Susan Ochshorn, who advocates for early childhood education, is aghast at the idea that children as young as four or five are expected to take standardized tests. She explained that experts in early childhood education were appalled by the idea of testing young children with bubble tests.

Then she discovered a school where anti-testing sentiment had grown to include not only the principal and the teachers but the parents as well.

Parents and teachers always ask: What can we do? At the Castle Bridge Elementary School in New York Coty, they figured out what to do, and they took action:

“Late last week, an email arrived from Emma Frank, mother of two, including a first-grader at Castle Bridge, a K-5 school in Washington Heights led by progressive educator Julie Zuckerman. After a school-wide decision to opt out of K-1 testing, Frank was calling each member of the city council (“I’m up to ‘G,’ she wrote), to protest the policy. She also passed along the following letter, written by Don Lash, to state-level officials, which she is circulating as fast as she can:

“Dear Assembly Member Nolan and Senator Flanagan:

“I am contacting you because I am the parent of a first grade student who is expected to take a multiple choice standardized test as a result of a policy directive from the New York State Education Department (NYSED) that students from Kindergarten to 2nd grade be tested using an exam mandated by NYSED.

“The test is not intended to reveal any information that would be used to improve instruction to my child, but would be used solely to evaluate her teachers. Having seen some of the sample testing material published in news accounts, which was developed by the for-profit testing conglomerate PearsonEd, I don’t believe the test has any validity in assessing the quality of her instruction or the level of mastery of the curriculum. Moreover, I deeply resent the intrusion on her learning time that would be required to master test-taking skills that would serve no purpose beyond the test.

“Finally, my child is in a dual language program, with some students acquiring English as a second language and others acquiring Spanish as a second language. The test was developed and normed in English, so it would be worse than useless in evaluating the performance of my child’s teachers. I have exercised my right to opt out of this pointless testing, but I am nevertheless concerned that if my child’s teachers and the administrators of the school are forced to administer a test with no educational value, her instruction time will be reduced whether she takes the test or not.

“As a taxpayer, I object to the diversion of funds into Pearson’s or any other developer’s coffers, and the waste of the time of teachers and other school personnel, time that could be dedicated to teaching and learning. I am requesting that as chairs of the Assembly and Senate Education Committees, with oversight responsibility for NYSED, you demand that Commissioner King reverse this ill-considered and poorly implemented policy.”