Peg Robertson is a teacher and a founder of United Opt Out, a national group that encourages parents, students, and other educators not to take or give the state tests. She writes here that though she has refused to administer the PARCC assessments, someone else will do it. Try as she might, she admits, she cannot protect the children from endless test prep and the age-inappropriate practices introduced into the early grades by Common Core.
She writes:
“Across the nation teachers are fighting back hard. Across the nation – actually across the world – teachers will shut their doors and do their best to protect children from high stakes testing, test prep, nonstop district and state mandated testing and more. But – the truth is this, our best is not good enough, because in order to attempt to do our best we are jumping through hoops, shutting our door to secretly do what is right for children, spending our own money on resources for our classrooms and on supplies for children who have none, and we are spending hours and hours gaming our way through “teach to the test” curriculum and massive amounts of mandated corporate formative and summative assessment – in order to attempt to “do our best.”
“So, I’m going to be blunt here. I cannot do my best under these conditions. I can attempt to do my best, but my best under these conditions is not good enough. And my attempts to play the game and resist where I can will not be enough to protect your children from what is happening….
“And I cannot protect children from certain non-negotiables within common core curriculum and on-going assessment. We cannot protect the children from the common core professional development which takes us away from our buildings and leaves children with substitute teachers. As a literacy coach, I do what I can to rephrase and rid my school of corporate reform language such as rigor, grit, calibrate, accountability, no excuses and college and career ready. I can even replace these words with language that represents inquiry, heart, relationships, community, equity, creativity and more. But ultimately, all of my attempts are simply band aids.
“Even though I have done my best to make writing “on-demand” prompts developmentally appropriate for kindergarten (let’s face facts -there is NO such thing), it is still an “on-demand” writing prompt for kindergarten. Even though I will do everything in my power to support children in their inquiries about bugs, outer space, poetry, sports, cooking, their favorite authors, music, art, history and more; I cannot stop the testing train which makes stops in every classroom every week in some shape or form. The classroom is no longer driven by the rhythm of learning, it is driven by the testing schedule which continually interrupts our children’s talk and exploration of their interests – the testing schedule extinguishes the passion for learning. It makes all of us tired with the constant stop. start. stop start. as we try to regroup and get back on track with the real learning that is occurring in the classrooms. I can’t tell you how many “ah ha” moments have been lost for children as they had to break away from their projects, their thinking, their conversation, in order to hunker down over an assessment as they labor for the corporations…..
“Some days I feel like a nurse inside a war tent with wounded soldiers. And no matter how brave I am, no matter how much I stand up to these reforms, it is not enough – they have taken away so much of my power, and my ability to make professional decisions in order to protect children and do what is right for all children.
“I teach at a school with 73% free/reduced lunch. Over 40 languages are spoken within my school. I know what our children need – they need wrap around services for poverty, books, librarians, small class size, health care, nurses, counselors, recess, quality food, and the opportunity to express their interests as they talk, read, write, play, sing, dance, create and smile. But you see, that doesn’t create corporate profit. Poverty must be ignored in order to keep corporate profit churning.
“Parents, I cannot protect your children. I must be honest in telling you that the war is alive and well in our classrooms, and children are being harmed every day. What is happening is evil, cruel and abusive. Refuse the tests and deny the corporations the profit, deny the district, state and federal government your child’s data (which they can share with corporations), deny the publishing companies the opportunity to create more common core products. Without the data, the profit ends and we have an opportunity to reclaim our public schools, our profession. We have an opportunity to do what is right for all children. I am done smiling and saying, I am doing my best. I’m not.”

The more I learn about so-called public education reform, the more I’m convinced that the only thing that will stop the corporate driven, fake-education reformers will be riots in the streets that sweep the nation.
Will fools like Bill Gates wake up in time to save U.S. cities from being burned to the ground on day, or will he just board his private jet and fly to Switzerland to hide?
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Most of the people working for ed reform would stop very quickly if they were no paid positions in ed reform organizations. I suspect that for many in the long line of interconnected and interrelated, as well as commonly funded organizations (TFA, Students First, TNTP, etc), it is little more than a way to be paid, while working with their nationwide “corp” of similarly aged trendy peers who have staked their careers and professional contacts on the ed reform industry. When or if the funding ends, so will they. (Compare and contrast to the many parents, grandparents, community members, etc who are working for children against ed reform, at no pay at all.)
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maruegger,
With all of the money pouring out of the Gates Foundation, the stealthy Koch funding labyrinth, the Walton foundation—for instance, just from the Waltons more than $700 million in the last few years—-and all the other billionaire foundations that were set up to shelter great wealth from taxation, I’m sure we won’t see the fake-education reform well run dry for a long time—at least until all of these aging billionaires are dead and buried.
Maybe their children won’t be interested in using the family wealth to fight this war. We can only hope.
On that note, Monday, I went to see the latest Denzel Washington film, “The Equalizer”, and on the way home, I thought, “Why can’t we have some one like that in real life who would fix this problem his way?”
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Just let me know when!
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carry444,
No one will have to tell us when it happens. History teaches us that these things happen spontaneously like that Arab Spring in Libya and a few other Middle Eastern countries.
Leaders will emerge, as usual, and, as usual, eventually they will fight among each other to see who leads from the top, as usual.
The U.S. Revolution in the 18th century and America’s Founding Fathers was an exception to the usual course of history when these things explode and “usually” bring an end to civilization. In China’s case, one dynasty would be swept aside through one of these bloody rebellions to be replaced by the next dynasty. The current Chinese dynasty is called the Chinese Communist Party. Instead of an Emperor, the CCP has maybe 300 party members at the top who make most of the decisions as they walk a tight line to keep enough people not angry enough to explode.
When the explosion hits, the spontaneous mobs will be angry and out for blood. And anyone who looks better off than them may become easy targets.
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Bill Gates is not interested in saving U.S. Cities; he has shielded his own children from the ghastly “deforms” he continues to press on our children.
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For me, it is her observation that:
“What is happening is evil, cruel and abusive.”
that needs to be emphasized and repeated at every opportunity. It cannot be tolerated in schools at any level!
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Peg, thank you for everything you do; have done and continue to do. Parents…….they need to be made aware……..for my part I will tell every parent I see the month of October to look up “The Privatization of US Public Schools” – I wonder how many hits that would be on Google?
Peg, you are a Trailblazer and I’m grateful for your voice and your activism! I am keenly aware how tied teacher hands are!
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The Privatization of US Schools – RESULTS on Google Search:
About 6,830,000 results (0.47 seconds)
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TAGrO! Peg!!
The reason the unions won’t help is that they have been bought off by BIG BILLY G for less than a cheap hooker as far as he is concerned.
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“The Common Core”
It’s evil at it’s core
Abusive, cruel and more
The endless testing
Is growth arresting
A PTSD war
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“I am done smiling and saying, I am doing my best. I’m not.”
I think she and others have done a great job. They were completely ignored and dismissed as “self interested” for years, and now politicians are rushing to the podium to make statements about how we test too much. The best part is, they did it without a Gates grant, or a Broad endorsement, or StudentsFirst, or state and federal backing.
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The problem is the interests of those now leading the schools and the best interests of teachers, parents, and students in the classroom are not aligned. For the educorps, it is about profits, not learning. The connection between the two is weak, nevermind the fairy tail of mythical “free markets” and pixie dust of “competition”. For politicians, it is about elections and appeasing an anti-education, far-right base in order to win primaries. If an executive team worked as hard purposefully undermining and destroying a company like these political leaders are decimating our schools, the executives would be sued into oblivion by shareholders.
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Good, effective advocacy and without millions of dollars and a lobbying group 🙂
Here’s the Ohio governor:
“Gov. John Kasich recently told The Enquirer’s editorial board he is sympathetic to the charges of over-testing and promises action.
“I’m absolutely convinced we need to lower (the number of tests) … and I’m going to work to lower it,” he said.
“I’ve asked (Ohio Schools Superintendent) Dick Ross to take a look at all these tests we have.”
It’s absolute nonsense, if he “asked” anyone they are completely ignoring him – Ohio just added 7 standardized tests in high school, I don’t know where he was when they were cooking that up.
BUT at least he has become vaguely aware that there ARE (still) public schools in this state and it’s a political problem for him.
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PTSD? Absolutely. I am traumatized, beaten down, and have it in my head that I’m not good enough. As a matter of fact, even after 17 years of teaching, College degrees, and a current professional certification, I still need to prove my worth. It’s demeaning, it’s humiliating, and quite frankly, I am terrified to go back into the classroom because it is a warzone. If all teachers had the strength and the courage to untie their hands and stand up to their leaders and say enough, what are they going to do…fire us all? We need to protect our students because it is evil, it is cruel, and it is abusive. Enough already!
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Our next district professional development day includes of 90 minutes of SLO/ vendor assessment/VAM meetings and 90 minutes of literacy meetings to discuss our PK-12 writing initiative. I now have “K-5 Common Core Lesson Book” and “The Common Core Writing Book “. I teach K-2 music. 😦
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Pat reiterates my concerns. Just last night I lamented what Common Core was doing to one of my grandchildren. He is in kindergarten and won’t be 5 until the end of Oct. I looked at the homework and I see clearly that the K curriculum is now what use to be the first grade curriculum. There shouldn’t even be homework in kindergarten. The little time parents have with their children after a long day at work should be spent reading to children and talking to them about their day- not trying to comply with a teacher’s inappropriate mandates- which are ultimately the mandates of people who constructed a curriculum for kindergarteners who didn’t know their nose from their elbow.
The end of Sept.’s homework in phonics, centers around marking pictures that have a middle sound of short i and tracing over and then writing independently the short vowel words between two narrow lines. That is bad enough but to show a picture of a cup on top of saucer with a plate is ridiculous! A four year old is suppose to know that is a picture of dishes he is viewing?! Plus it is a two syllable word with a digraph! Most four and five year old’s auditory discriminatory powers are not developed sufficiently to be that discriminatory. They can hear the initial sound but not the middle sound. So my four year old grandson who entered K feeling he had the world by the tail is little by little being hit over the head with the feeling of insecurity – that he isn’t so smart after all. It was bad enough in pre k when an entire year was wasted on learning the names and sounds of the alphabet plus all the reams and reams of paper wasted on homework and work in school. There was no carry over with the names and the sounds because it wasn’t applied. Reading instruction and phonics needs to be meaningful and integrated. (Not via some meaningless asinine, trite sentences.) The same goes for teaching sight words. There has to be meaningful association. Memorizing sight words is for the birds – no transfer or carry over and will only cause a child to “blow a fuse.” The best way to teach sight words is through reading and reading numerous different types of text. Pre-school is too young for formal reading instruction and for sure to teach sight words. There are many appropriate ways to teach auditory discrimination, to enrich their hearing vocabulary and ways of strengthening the fine muscles but the teachers can’t take the time to teach skills appropriately. There are many ways to teach sight vocabulary in a meaningful way but teachers are wasting everyone’s time by sending home a list of sight vocabulary words to master. Words in isolation are meaningless- appearing is an isolated sentence isn’t going to help either. There are many ways to introduce print in an interesting and inviting way. Curriculum writers need to go back to the drawing board and the writers need to be experts in the field.
Had the writers of CC done their research they would have encountered numerous early child experts who decry pushing the children such as David Elkind’s Hurried Child and Marie Clay’s works. Marie Clay maintained that we should teach to a child’s strengths. Children need a happy environment, freedom to explore, confidence, a feeling of success, a challenge that can be met, hands on, and modeling not what teachers are forced to do today – teach to their weakness developing in the children a defeatist attitude.
My daughter’s friend is so concerned about her son in middle school. The teacher believes that he has a disability; he has not made progress since last year. What is the teacher comparing? Standardized test results? We are going to find more and more children being labeled “disabled” because curriculum and the methods of teaching are wrong.
What is going to put a stop to this madness? When children drop out of school because they can’t cope and think they can’t learn? We are building a pipeline to our jails instead of a desire to develop their talents so they in turn can help others and make this a
better world.
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This will play out like the end of the original King Kong movie. When the 3-headed beast (Common Core standards/PARCC and SBAC tests/VAM) is dead on the pavement, someone from the Resistance will say it was us who killed the beast. But a much wiser person will respond to that claim, “Oh no it wasn’t the teachers, it was the parents that killed the beast.”
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Sad but true, eloquently stated.
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The SAD part is so much has gone and little is new. I have no reason to doubt
John Taylor Gatto, how about YOU?
John Taylor Gatto spent 26 years as a New York City public school teacher. In 1991after winning his third Teacher of the Year Award, Gatto wrote a resignation letter which he submitted to the Wall Street Journal called, “I Quit, I Think” and left his job, stating that he was “no longer willing to hurt children.” Gatto’s outline his reasons for becoming disheartened in The Six-Lesson Schoolteacher where he shares that the American public school system is largely responsible for a national humanitarian crisis. In that essay Gatto points out, this system:
Teaches children that their worth is determined by other people
Causes children to be dependent on teachers/experts rather than on themselves
Praises total conformity and condemns individuality as a threat to the system
Teaches that schedule, not interesting work, is what has value
Teaches that value is only possible under conditions of competition
Leaves children with almost no private time
So much has gone and little is new…
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agree…agree…agree…school has become a place of pressure and unrealistic expectations that has both teachers and children stressed and confused…
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HAS become? Note date of JTG resignation 1991.
Read: The Underground History of American Education by JTG.
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I am in tears.
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“The classroom is no longer driven by the rhythm of learning, it is driven by the testing schedule which continually interrupts our children’s talk and exploration of their interests – the testing schedule extinguishes the passion for learning.”
You have summarized the ugly and harmful nature of federal. test-and-punish reform so perfectly. This is the Gates/Duncan/Obama K-12 legacy.
We heard you knocking
at our classroom doors
Test them baby
with your common core
ooh, ooh, the damage done
They hit the cities
all across the land
We watched the testing
and their voodoo vam
wrong, wrong, the damage done
We sing this song
because we hate your plan
We know that none of you
can understand
o u r k i d s
they will be, op – tin’ out
We’ve seen the testing
and the damage done
we-want no part of this for anyone
Now your rheeform
is like a setting sun
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Peg Robertson: thank you.
It starts with honesty.
When public school staff take responsibility for the abuses of “education reform” they are throwing themselves on the sword of—
$tudent $ucce$$. And then they get blamed for the inevitable failures!
😱
Whatever an individual can or cannot do, first do no harm to one’s own conscience.
“There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part; you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all!” [Mario Savio, 1964, Berkeley, CA]
Just my dos centavitos worth…
😎
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We have lost a lot of excellent teachers do to teaching to state tests and what they are being forced to force upon our children. I overhead a couple of teachers just yesterday talking about how even decorating their classroom door has to be in alignment with state curriculum which in the end is in alignment to state tests.
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