John Stoffel went to his school board in Indiana and delivered this message. Would you do the same in your district?
Stoffel said:
A little over two months ago, tragedy unfolded at Sandy Hook Elementary. By the next school day, my school had safeguarded every reasonable security measure. Today, our district is still hammering out policy to best ensure our children’s safety.
In years of teaching elementary here, I have always believed our children are nestled safely inside the walls of our schools. However, this year I have become greatly concerned that, while physically safe, we are suffocating each child’s innate curiosity and natural love of learning through excessive, high-stakes testing.
This exponential growth of high stakes testing has created a frenetic, stressful, and wasteful environment that is not conducive to learning. For example, my students took two hours of interim, predictive tests over the last two weeks. By the time we get results and remediation could occur, the ISTEP applied skills testing window will already be upon us. Further, even if remediation was possible, no research supports interim, predictive tests, except research done by the vendors who sell them.
In fact, with the feverish pace we have started assessing our students; we have actually ignored sound research that the testing is harmful.
Last week I had to administer to students a test of 40, multi-digit multiplication problems which were to be attempted in one minute. Brain research shows that these math tests actually result in the altering of neurological pathways as a protective avoidance to stressful, mathematical problems, even later in real life applications. Still, the need to collect data trumped the maxim: “First, do no harm.”
Perhaps even more demoralizing, as a teacher, is that excessive testing has spirited-away the ability to meet the needs of the whole child. Recess has been cut to a bare minimum. Most social studies and science has been axed. Classroom meetings and current events have gone extinct. Even reading aloud to students, with all its richness in virtue, cannot fit in to the demand of many testing or test-prep days.
Last fall, my school received a “D” rating from then State Superintendent Tony Bennett. No one in Bennett’s Department of Education (DOE) could explain exactly how our school received a “D”. Now, everyone from the statehouse to current State Superintendent Glenda Ritz has expressed the A-F grading system is flawed.
I have voiced my concern about the current educational practices to which our grade of a “D” has led. I have been told our school still must show evidence to the state that we are attempting interventions to improve ISTEP scores.
Under those same pretenses, then, let me ask this:
Can you imagine a doctor diagnoses your child with cancer, though he has no evidence, then recommends and demands immediate, intense chemotherapy? Can you imagine being forced to purposely intervene with toxins to slowly poison your child even though you know the diagnosis is wrong?
Now, back to my school – how are we attempting to “cure” our “D” letter grade from the state? More testing. More data-analysis. As a teacher, let me assure you these interventions are toxic.
Current State Superintendent Glenda Ritz must adhere to the detrimental laws put in the books during Tony Bennett’s regime. She has asked current legislators to rework these laws to makes schools accountable in a manner that supports, not forsakes, or schools.
Let me conclude with handing you a copy of a Resolution on High-Stakes testing, which appeals for a drastic reduction to high-stakes testing. I would appreciate our school board’s consideration of such a resolution at some future date to send a message to legislators to work with our current state superintendent. This would serve as the beginning point to eliminating all unnecessary testing as a means to improve our schools.
Thank you.
I would like to see the resolution for high stakes testing that was referred to. I would like to use it as a template to write our own in Nashville Public Schools.
Jill Speering District 3 Board Member 615-562-5234 ________________________________
Jill, You can find the NRHST here:
http://timeoutfromtesting.org/nationalresolution/
I sure would – and have – at least as much as can be fit into 3 minutes once every 3 weeks. Kudos to you John. We need more teachers to speak out – publicly and without shelter of anonymity. Standing at that podium staring up at the dais, and the handful of people who can un-employ you in a heartbeat; takes some stuff.
Here in Hillsborough County Florida, I am speaking to a brick wall; but I do it every three weeks. Our District has not met a test it didn’t like. I am not speaking to the Board, I am speaking to the 15,000 teachers in my district who are not yet standing up. Bitching in the teachers’ lounge is somewhat cathartic, but achieves little. My District has a culture of leadership through intimidation and fear; making it difficult for teachers to step out of the crowd. It has to be done however. We used to have unions to do this for us, but altogether too many unions have gone the “collaborative” method, ie. sold-out.
Please keep it up John. Our Board argued for months over the ROHST, and ultimately only signed a seriously watered down version produced by the State Association of School Boards – not exactly a high-energy, path-blazing group.
If you want to really have an impact – run for School Board. Win or lose, you can start a conversation that is difficult to kill. All through my last run (unsuccessful – but I’ll take it this round), I wore two buttons; “Parent Trigger Kills Public Schools”, and “NO FCAT”, Florida’s evil assessment.
It ‘s very heartening to hear how you continue to speak out for your students. It is difficult and frustrating. I am hoping that you will get elected to the School Board the next time.
The ONLY effective solution is for parents to take charge and OPT-OUT their children from all high stakes standardized testing.
Dear Diane, and Dear All Readers,
We need to propose an alternative evaluation system.
I’ve been speaking with folks all week before, during, and after attending Wednesday’s Ed. Summit here in Los Angeles.
When I pressed my peers about the lack of evidence for VAM, the toxicity of this reform vs. ‘status quo’ battle, and the reductive and destructive nature of high stakes testing on students, teachers and communities, some countered that we need a way to weed out bad teachers, and that we can’t ignore this data, etc.
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So let’s find a platform to put forth and unite on, in order to counter these poor educational policies.
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Some of my suggestions:
-increased funding to support adding teacher aides, nurses, counselors, special ed specialists, and other support staff
-reduced class sizes
-reinvesting in career and technical training
-standardized testing to be a smaller/shorter part of each school year (1-3 days max, without increasing the hours per day)
-standardized testing to play no more than 10-20% in the evaluation of student achievement and teacher effectiveness, school success
(student grades and instructor assessments throughout the year should count for their original purpose of assessing the student)
-better tracking of students throughout the system(s) to get more clarity on their progress-many students switch schools as you know each year
-concerted outreach to students/families who drop out, or at risk to do so (funding needed)
-use of frequent (weekly or biweekly perhaps) principal and parent observation teams,annual student surveys and regular teacher peer review, to assess the effectiveness of each teacher and school admin which would count for 80-90% of their evaluation.
thoughts, anyone?
“-standardized testing to play no more than 10-20% in the evaluation of student achievement and teacher effectiveness, school success”
Bovine Excrement!!
You are selling yourself out to the edudeformers if you think that standardized testing has any validity whatsoever to assess not only students but teachers and a school. First of all it is UNETHICAL to use any test score for any purpose other than what it is specifically constructed to assess. It is not “moral compass” rocket science to understand the UNETHICALNESS (unethicality?) of how standardized testing is currently used.
Not to mention the complete invalidity due to the myriad errors involved in the construction, giving and using the results of educational standards and standardized testing (and even the “grading” of students) as shown by Noel Wilson in his landmark dissertation “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” found at: http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700 . Read, understand it and change your thinking.
noted below but thought I’d repeat – Testing in grades 3, 5, 8, and 10 only
English and mathematics only
period
then State requirements and pressures drop – teacher eval pressures drops – Pearson stock drops –
In NY standardized tests are only 20% with another 20% for local (authentic) (“SLO”) assessments –
ONE % is too much when tests are all consuming, VAM methodology is flawed, and it’s all unfunded
Why can’t all schools just administer the NAEP and be done with it? That is, after all, the test used to compare us to other countries, is it not? I would vote for the Terra Nova but, as it’s a consumable test. I know that it’s too expensive for the majority of U.S. school districts. However, if I am wrong, someone out there correct me (perhaps those ARE cheaper than the Pear$on garbage)–in which case, let’s use it!
No, the NAEP only compares states against states (plus some DoD and other areas of American citizenry). You are thinking of the TIMSS or the PISA test. Everyone is all worked up about the international test but in reality we do pretty well. Here is an article about it some might find a worthwhile read. http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2012/12/educational_tourism_has_become.html
I love it. A serious, but nice way to end a stressful week. Thank you.
I love the cancer cure explanation. So to the point.
John Stoeffel – Good for you!
Simple solution that put testing back where it belongs – benchmarking schools and curriculum, checking readiness for next levels of learning, no high-stakesness….
Testing in grades 3, 5, 8, and 10 only
English and mathematics only
period
then State requirements and pressures drop – teacher eval pressures drops – Pearson stock drops –
In Louisiana, the entire month of April has some sort of end of year or end of course testing going on throughout various grade levels and subject areas, and on in to May. All of our 11th graders have to take the ACT – ALL of them. No wonder kids burst out of the schoolhouse doors on the last day and don’t even want to look at a book all summer. Sad
I have a basic question that has been nagging me even though I’m sure the answer is obvious to those immersed in education.
Are private and parochial schools required to foist the same standardized testing regime on their students? If not, why not? If such schools are allowed to escape from this, then this might be why we don’t see the degree of uproar we would ordinarily expect.
And I’ll add: Home-schooled students to that mix as well.