don’t take it seriously. It produces specious results, and wreaks havoc on limited school resources during the weeks and weeks the test is administered.”
McBride explained that the MAP test, which stands for Measure of Academic Progress, is administered two to three times each year to 9th grade students as well as those receiving extra support services. The students are told the test will have no impact on their grades or class standing, and, because of this, students tend to give it little thought to the test and hurry through it. In addition, there seems to be little overlap between what teachers are expected to teach (state and district standards) and what is measured on the test.
Despite this flaw, McBride states, results of the MAP tests will be used by district officials to help evaluate the effectiveness of instructors who give the test. “Our teachers feel strongly that this type of evaluative tool is unfair based on the abundance of problems with the exam, the content, and the statistical insignificance of the students’ scores,” she says.
Refusing to administer a district-mandated test is not a decision the school’s teachers made casually, or without serious internal discussion.
“Those of us who give this test have talked about it for several years,” explained Mallory Clarke, Garfield’s Reading Specialist. “When we heard that district representatives themselves reported that the margin of error for this test is greater than an individual student’s expected score increase, we were appalled!”
After the affected faculty decided unanimously to make a stand against the MAP test, they told the rest of Garfield’s faculty of their decision. In a December 19 vote, the rest of the school’s teachers voted overwhelmingly to support their colleagues’ refusal to administer the test. Not a single teacher voted against the action. Four abstained from voting. the rest voted to support it.
“We really think our teachers are making the right decision,” said student body president Obadiah Stephens-Terry.“I know when I took the test, it didn’t seem relevant to what we were studying in class– and we have great classes here at Garfield. I know students who just go through the motions when taking the test, did it as quickly as possible so that they could do something more useful with their time.” History teacher Jesse Hagopian said, “What frustrates me about the MAP test is that the computer labs are monopolized for weeks by the MAP test, making research projects very difficult to assign.” Hagopian added “This especially hurts students who don’t have a computer at home.”
The $4 million MAP test was purchased by Seattle Public Schools during the tenure of former Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson, who left her position in 2011 and sadly passed away in 2012. Goodloe-Johnson sat on the board of directors of Northwest Evaluation Association (NWEA), the company that markets the MAP test. At the time, some pointed out this potential conflict of interest for Goodloe-Johnson, but the district went ahead with the purchase nonetheless. NWEA itself warns that districts should not use the map test to evaluate teachers. We teachers of Garfield High School believe that the NWEA is right—this test should not be used to evaluate teachers. For secondary teachers the test cannot provide useful information about students’ skills and progress. Still worse, this test should not rob students of precious class time away from instruction. “We believe the negative aspects of the MAP test so outweigh the positive ones that we are willing to take this step,” said Language Arts teacher Adam Gish.
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BRAVO!!! And so it begins…
Wow, go Garfield!
If the test is so flawed and apparently does not “provide useful information about students’ skills and progress”, then what is the point of the test – academic torture?
The point is satisfying the political posturing of individuals who don’t have a clue as to what eduacation is really about, but who are trying to appeal to their constituency by “holding teachers accountable.”
I’m so happy. This article JUST made my day. Not only is it not useful for teacher eval it’s a BAD test. If you don’t want to take my word for it, read what testing expert Dr. Jim Popham has to say. (Pg. 14 deals specifically with this test.)http://www.bestevidence.org/word/Better_Spring_2011.pdf
And I think about 10 minutes into this video, he’ll tell you the purpose of MAPS. . . http://edu.wyoming.gov/video/2011/08/23/dr-jim-popham-discusses-paws-and-assessment-literacy
With so many others, I couldn’t be more thrilled with the courage of Garfield’s faculty, or the integrity of their administration should they continue to abide by this vote.
Here’s the thing (certain that I don’t want to get flamed for this, but feeling it’s a relevant point): I would hope to see this understood as a victory for preventing the use of MAP results for evaluating teachers, or for any other high-stakes purpose. MAP itself — love it or hate it — is represented as a formative assessment and (though perhaps I misunderstand) was _never_ intended to be used in the manner for which it was proposed. Admitting my own possible confusion, I would hate to see us jump to conclusions about the possible value of MAP as a potentially _more_ reliable measure of crucial proficiencies to inform effective actual teaching and learning — even as much as I would hate to see us neglect to celebrate this act of courage in refusing to turn its result to other more sinister purposes at odds with that very teaching and learning.
This is a reminder that while teachers are going through a difficult time now, the only people who will truly influence the education of a child are the parents and teachers. Any reform that happens will only happen with the cooperation of the people who care enough to be with the children each day. Any reform that is opposed by most teachers cannot succeed.
This is the kind of action that works.
Imagine….
“if You know, if one person, just one person does it they may think he’s really sick and they won’t take him.
And if two people, two people do it, in harmony,
they may think they’re both faggots and they won’t take either of them.
And three people do it, three, can you imagine, three people walking in
singin a bar of Alice’s Restaurant and walking out. They may think it’s an
organization.
And can you, can you imagine fifty people a day,I said
fifty people a day walking in singin a bar of Alice’s Restaurant and
walking out. And friends they may thinks it’s a movement.
AND IT IS… with thanks to Arlo Guthrie
“And you can get anything you want. . . exceptin Alice”
My heroes! I hope this sort of thing spreads.
Good. They’ll have no complaints if the school district decides to not honor portions of their contract because “it’s a waste of time.”
Please! There are so many broken or ignored sections of contracts by Districts toward Teachers your comment is a joke!
And yet as a parent, I trust teachers have the truest sense of what “waste of time” means.
So if your boss asked you to do something every year that had a directly negative impact on your customers, then used that negative impact to judge you as an employee, then had the public at large claim that YOU weren’t doing YOUR job, you would just say “oh well…”? The teachers are not only doing this because it is used against them, they are doing it because it takes away from the time used to instruct the students.
Yes!!-this is courageous and reminds us of that our strength is in solidarity. Awesome!
I love that “the margin of error is greater than the potential student increase.” Then I might ask “What is the purpose of the test?” Good for those teachers to go against a useless so called tool.
A precedent has been set. Let the dominoes fall.
This may be akin to that first shot fired at Lexington Common. Don’t tread on us!
I attended the press conference announcing this action in Seattle. What you came away with from this roomful of teachers and staff is concern for students. MAP does NOT align with curriculum and takes away valuable instructional time (not to mention tying up computer access for other students while MAP is given).
The takeaway lesson from them – “We care about our students and will stand up for them.”
Very courageous. I feel excited that groups are banning together and saying enough. There is hope.
The State of Washington voters have placed their confidence in teachers judgement. If over half of the teachers at Garfield voted to turn it into a charter school, it would be so under state law.
Thus, a unanimous vote to get rid of a simple test, is a mild use of teacher authority by comparison.
It is about time that we take back public education. I’m super impressed wtih the Seattle teachers at Garfield HS. Let’s give those teachers from Garfield HS a loud cheer of “RIGHT ON!”
I hope that this is the beginning of a revolution against the deformers, against high-stake testing, and against the unfair teacher evaluation that would use scores to rate educators.
Right on, Garfield High School, proud Alma Mater of Jimi Hendrix, who grew up in the local Central District.
Bravo to the teachers at Garfield High School. I will add that the actual MAP test can never be seen by teachers, parents or principals. The actual test is adapted for each student. The test is locked into the computer. Parents just get numerical results.
I’ve opted my children out of MAP due to fears of test fatigue. For algebra, our children are expected to take classroom tests and quizzes, MAP 3Xs year, EOC and MSP. The level of testing has become absurd.
I should also note that Seattle Public Schools require children as young as 5 to take MAP testing. Some very young students, with limited fine motor movements..have never held a computer mouse.
I also want to add that this test was sold to the district as an “instructional” tool. At the time it was sold to the district, the superintendent didn’t disclose the fact that MAP would eventually be used to incorporate into teacher evaluations.
Grant funding for this “instructional” tool ran out. As a result, teachers don’t know how to correlate this test to individualized instruction.
I’ve proctored this test and wouldn’t trust it to guide my instruction either. A teacher’s assessments can better guide students individually. We don’t need this multiple choice test.
And good for you for opting your children out! Parents across the country, opt your children out of testing–especially state, “standardized,” “Pineapple” question tests. STOP-THE-TESTING-IN-2013!!!
Many parents are fearful to opt their children out of this test. They feel it the district requires testing..it must be a good thing.
I’ve created a Facebook page to show these courageous teachers that they have supporters all over the country: http://www.facebook.com/SolidarityWithGarfieldHighSchoolTestingBoycott
I wish I had had the guts to do this when all my middle school bilingual students were given the MAP reading test with no advance warning.
The Billionaire Oligarchs love the centralized top down one size tool. Value Added Measure — for teacher evaluation is a favorite. Except VAM does not work. It has proved to be neither reliable nor valid. Thus the Gates Foundation is now misinterpreting the data from a $46 million three-year study to claim a blended model of observation + VAM works.
Jay Greene provides the Truth that underlies Gates Foundation spin ==>
Understanding the Gates Foundation’s Measuring Effective Teachers Project
http://jaypgreene.com/2013/01/09/understanding-the-gates-foundations-measuring-effective-teachers-project/
What Success Would Have Looked Like
http://jaypgreene.com/2013/01/10/what-success-would-have-looked-like/
Again, what truly matters about our current test culture is that kids are often being tested on content not yet taught. (Why?) Despite what administrators tell us, the results of these poorly timed, “low stakes” tests, designed to “inform our instruction” is affecting students in an unethical matter. As a result of these tests, program placements are being made arbitrarily because of the “data”. (The data is false!) Meanwhile, parents, community members, policy makers, and the public at large have no knowledge of this commonplace practice. The bold and courageous actions of the teachers in Seattle is an important first step. Thank you teachers!
From the low quality standards of the past to the low quality standardized tests, we are forced as teachers to do so many things that we know are not in the best interests of learning. The old standards wasted our time and kept our students on the lower level of thinking. The standardized tests often offered us absolutely no useable data.
You have untied your hands so you may best help your students!
May you standing up for your students give other teachers the courage to stand up for theirs! Bravo!
Great teachers have classrooms full of students who take every exam seriously, regardless of accountability measures or lack thereof. Teachers like these create the need for horrible accountability measures like any high stakes test will provide. There are lots of problems here, but we cannot forget that the teacher created assessments at the high school level are plenty high stakes enough (GPA, class rank, etc), and the “old-school” types of teachers, especially at the secondary level, are afraid of accountability for soe reason. Teachers who blame students and hide from accountability are at least as bad as districts that blame teachers and only pass the buck.
Now let us shout this out to Arne Duncan! Good read today by Bill Ayers.
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/13813-bill-ayers-a-letter-to-the-president
I’ve found the MAP to be useful in gauging middle schoolers’ reading comprehension, more so than the state tests. I agree that having three or four different standardized tests during the year is overkill and ironically cuts into instruction time, but standardized tests are not evil in themselves.
“. . .but standardized tests are not evil in themselves.”
Wrong, Sparky!!!
As Wilson has shown, the myriad errors involved in the making, taking the test and disseminating results of standards, standardized testing and grading render said practices invalid. Start with mierda end up with caca. Or as Wilson says any results are “vain and illusory” See: “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” found at:
http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700
“A Little Less than Valid: An Essay Review” found at:
http://www.edrev.info/essays/v10n5index.html
http://www.edrev.info/essays/v10n5.pdf
How does it gauge comprehension? A multiple choice test? I gauge comprehension by talking to the student about what they’re reading and reading their reading journals.
We are starting an opt-out movement in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and surrounding areas. We stand in solidarity with Seattle and all the other parents, teachers, students, and concerned community members who have decided enough is enough. It’s time to take back our schools for real learning.
Here is a link to an FAQ we put together this week:
http://yinzercation.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/opt-out-faqs/
Have you made a copy of this for teachers in your school yet?
I would love for the Metro Nashville Public Schools to follow their fine example, but, as usual, Race to the Top money was too much for our state/local government to resist and now the TCAP testing counts as 10 percent of the grade.