Archives for the year of: 2014

A teacher sent the following comment in reference to the requirement that all Common Core testing must be done online. Schools will lay off teachers and cut programs and services to pay for technology for testing:

“My campus has 1200 students and 32 computers in the lab. You do the math. We have to buy HUNDREDS of new computers, so that our primary-aged kids can take a test in the spring. Our district has frozen our salaries, cut staff, and cut our benefits…because our funding was also cut by our state…but we still have to come up with the $10 million that these computers will cost our district.”

The following report comes from FairTest, which keeps track of news about testing a Ross the nation and advocates for sensible testing policies:

This week’s stories about test protest and reform activities — as well as a few victories — come from more than a third of the states, as the movement continues to spread, intensify and gain more clout.

Four Reasons Why Alabama Parents Want to Opt Their Kids Out of Tests
http://blog.al.com/breaking/2014/04/4_reasons_parents_want_to_opt.html

Colorado Testing Fight Nears Boiling Point
http://co.chalkbeat.org/2014/04/24/testing-issue-coming-back-to-the-boil/
Colorado Teachers Union Joins Fight for High-Stakes Moratorium

Breaking News: Colorado Teachers Force Union to Join Fight Against High-Stakes Testing!

Connecticut Mom Says: Let’s Ditch Those Tests and Let Teachers Teach
http://www.courant.com/features/parenting/hc-common-core-testing-parenting-20140425,0,2684706.story
Growing Debate Over Connecticut Opt-Out Policies
http://www.greenwichtime.com/local/article/Can-students-opt-out-of-new-standardized-tests-5432231.php

Florida School Stops Serving Kids High-Sugar, Caffeinated Drinks Before High-Stakes Tests
http://www.floridatoday.com/story/news/education/2014/04/23/school-stops-serving-mountain-dew-before-fcat-after-complaints/8050073/
There’s Still Time for an Assessment Reform Pause
http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-theres-still-time-for-a-test-reform-pause/2176908

Georgia Family Wins Opt-Out Fight With School District
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/04/24/standardized-test-opponents-reach-agreement-with-school/
Standardized Tests Are Not Useful Tools for Georgia Parents, Students,Teachers or Schools
http://www.greenwichtime.com/local/article/Can-students-opt-out-of-new-standardized-tests-5432231.php

Excellent Parents’ Group Testimony to Illinois Legislature

California Teacher on Common Core Test

Computer Problems Disrupt Indiana Practice Tests
http://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/indiana/2014/04/24/new-istep-glitches-put-educators-edge/8084747/

Minnesota Parent: I Am Middle Class, My Kids Test Well, and I Opt Out for Better Learning
http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/blog/sarahlahm/i-am-middle-class-my-kids-test-well-and-i-opt-out
http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/blog/sarahlahm/opting-out-tests-and-learning-matters
South High Leads Way for Minnesota Test Protests
http://www.startribune.com/local/minneapolis/256789551.html

Nebraska Parents Begin Joining National Movement to Say “No” to Test Overkill
http://www.theindependent.com/news/local/parents-saying-no-to-all-the-tests/article_393d15b8-cdc7-11e3-918a-001a4bcf887a.html

Time for New Jersey to Fight Back Against Standardized Testing
http://www.myveronanj.com/2014/04/27/op-ed-fight-back-high-risk-standardized-testing/

New York City Activists Rally Against High-Stakes Testing
http://indypendent.org/2014/04/25/photos-nyc-education-activists-rally-against-high-stakes-standardized-testing
Why New York’s Common Core Tests Are So Bad
http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/23/opinion/tampio-common-core/
Louis C.K. Blasts Common Core Testing in New York: “Massive Stressball That Hangs Over the Whole School”
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2014/04/louis_ck_twitter_common_core_standardized_testing_pearson_math_is_hell.php
No Place for Poetry on New York’s Common Core Exams
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cynthia-wachtell/no-poetry-on-my-sons-comm_b_5223744.html
AFT Asks Pearson to Lift “Gag Order” on NY Teachers Talking About Tests
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/aft-asks-pearson-to-stop-gag-order-barring-educators-from-talking-about-tests/

More Oklahoma Parents Opting Out of Standardized Exams
http://www.tulsaworld.com/blogs/scene/becauseisaidso/because-i-said-so-more-parents-are-opting-out-of/article_22f43014-cca2-11e3-ac8d-0017a43b2370.html
Profile in Courage: Oklahoma Fights to Exempt Students Whose Parents Were Killed in a Car Crash From State Testing
http://www.okcfox.com/story/25322910/superintendent-defies-state-after-students-testing-exemption-denied

Pennsylvania Testing Forum Looks for Better Ways to Assess
http://www.centredaily.com/2014/04/25/4150130/standardized-testing-forum-looks.html

Students Put Providence, R.I. Mayoral Candidates on the Record Against Graduation Test
http://wpri.com/2014/04/25/providence-mayoral-candidate-oppose-necap-city-busing-policy/

Tennessee Rolls Back Test-Based Teacher Evaluation Policy
http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/education/2014/04/24/haslam-signs-bill-undoing-controversial-teacher-license-policy/8121885/
More Tennessee Families Opt Out as Testing Drives Students to Tears
http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2014/04/28/tennessee-schools-stress-testing-students-driven-tears/

Why Texas Legislators Should Take the Same Tests They Require for Students
http://letterstotheeditorblog.dallasnews.com/2014/04/legislators-take-the-same-standardized-tests-you-ask-our-children-to-take-and-make-the-results-public.html/
New Texas Law Limits Standardized Exams But Not Test Prep

Utah Educators Deal Delicately With Opt-Out Requests
http://www.standard.net/stories/2014/04/24/area-teachers-treading-gingerly-around-sage-opt-out-issue

Widespread Problems Disrupt Computerized Tests . . . . Just As Predicted
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/28/computer-troubles-mar-standardized-testing-in-multiple-states/

The Crazy Way Common Core Test Cut Scores Are Set
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/29/the-scary-way-common-core-test-cut-scores-are-selected/

Canadian Perspective on U.S. — Forget Test Scores: Fight Poverty
http://thechronicleherald.ca/letters/1203117-forget-test-scores-fight-poverty-and-keep-education-public

What Does the SAT Measure: “Aptitude,” “Achievement,” or Anything At All?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/22/what-does-the-sat-measure-aptitude-achievement-anything/

New Resource: “Politics Aside: Our Children and Their Teachers in Score Driven Times”
http://bookreviewbuzz.com/education-politics-aside-our-children-and-their-teachers-in-score-driven-times/

Parody Song: “I Write the Tests That Make the Whole World Fail”
http://testingtalk.org/response/i-write-the-tests-i-write-the-tests-these-observations-sung-to-chorus-of-barry-manilows-song/

Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director
FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing
office- (239) 395-6773 fax- (239) 395-6779
mobile- (239) 696-0468
web- http://www.fairtest.org

New Jersey is sharing its riches. Darrell Bradford, formerly of a billionaire-funded group called B4Kids, will move to New York to become CEO of NYCan. This is another of those fake “reform” groups that advocates for privatization as the cure for poverty and the surefire way to get rid of unions.

Jersey Jazzman knows him well and describes his role in advocating for vouchers.

The origin of these CAN groups is Connecticut, where Jonathan Sackler, a billionaire leader in the pharmaceutical industry (see Leonie Haimson’s comments below) and various hedge fund managers organized to advocate for privatization, mayoral control (to speed the pace of privatization), and anti-teacher legislation.

In the psychiatric literature, CAN is an acronym that stands for “child abuse abuse and neglect.”

Welcome to New York, Darrell. If you can make it here, you’ll make it anywhere, it’s up to you, New York, New York.

 

Here is the story of the Houston Seven, the teachers suing to invalidate the evaluations based on student tests scores.

How nutty is this?

“Andrew Dewey is an award-winning history teacher at Carnegie Vanguard High School in Houston. In 2011-12, he earned the top merit pay award that his school district gives out and had “most effective” teacher status through a controversial evaluation system that uses student standardized test scores. The next year, after teaching similar students in the same way, he went from being one of the district’s highest-performing teachers to one that made “no detectable difference” for his students.

“Dewey is one of seven high-achieving teachers who, along with the Houston Federation of Teachers, filed a lawsuit in federal court in Texas late Wednesday alleging that the Houston Independent School District uses a badly flawed method of evaluating teacher effectiveness, known as the “Educational Value-Added Assessment System.” The teachers argue that the EVAAS is inaccurate and unfair but that it still plays a large role in determining how much teachers are paid and whether they can keep their jobs.
The method, generically known as “value added measures,” or VAM, is increasingly in use around the country — with the support of the Obama administration — after Michelle Rhee pioneered the method when she ran D.C. public schools several years ago. The result of this lawsuit could affect evaluation systems well beyond Texas.”

Just think: if the Houston teachers win, and the evidence is on their side–they take down the central theory of Race to the Top and Rhee, as well as laws in dozens of states that will face similar lawsuits.

“Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, said that the obsession with standardized testing that has driven education policymakers to make standardized test scores the key metric of accountability for students, educators and schools, is bastardizing public education.

“This country has spent billions on accountability, not on the improvement of teaching and learning at the classroom level, and value-added models are the leading edge of this misguided effort,” she said.”

Start with Race to the Top. $5 billion wasted.

Michael S. Teitelbaum, author of a new book called “Falling Behind? Boom, Bust, and the Global Race for Scientific Talent,” writes in the Los Angeles Times that claims of a shortage of scientists and engineers are exaggerated.

He reminds us that there have been at least five cycles of hand-wringing since the end of World War II about our alleged technological decline. The reality, he argues, is that the STEM fields are not suffering shortages:

“Nearly all of the independent scholars and analysts who have examined the claims of widespread shortages have found little or no evidence to support them. Salaries in these occupations are generally flat, and unemployment rates are about the same or higher than in others requiring advanced education.

“Science and engineering occupations are indeed crucial to modern economies, but they account for only a small part — about 5% — of the workforce. There is some evidence of too few professionals in certain fields that currently are hot, such as social media and petroleum engineering, or in localized hot spots such as Silicon Valley.

“But in a wide range of other science and engineering fields, and in most parts of the country, the supply appears ample and sometimes excessive. In the large field of biomedical research, for example, talented young PhDs are facing daunting career challenges, with only about 1 in 5 likely to find the tenure-track academic posts to which most of them aspire.”

He urges that we continue to strengthen math and science education in K-12, because educated citizens should have an understanding and knowledge of math and science, not because there will be lucrative careers awaiting them. There will be for some, but not for all or even most.

He writes:

“U.S. schools currently produce large numbers of high-performing science and math students (about one-third of the world’s total in science) but also very large numbers of students with low test scores that partly explain the less-than-stellar U.S. rankings in international comparisons. This is a reflection of educational and economic inequalities that need to be addressed energetically, but it is not a reason to urge every American student to pursue a STEM degree.

“Students with talent and enthusiasm for science and engineering should be strongly encouraged to pursue their interest in such careers, and informed that most do offer higher earnings than in many humanities and arts fields. Yet they also need to know about large differences in career prospects among science and engineering specialties, and to understand that conditions can and do change dramatically over time, sometimes even during the period it takes to pursue a degree.

“Given such uncertainties, students who major in science and engineering must recognize that employers value not only strong specialized skills but also broader knowledge and capabilities. They want employees who can communicate clearly with non-specialists, work effectively in multi-specialty teams and understand the basics of business and management.
Radical changes in K-12 education cannot be justified on the basis of pervasive but largely unfounded claims of widespread shortages of scientists and engineers.”

The lesson: We should increase our efforts to educate the lowest-performing students in STEM subjects in K-12, those in the bottom 25%, because these subjects are valuable for success in almost every kind of career and for informed citizenship, not because of false alarms by politicians.

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/commentary/la-oe-teitelbaum-stem-fears-20140420,0,120851.story#ixzz2zWcJB8az

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/commentary/la-oe-teitelbaum-stem-fears-20140420,0,120851.story#ixzz2zWbH5yoO

Bob Braun has written one of the most moving, powerful critiques I have ever read of the heartless destruction of neighborhood public schools. What is it all about? To quote Braun: “money and power and greed.”

He writes:

“Sad. There’s a word rarely heard in the context of the state’s war on Newark’s neighborhood public schools. Sad. Yet the story of how a cruelly tone-deaf state bureaucrat named Cami Anderson is singlehandedly destroying a community’s neighborhood schools is just that. Sad. And nothing more illustrates that sadness than the brave but probably futile effort of one successful neighborhood school to remain alive despite Anderson’s promise to give it to privatized educational entrepreneurs who include former business partners of the recently resigned state education commissioner.”

Hawthorne Avenue School is not a failing school. It ranks well in the city and state. It has string parent involvement. But Cami has promised it to her friends at KIPP.

To get ready for the transfer, she has devastated the school:

“Anderson’s treatment of Hawthorne—and similar schools throughout the state’s largest district—has been a nightmare. A sad nightmare. She stripped the school of its librarians, its counselors, its attendance personnel. She has ignored constant pleas to repair crumbling walls and leaking ceilings—promising repair money only after she gave the building to TEAM Academy, the local name for KIPP charters, and the Brick schools. The head of TEAM Academy, Tim Cardin, is a former business partner of Christopher Cerf, the recently-resigned education commissioner. All three–Cardin, Cerf, and Anderson–worked for the New York City schools.”

Cami Anderson has no sense of shame.

New York passed a law to limit test prep, but it won’t make any difference.

Because high-stakes are attached to the tests, who will dare to limit test prep? Teachers and principals will be evaluated and possibly fired based on the scores. Schools may be closed based on the scores. The test prep will go on, as frenzied as ever.

Only the NY legislature would be so naive as to believe that passing a law against too much test prep will negate the high stakes they have attached to it.

Oddly enough, the law exempts charter schools from its limits. They can engage in test prep 100% of the time, and that’s okay.

“This month, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and state legislators passed a law, intended to take effect by the next school year, setting a 2 percent limit on the amount of classroom time that could be spent on test preparation, or about three and a half days in a school year. Charter schools, some of which are known for an almost religious devotion to test preparation, are not obligated to comply, officials said.”

Makes sense, right?

Mercedes Schneider’s new book on corporate reform is now available.

Its title is “A Chronicle of Echoes: Who’s Who in the Implosion of American Public Education.”

This is the description on amazon:

“”Corporate reform” is not reform at all. Instead, it is the systematic destruction of the foundational American institution of public education. The primary motivation behind this destruction is greed. Public education in America is worth almost a trillion dollars a year. Whereas American public education is a democratic institution, its destruction is being choreographed by a few wealthy, well-positioned individuals and organizations. This book investigates and exposes the handful of people and institutions that are often working together to become the driving force behind destroying the community public school.”

Gene Glass, eminent researcher at Arizona State University, posted this review:

“Schneider has exposed the corruption, greed and entangling of self-interests that underlie the attempt of the mega-corporations to grab billions of tax-payer dollars that are appropriated for America’s K-12 public schools. She puts the names and faces on the movement that Diane Ravitch documented in “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools.” There are no “must reads” anymore. There are just a handful of “should reads”: “A Chronicle of Echoes” is at the head of that list.”

Seven teachers in Houston are suing the district over the use of test-score-based evaluations.

Good for them!

As a K-12 graduate of HISD, I am proud of these teachers for standing up for their profession.

I hope they will introduce as evidence the recent statement of the American Statistical Association cautioning about the limitations of VAM, as well as the joint statement of the National Academy of Education and the American Educational Research Association, warning that VAM produces results that are inaccurate and unstable.

Here is a good list of references the plaintiffs can use.

VAM is junk science when used to rate individual teachers. The ratings change if a different test is used. VAM says more about the composition of the class than the quality of the teacher.

Ras Baraka is in a tough fight for Mayor of Newark, New Jersey.

The hedge fund managers have poured into the campaign more than $1 million–that has been reported–to defeat him and to turn over more public schools and children to corporate charter chains. Please help save public education in Newark by supporting Ras Baraka.

Ras is a high school principal and a member of the Newark City Council.

Please donate whatever you can to help him.

The primary election is May 13.

He needs your help NOW.

This is what Mark Naison wrote about Ras Baraka:

“Friends of public education. The most important election in the nation regarding the future of public education is happening right now in Newark New Jersey. On one side is Shevar Jeffries, a lawyer and a huge charter school supporter getting millions of dollars in contributions from Hedge Fund advocates of school privatization and on the other side is Ras Baraka, a high school principal who has been in the front lines of community voices resisting Chris Christie “One Newark” plan and the school closings and mass teacher firings which have accompanied it. Rarely has there been a clearer choice for defenders of public education and those who think Big Money Interests should not determine the future of our schools. Ras Baraka is not only the right choice for Newark students, teachers and families, his election will inspire candidates like him to come forth in cities like Philadelphia and Chicago and Los Angeles where pro privatization Mayors currently are in office. And he is not just strong on paper. His is a brilliant speaker, someone who inspires those who hear him to step forward in the struggle for justice, and take on the Special Interests who are deforming our democracy.

“Any way you can help this campaign will help our entire movement. We need Ras Baraka as Mayor of Newark, and we need more people like him to run for office in every urban center in the nation

https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=246039618866448”