The New York Times is convinced that No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top have been a great success, and the editorial board urges Congress to stick with annual high-stakes testing. The editorial is couched in terms of the wonderful things that have happened to children of color, echoing the “reform” theme of testing as a “civil right.” This editorial is so out of touch with reality that it is hard to know where to begin. States are now beginning to test little children for 10-12 hours to see if they can read and do math; the amount of testing and the stakes attached to it are not found in any high-performing nation in the world, only here. The billions of dollars now devoted to standardized testing is obscene, especially when many of children who need help the most are in overcrowded classes and in states that have slashed the budget and/or opened charter schools and handed out vouchers to drain funding away from the public schools.
For a different point of view, read Carol Burris’s strong article about why it is time for civil disobedience, why parents should refuse to allow their children to take the tests.
Burris writes:
It has become increasingly clear that Congress does not have the will to move away from annual high-stakes testing. The bizarre notion that subjecting 9-year-olds to hours of high-stakes tests is a “civil right,” is embedded in the thinking of both parties. Conservatives no longer believe in the local, democratic control of our schools. Progressives refuse to address the effects of poverty, segregation and the destruction of the middle class on student learning. The unimaginative strategy to improve achievement is to make standardized tests longer and harder.
And then there are the Common Core State Standards. Legislators talk a good game to appease parents, but for all their bluff and bluster, they are quite content to use code names, like the West Virginia Next Generation Content Standards, to trick their constituents into believing their state standards are unique, even though most are word for word from the Common Core.
The only remedy left to parents is to refuse to have their children take the tests. Testing is the rock on which the policies that are destroying our local public schools are built. If our politicians do not have the courage to reverse high-stakes testing, then those who care must step in. As professor of Language and Composition, Ira Shor, bluntly stated:
Because our kids cannot defend themselves, we have to defend them. We parents must step in to stop it. We should put our foot down and say, “Do it to your own kids first before you experiment on ours!”
In contrast to the New York Times, which argues for the status quo on grounds of helping minority students, Burris sharply argues:
The alleged benefit of annual high stakes testing was to unveil the achievement gaps, and by doing so, close them. All that has been closed are children’s neighborhood schools. In a powerful piece in the Huffington Post, Fairfield University Professor Yohuru Williams argues that annual high-stakes testing feeds racial determinism and closes doors of opportunity for black and brown children.
Last year, Alan Aja and I presented evidence on how the Common Core and its tests are hurting, not helping, disadvantaged students. (The links to both articles are in Burris’s article.)
Burris concludes:
I am a rule follower by nature. I have never gotten a speeding ticket. I patiently wait my turn in lines. I am the product of 12 years of Catholic schools–raised in a blue-collar home where authority was not to be questioned. I was the little girl who always colored in the lines.
But there comes a time when rules must be broken — when adults, after exhausting all remedies, must be willing to break ranks and not comply. That time is now. The promise of a public school system, however imperfectly realized, is at risk of being destroyed. The future of our children is hanging from testing’s high stakes. The time to Opt Out is now.

I canceled my subscription to that NYT-Picayune rag last year. It’s nothing but a corporate house organ anymore.
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The endorsement of CCSS and high-stakes testing = MAJOR SPIN. The marketers are doing their jobs and the oligarchs who will steal billions from our public schools are literally buying elections. This is called just doing business. Sad. Gotta read between the lines and find out who are those who will gain the most. Answer: Not our students or this country.
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“t has become increasingly clear that Congress does not have the will to move away from annual high-stakes testing.”
Agreed. Fake DC debate. They all walked in knowing they’d retain annual testing.
I think the only remaining question is what Congressional Democrats trade away to retain testing and claim a “win”.. I suspect it will be some form of “backpack vouchers” or funding portability
They announced at the outset they had one priority; testing, that was the only thing they’d fight for, and Democrats are ready to adopt the GOP position on vouchers anyway. Public schools will get tests and nothing else.
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I think it might actually be worse for public schools if Congress limits testing. It’s just more money and time to testing and the “accountability hawks” will insist on some sanction to ensure compliance.
Public schools maybe should drop out of this negotiation before they get hurt further. Not going well for them. Could get worse.
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Well, Carol, have you told your staff to not open up the boxes of tests and have them sent back to the state department with a note explaining you will not be a part of the UNETHICAL usage of standardized testing that harms many children???
Lead by EXAMPLE, Carol!!
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“Some schools went even further with testing when the federal Race to the Top competitive grant program pushed states to create teacher evaluation systems that take student test results into account. It’s up to the states to fix this problem, perhaps by identifying and discarding unnecessary tests and, if necessary, placing explicit limits on how much time can be spent on testing.”
This is an AMAZING accountability dodge by the Obama Administration. Who has been the biggest proponent of these ridiculous teacher ranking systems?
I mean, my God. How they can strut around demanding “accountability” when they take ZERO responsibility for their favorite gimmick is just shameful.
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Although I also disagree with the idea of long standardized tests for children, I am not sure how this method can change. These tests are so ingrained into our public schooling system that I believe removing them entirely might not be the best solution. What do you believe schools should do instead of standardized testing?
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Let’s try teaching!
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“These tests are so ingrained into our public schooling system that I believe removing them entirely might not be the best solution.”
Your assumption is wrong.
And why wouldn’t removing them “not be the best solution”?
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You must be very young. We really did exist for a lo-o-ong time without a mountain of standardized tests. Standardized testing does nothing to advance instruction in the classroom. It does not inform curriculum or the teaching thereof. Teachers are assessing their students every day in authentic ways that will actually help each child to grow. Is the “system” perfect? No! But standardized testing does nothing to improve the problem if it can be termed as such.
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The editorial stance of the New York Times supporting the Common Core Crap is exactly why I stopped reading newspapers before I graduated with a BA in journalism back in 1973—the traditional media in the U.S. is mostly free from government control but not free of their corporate masters.
I have a question with an answer?
What is the difference between China’s state owned media Xinhua and more than 90% of America’s private sector traditional media? Not much.
In China, the state owned media has one master. In the U.S., more than 90% of the media has six masters who may be working together: the CEOs/oligarchs of six major corporations with revenue that exceeds the budget of more than 130 countries, and both China and the U.S. media is struggling to stifle and censor the freedom of expression on the Internet from the people.
The Bix Six media corporations are: GE, News Corp, Disney, Viacom, Time Warner and CBS. In 2010, the total revenue for the big six was $275.9 billion.
The Big Six control 70% of cable TV, and they have a monopoly of 11 U.S. markets like NYC & Chicago.
http://www.businessinsider.com/these-6-corporations-control-90-of-the-media-in-america-2012-6
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Of course Burris fails to mention what’s doing the most harm to children: it’s not taking tests, but the weeks and months of test prep that replace whatever the actual curriculum is supposed to be.
The administrators, principals, and teachers who are encouraging opting out are trying to have it both ways. Campbell’s “Law” isn’t a justifiable defense. Neither is placing the security of one’s job ahead of doing what’s best for kids.
It would be truly honor-roll worthy for a school official to take a stand on test prep and publicly pledge that there will be only a bare minimum of test prep in their district, school, or classroom. The opt-out movement will remain on the fringe (60,000 out of 1.2 million kids in New York State in grades 3-8) until there is an actual benefit to it for families, and a demonstration of good faith by educators. Opting out after having suffered hundreds of hours of test prep isn’t making any kind of worthwhile statement, just a willingness to have your kid used as cannon fodder.
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Of course TIM fails to mention that when I took the IOWA test of basic skills back in 1964 my third grade teacher did not waste one nanosecond with test prep because her job wasn’t threatened with my score, my principal wasn’t threatened with a PIP, and my school’s reputation or it’s federal funding wasn’t threatened either. The test-and-punish federal reform agenda is to blame – not the teachers, administrators, or school boards being forced to play this damaging game.
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I agree.
I remember standardized testing as a tiny part of public school.
This obsession is an outgrowth of ed reform.
I can see the increase just over the last 10 years, in the same schools, between my grown and younger children. My youngest is tested more than his older brother and sister were. That’s ed reform.
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Sorry, but these justifications don’t hold any water. You can’t test prep and say that you are protecting the best interests of kids, plain and simple.
Maybe not enough educators have gotten the memo: what good is test prep if classroom teachers influence only 1-14% of a student’s test score? Is that worth wrecking months and months of a kid’s education?
The so-called “progressive” opt-out movement needs to address the test-prep elephant in the room.
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Tim
Test prep will end when the tests are dead. When the opt out (test refusal) movement reaches the tipping point, it will hopefully disable the test score data and bring an end to test-and-punish reform.
In my opinion, participating in excessive test prep is an act of cowardice and desperation, however, many teachers are micro-managed or bullied into this “worst practice”. The very best teachers ignore the demands of frightened or duped administrators, close their doors and truly do what’s best – they teach to their students.
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“The so-called “progressive” opt-out movement needs to address the test-prep elephant in the room.”
Why do you consider those who advocate for opting out as “progressive”?
Do you consider “progressive” to be a derogatory term in your sentence?
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I can’t think of anything less progressive than insisting that poor black and brown people have one educational option, a zoned district school (usually in a neighborhood that’s been hypersegregated for decades).
This insistence on neighborhood schools is important, you see. Without it, someone might devise a plan to have “those kids” end up in a school with your kids.
The “opt-out” movement in New York is closely aligned with “progressive” schools and districts, almost all of which have either negligible numbers of at-risk kids or a much lower proportion of them than their respective metro area and/or the state as a whole. As the work of Kahlenburg and others shows, reducing the concentration of high-needs students in districts and schools is a proven recipe for better student outcomes for everyone. I’ll lose the quotation marks when the “progressives” come up with some district-based plans for all schools to pitch in and do their part.
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It would be a lot more meaningful to me if Burris were an elementary or middle school principal, as it’s my sense that test prep has its biggest impact on what happens in the classroom in grades 3 to 8. And if she were an elementary or middle school principal, my followup question would certainly be, what if anything are you doing to eliminate test-prep in your school?
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So, blaming the schools and teachers to put students into the wasteful time of test-prep–instead of mean bullies who engineer teaching-to-test scheme and penalize those who refuse to do so???
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But it must be true. The New York Times is a “liberal” newspaper. Just ask my Tea Party friends.
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The NYT also claims to be a liberal newspaper but the so-called liberal movement these days has been hijacked by those who worship at the smelly feet of Milton Friedman’s trickle down economic theory—a theory, by the way, that was already proved wrong and destructive before Friedman was born.
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One funny thing- Ohio media have taken to calling it “testing season”.
The season formerly known as “spring” 🙂
They might be able to roll back the dominance of these tests if they would stop over-selling them. Rather than miraculous and marketing-based claims of “College and Career Ready!” what about if they just said “we need annual national data to track our various programs, theories and money”
I would actually be more amenable to that pitch. Try that. Try the truth. Try the “common good/common cause” argument. See how that goes.
Maybe they don’t do that because it conflicts with everything else they promote, where we’re all competing and “choosing”.
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It is funny how discordant the NYT editorial is from many of it’s articles. Why is that?
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Like most of us, the Times editors don’t read the paper.
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Great job opportunity in Fullerton California for a Superintendent who wants to work in one of the best districts in the nation. Please apply. We do not want to repeat the same mistakes of Florida. We are just beginning the testing process and we have a Governor who is on record of NOT BEING IN FAVOR OF NATIONAL TESTING.
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Here’s the comment I posted at the NYT…
I simply can’t get past the headline. What “gains” in education are documented and real since the advent of NCLB? None.
Here in Oregon, the Secretary of State audited the state for the achievement gap. Unmentioned in the analysis is the very first chart: Which showed statistically zero improvement in test scores after more than a decade of the NCLB induced school reform.
And, this report showed clear achievement gap — even after all this time with NCLB.
In our state, I estimate that achieving nothing cost us $3 billion. And that’s just Oregon. Is it possible that NCLB has wasted a trillion nationwide? I’d expect it’s getting far too close to that for comfort.
And so… It is irresponsible for the editorial board of the New York Times to take this position. Far too many crimes are committed in the name of “save our youngsters”… We’ll mark this editorial up as one more.
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When so many comments respond negatively to the editorial that they feel they have to close it to comments within several hours, it should be clear that there is a groundswell of opinion that is against the status quo. Unfortunately, our voices are so rarely heard except as a response.
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