This article was sent to me by the author, Travis Manning, who teaches high school English in Idaho.
We have reached a testing crisis in Idaho and Common Core hasn’t helped. As a current high school English teacher, I know. We are over-testing children, including the new 8-hour Common Core test: the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC).
In high school alone we give students the PSAT, SAT, IELA, PLAN, ACT, pre- and post-tests, end-of-semester exams, ASVAB, Science ISAT, AP tests, SBAC, PLATO, benchmarks, Career Information System (CIS) and sometimes the NAEP. Not all students take every test every year, but the testing process disrupts the entire school calendar, regardless. Testing burns weeks of instructional time, clogs up school computer labs, and costs millions. Special education students are given even more tests, often with accommodations to take as much time as they need, soaking up weeks more in a teacher’s curriculum calendar.
I support the Common Core standards generally, but I do not support the high-stakes test, the SBAC. Last year I wrote an op-ed in support of Common Core, but there are some ongoing concerns since then that haven’t been addressed by policymakers: fiscal strain, increased class sizes, cutting necessary programs and courses, teacher and student privacy issues, and tying teacher merit pay to SBAC.
The proposed teacher career ladder is coming down the pike, but details are sketchy. Idaho legislators want to tie as much as 50 percent of SBAC scores to teacher pay. “Our students are the most over-tested in the world,” writes education historian Dr. Diane Ravitch in a January 11, 2014 speech. “No other nation—at least no high-performing nation—judges the quality of teachers by the test scores of their students. Most researchers agree that this methodology is fundamentally flawed, that it is inaccurate, unreliable, and unstable, that the highest ratings will go to teachers with the most affluent students and the lowest ratings will go to teachers of English learners, teachers of students with disabilities, and teachers in high-poverty schools.”
We have become a nation infatuated with standardized testing and, in the process, have given private testing companies the onus for unnecessarily labeling schools, children and teachers. Groups like the Albertson Foundation and their Don’t Fail Idaho campaign continue to beat public schools about the head with statistics. Their campaign is meant to inform – but also to demoralize public schools – in order to privatize them, convert them into for-profit charters.
Ravitch notes that U.S. Department of Education website data reveals that recent U.S. test scores were “the highest they had ever been in our history for whites, African Americans, Latinos, and Asians; that graduation rates for all groups were the highest in our history; and that the dropout rate was the lowest ever in our history.” Unabashedly, privateers like Governor Otter and Superintendent Luna choose to ignore these facts.
New York state gave Common Core tests last spring and only 30 percent of students passed, including less than 20 percent of Hispanic students, 5 percent of students with disabilities, and 3 percent of English language learners. Could New York teachers use Common Core test results for item analysis and re-teaching? Nope. Results were reported in August. SBAC passing marks, called “cut scores,” are aligned with the federal test called NAEP, and the bar is set so high only 40 percent of students, at best, reach proficiency.
In Idaho, we are setting up 60 percent of our children to fail. My young children will not be taking the SBAC, especially in their elementary years, when their love of learning is paramount.
One answer: “opt out.” See Idahoans for Local Education website: http://bit.ly/1ac5aRZ. For the sake of Idaho’s children and teachers: “opt out.”
Travis Manning is executive director of The Common Sense Democracy Foundation of Idaho and can be reached at manning_travis@hotmail.com.
Well, we live in a Corporatocracy, so what do you expect, the arts? It’s all about “data” and graphs and that other garbage. The students are the widgets, get it? Have you ever worked in corporate America? I did for two years, and it was an awful, soul-destroying experience. You are basically a slave with a tie and shirt.
I went into teaching to get away from that action, and here we are 13 years later, and I am back in corporate America again. How wonderful! My department supervisor is suddenly talking about data, performance evaluation, and talking down to us like we are in a corporation. They are coming to corporatize the colleges next with temp workers and adjuncts who get paid peanuts, retention, inflated grades (wait, that already happened). If you are interested in working in education at any level, I would recommend moving to a country that actually values education (any European country will do). I don’t see a happy ending to all of this. It will be a very entertaining (yet sad) freak show to watch as it all collapses!
My second-graders this week took THREE math assessments this past week, each one at least five pages long. Next week I herd them to the computer lab for a STAR Math assessment, because, apparently, I do not have enough data on my students. I haven’t taught a math lesson in a week. Some kids are needing an hour or more to complete each assessment. Have you ever seen a young child trying to work for an hour straight? It’s torture for them and it’s torture for me. I actually hated myself all night after the third assessment: I should have just stopped them halfway through, but I am so far behind in the curriculum, I tried to just get it done. I let a curriculum pacing guide overrule what I know is best for young children. I will not do that again. And the frustrating piece in all this is that all these assessments didn’t tell me anything I already didn’t know.
I too entered teaching after many years in corporate America. Out of the frying pan into the testing fire.
“I support the Common Core standards generally, but I do not support the high-stakes test”
Heh, he, he, he, heh, heh, ha ha ha! Suckah! Git the knife out Jim, we need to fillet this one, he’s gettin a little feisty.
Standards, testing, heads, tails, testing, standards, tails, heads.
Different sides of the same coin, peas and carrots, peanut butter and jelly, unfortunately this ain’t no Laurel and Hardy of a comedic kind but the sad bastardization of the teaching and learning process, that harms many students.
yup
Señor Swacker: I think an English-to-English translation of your remarks is in order for the satire-challenged, courtesy of your friendly local KrazyTA [on call for all Quixotic Quest teachers until they close all your neighborhood public schools].
I call on the inimitable Dr. Frederick Hess of the American Enterprise Institute to give us a standard English version of what you wrote. *Although in all honesty, his yeoman’s prose is a lot less enjoyable to read than your version.*
[start quote]
In truth, the idea that the Common Core might be a “game-changer” has little to do with the Common Core standards themselves, and everything to do with stuff attached to them, especially the adoption of common tests that make it possible to readily compare schools, programs, districts, and states (of course, the announcement that one state after another is opting out of the two testing consortia is hollowing out this promise).
But the Common Core will only make a dramatic difference if those test results are used to evaluate schools or hire, pay, or fire teachers; or if the effort serves to alter teacher preparation, revamp instructional materials, or compel teachers to change what students read and do. And, of course, advocates have made clear that this is exactly what they have in mind. When they refer to the “Common Core,” they don’t just mean the words on paper–what they really have in mind is this whole complex of changes.
[end quote]
Link: http://deutsch29.wordpress.com/2013/12/28/the-american-enterprise-institute-common-core-and-good-cop/
Even a broken clock is right twice a day…
😎
It is next to impossible to turn on the radio or TV in Idaho without hearing “Don’t Fail Idaho” and cooked stats on how poorly the State’s children are doing in school. One has to wonder about the motivation of the Albertson Foundation and who exactly IS failing Idaho’s children. Idaho students hold their own on assessments like NAEP. It is true that a smaller number go on to college. The reason is they cannot afford it as Idaho has the lowest average wages in the country. Smaller numbers of students complete in 4 years but the 6 year college completion rate is not too different from that of other states. Of course this bit of data never sees the light of day in Idaho. One reason for the 6 year completion rate is that many students have a pay-as-you-go approach as that college degree may only get them the same job back in the call center.
The sad thing is, it appears that Idaho may have surpassed Utah as paying the lowest per-pupil expenditure in the nation. I didn’t think it could get worse than Utah, but sadly, I guess it does. Solidarity from your neighbor to the south. If there are protests, and I can get enough advanced notice, I will join you and encourage others to come up and join you as well. We need to stick together.
Idaho, protests were strong in 2011-2012. They starting dwindling last year, when the people rejected Students Come First, only for the Idaho School Board Association to reintroduce laws back into the 2013 legislative session.
The people voted on term limits for congress, only to be overturned by the legislature with very little protesting.
Teachers in Idaho are tired. They have been beaten down. There is a huge push for Common Core here backed by the union, Parents and Teachers Together, teachers, businesses, and School Districts.
In Idaho, they have painted the picture that those that oppose the Common Core are “Tea Partiers” that don’t want a public school system.
Idaho needs help!!
Just wait until the tests hit home. That’s what it took here in NY.
The same thing is happening in Utah, in that all of us who protest Common Core are portrayed as tea party crazies. We keep being told that the decisions have been made and that we will now be “competitive in the world.” It’s disgusting.
Hummm. Diane – If I win my School Board race here in Florida, and then advocate Opt-out from the dais, I wonder if the Guv would try to have me removed……
This is an invasion of public education. Be fierce and fearless.
Is Judge Roach up for reelection? I loved what he had to say in the new documentary Standardized: Lies, Money, & Civil Rights: How Testing is Ruining Public Education. Standardizedthefilm.com
About a decade and a half ago, a great idea was making the rounds in the education journals here in the United States. It’s one I can’t speak highly enough of. The idea was this: Summative testing should go the way of the the paddle on the eraser tray below the blackboard. Testing should, instead, disappear into instruction and take the form of formative assessment and feedback.
The idea was not new, of course. The early developers of programmed learning, back in the 1940s and 1950s, also championed this superb approach.
One of the biggest champions of this idea in the 1990s and 2000s, saw, however, which way the money was flowing in the CC$$ era, and just like the speaker in Orwell’s 1984 who changes the state that Oceania is at war with in mid sentence, he changed his branded approach (which had been adopted by lots of districts around the country) and started issuing materials suggesting that he had been in favor of high-stakes summative testing to standards all along.
In other words, he continued practicing the oldest profession (shamanism) but added to this a specialization in the second oldest profession (you know the one I mean).
Thank you Travis and all you “true” progressives who are taking on the glut of testing being hoisted onto our beautiful children . My students take MAPs three times a year , our States 5 days of CRT’s and this year we are piloting the SBAC. I already know the stress this puts upon my 8 & 9 year olds and their families who are being brainwashed to think that these assessments are somehow the whole picture of their children . Yay Idaho, yay New York for exposing this nonsense and organizing to refuse to take this test . The teachers have no voice in this , we must do what we are told.
Yes, you must do what you are told. But NO – never believe you are without a voice.
We al have voices here – and beyond. Its never wrong to speak up for the children being drowned in this cesspool of corporate reform.
“. . . “true” progressives”
One doesn’t have to be a “true” progressive to see the idiocies and idiologies of educational standards and standardized testing. Many a “conservative”, tea partier, no political affiliation and many others are against these educational malpractices (one of which Travis is fine with). Maybe that’s the definition of a “true” progressive, one who can’t see the forest for the trees.
Please, if you have not already, join BATs (BadAss Teachers)…you will hear the voices of thousands of teachers across the country and learn what they are doing to fight and stay sane!
Thank you Travis Manning for a link to an Opt Out template. I’m going to rewrite it and give it to my daughter for my grand daughter. Seems that a whole group of parents have lobbied the principal to provide an opt out room during the testing period. And this is one of the top four middle schools in Western New York where the parents are professionals who refuse to be bullied by the State Ed Dept.
It’s going to be interesting to see what happens during the assessments. And if the opt out movement is successful enough – the scores will be meaningless. Oh wait, they already are meaningless.
Here’s what Travis Manning said earlier, when he was complaining about all the “misinformation” that critics of the Common Core were spreading:
“As a teacher, I’ve read and already begun implementing the Idaho Core Standards, as have a majority of teachers across this state. In preparation for the 2014-15 school year, when students and teachers will be entirely accountable to Idaho Core Standards, I find them to be challenging and worthwhile for my students.”
At that time Manning seemed to have no apprehensions whatsoever about the testing that would accompany Common Core.
So, what made him change (sort of) his mind?
Part A Question: Which statement accurately describes the relationship between two central ideas in the biography “Abigail Smith Adams”?
a. Abigail Adams had a significant amount of political influence for a woman of her time, and she used her influence in several ways, including trying to gain rights for women.*
b. Abigail Adams was given many opportunities to prove that women could handle the same tasks as men, and she studied a wide range of topics so that she could show that women could also be educated.
c. John Adams loved and respected his wife, and the letters they wrote each other are important because they show how a typical family was able to survive during the Revolutionary War.
d. President John Adams often called upon his wife Abigail for counsel on personal and political issues, and he encouraged her to help him determine his policy on women’s rights.
Lets see what Travis thinks when one of his sped students has to respond to an MC like this sample, Grade 11 PARCC item. Then lets see what he thinks when he is told that he is ineffective because his sped student could not accurately answer items like this which require students to use un-teachable skills. Lets see what he thinks when he realizes that these tests are traps designed to trick or war down students into giving up and failing.
wear down
I see no discernible change of mind. Shill for the CCSS???
It’s an imprudent assumption we make when things are presented to us–and we all do it. We throw caution to the wind when things sound or look good and then decide it wasn’t that great after all. It’s okay to do this when it’s a minor misjudgment–like you’re only hurting yourself. But when it affects a large population…
Idaho has tied teacher pay to student success and then as teachers and students labor to provide this success, the legislators withdraw the pay incentive and offer a career ladder. They also offer a new test and no money for curriculum to support the SBAC. The public has little awareness of how Merit pay works. I think it is time for educators to get their parents, the school boards, and students on board and create an outcry to be heard around the world. Traditional teaching is not out of date. Technology has improved traditional teaching. Are you aware of what the SBAC looks like? Have you viewed curriculum that supports common core? Common core is a refining of traditional teaching methods and was needed. However, if Idaho does not have the money to improve curriculum, then it will take all educators much longer to bring our students up to standards for this the new testing. Every teacher can tell parents right now which students will likely show proficiency and which students will not. Same some money and talk to your professionals in the classroom.
Karen,
“Common core is a refining of traditional teaching methods and was needed.” What does this even mean? I thought CC was ‘just a set of standards’ and teachers were allowed to use their professional judgement to use whatever methods they saw fit.
See this post by a superintendent who has given the SBAC and says it is basically just a test of computer skills and perseverence….
https://dianeravitch.net/2014/02/10/what-went-wrong-with-common-core-testing-in-nashua-new-hampshire/
Not sure if you are pro or con CCSS and all it entails (and yes, CCSS requires the tests, you cannot separate the two)…
Tests for tots! All testing all the time!
So true, and the kids are becoming increasingly aware of our testing mania. As my second-graders were arriving this morning, I overheard one little guy talking to another. The first one said something about today being the hundredth day of school. The second one muttered, “Yeah, we’ll probably have to take a hundredth day of school test.” Again, how can we help ignite that spark that makes children eager to learn if we test them to death?
I am concerned that we will lose a generation of writers and other artists as we have become too focused on assessment and using technology as the means to assess. Using technology only to assess students will marginalize a portion of our population that expresses itself through speaking, visual art, writing, sharing, collaborating. Using so much technology is impersonal and is marginalizing so many people as our society falls more “in love” with technology.
Tee