I am pleased to add Superintendent Greg Power to the honor roll. He spoke up to those in power in Ohio, bluntly castigating them for the “assessment madness” that is ruining education. His statement was posted online by the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy.
Bill Phillis of the Coalition writes:
“The email from Greg Power (posted below) to State Superintendent Dr. Ross expresses the viewpoint of a lot of school administrators and teachers throughout the state and nation. As the Governor and 131st General Assembly gear up to unleash more K-12 public education legislation, other public school personnel may wish to weigh in on policy matters that relate to the education of Ohio’s children.”
Dear Superintendent Ross:
I write from the field to provide feedback regarding the ongoing drive by our state and federal governments to make public education “accountable.” As an advocate for the children of the Little Miami Learning Community, I can no longer remain silent regarding the legislated testing and assessment madness that has been thrust upon our schools. What has been occurring over the last several years and what is about to be unleashed upon our students and staff is nothing short of government malpractice. In fact, I believe the following quote from the 1983 A Nation at Risk is most applicable to what is being done to public education: “If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.” Simply replace the phrase “unfriendly power” and insert our “state and federal governments.” In essence, the narrow assessment frenzy is moving us toward achieving the mediocrity referenced in the above quote.
In the name of “accountability” the new, different, and increased high-stakes assessments are in fact driving our learning environments to become so narrowly focused that the state and federal governments are creating a generation of stressed and bewildered test takers. What is being done to our children does not place their needs in proper perspective, nor does it properly support the efforts of our teachers with our children. Our schools cannot create successful, well-rounded students when there is such an overemphasis on high-stakes assessments. I would hope that it is not public education’s goal to create adults who perform well on high stakes tests, but rather adults who are good citizens with the requisite skills necessary to be economically successful citizens. Do employers require their employees to take annual high-stakes assessments on the job? What is going on now is wrong!
Recently, you made some recommendations to reduce and modify assessments and indicated this will require changes in the law. However, it appears that the “fix” will be to legislate a limit, resulting in local districts doing away with meaningful assessments that support the specific learning needs of students while maintaining the high-stakes state assessments. My district uses student assessments to progress monitor so we can ensure each student is progressing with appropriate supports and interventions. I would hate to see this go away because of a state mandated time limit on assessments. There are assessment frameworks available which provide both progress monitoring for formative instruction as well as providing summative student data which shows growth over time. Wouldn’t it be wonderful for the state to adopt such a framework absent the current high stakes framework?
As we prepare for the state-wide infrastructure test this Thursday and for the first of two twenty-day test windows beginning in February, our curriculum director, special education director, EMIS coordinator, technology director, principals, assistant principals and teachers are being required to abandon their primary functional roles to prepare for these assessments. These staff members have spent countless hours and will continue to spend countless hours in these preparation activities as we continue to receive ever changing protocol guidance that often contradicts and causes follow-on support requests from your Ohio Department of Education offices. Departmental guidance has certainly been untimely, ever changing, and at certain points unknowable. I believe the unrealistically legislated timelines of implementation for all of these changes cause even more concern. Why would anyone create such a set of circumstances? We certainly will be seeing the “fruits” of this legislative wisdom coming to full fruition in the coming months.
Of added note, our district continues to incur added expenses as we work to meet all of the requirements needed to support this mandated testing without the benefit of any added financial support from the state or federal levels. Our district has spent and will continue to spend dollars on technology to support the online components of this testing, and will most likely add staff to support this assessment framework. The costs associated with all of this are being borne in large part by the local tax payers. These dollars are better spent on other needs to support our students and their learning needs.
A guideline limitation of 6%-10% has been placed on the number of students who can utilize the “read aloud” accommodation on the ELA portion of the state assessment. We have been in contact with the Ohio Department of Education Office of Exceptional Children and have discussed our concern with this limitation at length. We do not wish to be out of compliance with the federal IDEA requirements related to our students who possess an IEP. We have been informed by your department that if we cannot attain the 6%-10% limitation on the “read aloud” accommodation, our test results above this threshold may be invalidated. After having been informed last November that districts needed to work toward this 6%-10% guideline threshold (not achieve it) we now receive ODE guidance that we must be at or below this threshold. All of this just days before the first test. Our district will endeavor to do what is right for our kids and provide the “read aloud” accommodation as verified by our teams. We will do this irrespective of what appears to us to be the arbitrary 6%-10% limitation.
Each community should have the kinds of schools it desires. We believe very strongly in local community control. My district, like many across the state, has been blessed with great kids, families, and staff. Little Miami is a great community where all of our stakeholders work toward supporting each child. In the current context of what has been legislated and mandated, continuing with measuring, assessing, quantifying, and grading our kids, staff, and schools does not provide the supports necessary for each child to succeed. In fact, the current state and federal approach hinders our schools from being able to do so. There is growing displeasure and mistrust of all that is being done to public education in the name of accountability. Please work with us to stop this madness.
Best regards,
Greg Power, Lt. Col. USAF Retired
Superintendent
Little Miami Local Schools

Certainly a great one.
I have seen four or five other honor roll-worthy open letters from superintendents in Cincinnati. Hoping more here and elsewhere will continue to speak out.
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At some point “What is going on now is wrong!” needs to be followed with “Therefore, we will no longer do it.” All these letters are great, but they’re having the same effect as all those people who are speaking up at school board meetings and legislative hearings, which is to say: absolutely none. There comes a time to stop asking and start doing.
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Also, too primary challenges.
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I respectfully contend that these letters are valuable with regards to public opinion and have been important in opening the eyes of the media. For every superintendent that speaks out, there are 100 who say nothing. Teacher opinion is ignored and discredited. Superintendents still have widespread credibility.
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I agree, and remember the presidential campaigns will be descending on this state fairly soon.
“Ed reform” isn’t going to get the universal rubber stamp it might have gotten here even a year ago. There’s genuine, specific, informed dissent and there’s a lot of it, on everything from charters to testing. They aren’t going to get a pass this time through.
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Exactly, Dienne. I am frustrated with all the letter writing and hand wringing. If the tests are harming our children, then stop the tests. That’s exactly what parents are doing when they refuse the tests. As an Ohio teacher, I am so supportive of these parents taking this courageous step, and it is courageous.
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And it has to come from the top. Tons of parents are opting out, but tons more won’t or can’t. There have also been many teachers who have been brave enough to say they won’t give the tests, but teachers are in a very precarious position considering how not only their jobs but their licenses have been threatened (although I still say some brave ones nearing retirement or who have another source of income to fall back on need to challenge that). But nothing is going to change until all the principals and superintendents who claim to support public education put their money where their mouth is and refuse the tests. The solution isn’t going to come from legislators suddenly realizing they were wrong because they read some letters, no matter how impassioned and eloquent those letters are.
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“There comes a time to stop asking and start doing.”
I absolutely agree. This letter is a bit too mealy mouthed. “Please don’t make us comply with your demands to harm our children because we don’t like it”, is not going to have much of an effect.
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Yes. Bravo.
This letter has some of the detail needed to show the absurdies in legilative micromanging, federal and state. It also discloses the no-win “guidance” offered up by State Department of Education Officials who are caught in the same legislated absurdities.
I especially appreciate this reconstuction of the infamous Nation at Risk report that helped to launch these absurdities. It is a bonus that the reconstruction of that nation-at-risk rhetoric came from a Superintendent who is willing to put his “Lt. Col USAF” Retired into the signature. His letter certainly has more credibility that the posturing of Condy Rice on national security being threated by low test scores.
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Dienne,
Thank you, it’s what I’ve been saying, over and over again!
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“Greg Power, Lt. Col. USAF Retired
Superintendent”
Not impressed!
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What do you really mean with the last line, senior Swacker?
Please educate me. Is it some sort of Vichy collaboration in disguise? May
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May,
I mean what I said.
Because someone made it up through the ranks of one of the branches of the armed services (and a friend who knows about the military far more than me questioned why he was only at the level he was at-the LC didn’t seem to impress him) means nothing to me, other than that person knew/knows how to play the “get ahead in the military game” and I don’t automatically see that as a positive thing. Actually I generally see it as quite the opposite.
I looked up the district and tried to find his education “pedigree” (not that that always means much) and I can’t find where he has been a teacher, administrator or otherwise involved in public education other than him being a supe.
If anyone has more info, I might change my mind but this seems to be a case of “Oh, let’s bring in an ex CEO or an ex military to “take control” of the situation”. The district had been in a world of financial hurt, had tried many times to raise taxes and failed. I don’t know that much but it reeks of “public schools are failing let’s bring in an outsider to take command crap”.
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I trusted your judgement.You are the best in details, senior Swacker.
So, I had an intuitive guess about the disguised Vichy collaboration.
Thank you for your important information, because I hardly trust any commander in army.
IMHO, all business corporate and army commanders have some sort of brain-washed in EGO, GREED and LUST for control.
I was kind of confused in his title. However, I thought that he may be like our regular blogger, Mr. Lloyd Lofthouse who obtained Master in Education and became teacher and writer after serving in Navy Seal. So, he is kind of impressive to me in laterally transferring from Lieutenant Colonel retiree to become Superintendent in educational field.
Yes, in a short period of time, everything will be revealed under the naked sun and public eyes. For now, according to his letter of expression, I am impressed.
We, readers need your input. Thank you again for your precious time to educate me. Respectfully yours, May
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Broad is famous for placing ex-military into supernintendo positions.
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Christine,
That’s one huge TAGrO! for that line.
“Broad is famous for placing ex-military into supernintendo positions.”
Glad I hadn’t just taken a sip of tea before reading that!! I hope you don’t mind if I use it, “supernintendo”-love it!!
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@Duane
All credit for that goes to my son. He coined it years ago when he was about 8 – the result of growing up in a household where both parents were public school teachers. He was dismayed later to find it wasn’t the real title.
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24 years as a classroom teacher – teaching students in grades 3, 5, 6, 7,8. 2 years as a middle school assistant principal, 5 years as a high school assistant principal, 4 years as Director of Administrative Services, 1 year as Director of Curriculum and Instruction. Currently in my 4th year a Superintendent having stayed when others left to fight to lead our district our of Fiscal Emergency. Don’t really care what you think of my military title – I am proud to have had the opportunity to have served in the Ohio Air National Guard for over 30 years.
Greg Power, Lt. Col. USAF, Retired
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Thank you, Greg Power, for your service as an educator and your service to our nation. And thank you for speaking out against political meddling in education.
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Greg, as a high school teacher in Cincinnati, I was particularly heartened by your letter. Thank you for your service and for your willingness to stand up to the mindless Testing Movement. Hopefully your example will embolden other superintendents to speak out.
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Dear Greg Power, Lt. Col. USAF, Retired, and Ohio Superintendent;
Hopefully, you could serve like “a Northern Star” to unite all 50 States Superintendents who will allow all teachers, students and parents to participate in ONE UNITED DAY of CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE to cultivate public (= tax payers) an awareness of CIVILITY in PUBLIC EDUCATION.
Your 24 years of being as a teacher, assistant principal, Director of Administrative Services, Director of Curriculum and Instruction, and Superintendent is added on extra 30 years of being a retiree from position as Lt. Col. USAF will definitely enhance you to be a Northern Star ONLY IF YOU believe in what you wrote in your letter. Sincerely, Back2basic.
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This Superintendent put his career, livelihood, and reputation on the line for all this Students, Teachers, and Parents. This man has principals. I just wish more Superintendents across America would state up as this Superintendent has. I don’t know this individual but just based on this letter I would bet he has an outstanding District that does not need State and Federal intervention to education all their children.
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“DETROIT, MI — Michigan’s teacher of the year railed against standardized testing while emphasizing that teachers should be respected during a speech in front of a crowd of education and business sector officials Tuesday.”
She didn’t “rail” against anything- that’s an exaggeration and makes her sound hysterical- but she did criticize testing.
http://www.mlive.com/lansing-news/index.ssf/2015/03/michigans_teacher_of_the_year.html
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Of course she “railed” – and Diane is “shrill”- code for female.
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Meanwhile, females on the rephormster side are “bold” and “shaking up the status quo”.
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To whom it may concern
In America where there are people of all walks of life from all corners of the world who come to live, work and learn how to treasure and fight hard for FREEDOM. I hope that people with conscience and appreciation for this young land with its renown in STATUS OF LIBERTY will unite to give hand to all teachers to make it happen = take back control in PUBLIC EDUCATION from the hand of foreigner and greedy corporate.
“With knowledge and belief in civility and in freedom to teach, to cultivate and learn how to live with HUMANITY, we, educators and parents prefer to die on our feet rather than to live on our knee.”
The loss of wages, career can be recovered later, but the loss of hope and belief will slowly kill us all = living with regret and without soul. I prefer to die in shark’s mouth rather than die with the loss of hope and belief in communist country.
This capitalism WITHOUT CONSCIENCE is exactly like COMMUNISM whose ideology is to transform people into SLAVERY just for food without education and humanity.
It is time to unite in one moving strong force from all working areas to demand the DEMOCRACY IN PUBLIC EDUCATION.
We only need to take one UNITED DAY to be on strike in order to make our demand to be known. It is legal to take CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE for national education in CIVILITY.
Back2basic
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“This capitalism WITHOUT CONSCIENCE is exactly like COMMUNISM whose ideology is to transform people into SLAVERY just for food without education and humanity.”
May,
As KTA might say, “You’ve hit a grand slam” with that comment and have spoken an “unvoiced” truth: Any IDEOLOGY WITHOUT CONSCIENCE is inhuman. I don’t know if it is luck or misfortune but you have lived in both and have the wisdom to see that “unvoiced truth”. I hope you don’t mind if I use the thought in the future.
Again quoting KTA: “Keep writing and I’ll keep reading”.
May peace, love and tranquility find May! 🙂
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Thank you for agreeing with me, Senior Swacker.
Also, thank you for cultivating me the story in Vichy Collaboration. I gradually learn history from all masters, gurus, and veteran educational practitioners in this forum.
At first, I thought that I was unlucky to live with communism from 1975 to 1978. However, it needs to take one to understand one. I must live through it so that I will thoroughly understand Buddha’s four principles without any reluctant doubt about all GREEDY and LUSTY people’s INTENTION for their own GAIN without any CONSCIENCE.
Although I never hold any full-time teaching position, I have been TA all my student life from VN to Canada. Certainly, I know what it takes to be conscientious sentient beings who joyfully give a hand to anyone who needs help within their knowledge and ability and without any expectation for a return of favor –
Yes, please feel free to reinforce my expression. I thought that your sentence is even better, like “Any IDEOLOGY WITHOUT CONSCIENCE is inhuman” = Any IDEOLOGY WITH expectation for a return of favor is inhuman. Respectfully yours, May
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The Superintendent of Miami Dade County should also be commended for speaking out about the test disaster in Florida this week.
Will all that is going on right now with testing and evaluations, I consider any administrator that does not speak out about what is going on to lack any moral or ethical back bone.
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This section also bothers me: “Recently, you made some recommendations to reduce and modify assessments and indicated this will require changes in the law. However, it appears that the “fix” will be to legislate a limit, resulting in local districts doing away with meaningful assessments that support the specific learning needs of students while maintaining the high-stakes state assessments. My district uses student assessments to progress monitor so we can ensure each student is progressing with appropriate supports and interventions.”
First, he’s conflating assessment with standardized testing. I don’t know of anyone who is opposed to assessment. Students absolutely should be demonstrating what they have learned. But that can – and should – take many more and different forms besides standardized testing – writing essays, giving presentations, designing and performing science experiments, holding debates, writing plays or stories, performing music, and even many thoughtful, teacher designed tests.
Second, he’s only concerned about state-mandated standardized tests because if standardized tests are limited, his favored district standardized tests will be squeezed out.
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I am a 17-year classroom veteran, and finally hit the point in my career where I am tired of sitting and watching the demise of the profession I love so much! About a month ago, I took the plunge and launched a blog of my own:
http://www.thekidneytable.com
I have been inspired by many of your recent posts, including this one, as it echoes very much the sentiments of my blog. My intention is to gather a group of problem-solvers to engage in the tough discussions that need to take place in regards to the issues in our classrooms.
We need to gather together as a society to regain the voice of the teacher in the classroom. I am saddened by how much my voice has been reduced to a whisper since I entered teaching 17-years ago.
Education is not something to be governed through policies. It requires well thought out design, trust, and follow through. My fear is that if we do not come up with good solutions to present to our legislators, we are going to be stuck in the mire of bad policy.
Kudos to those, such as this gentlemen, who is willing to put himself in the line of fire for the what is best for our students!
Thank you,
Charles K.
Centennial, CO
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Charles, please send an email to Jonathan Pelto, who runs the Education Bloggers Network and join nearly 200 other bloggers in sharing information across the nation. jonpelto@gmail.com
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Thank you so very much! I will do that!
I really enjoy your blog…keep up the great work!!!!
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Little Miami School District is near Cincinnati. It is the only school in southwest Ohio to fall under fiscal emergency. It’s taxpayers were unwilling to pass levies, in part because the district had among the highest number of underwater (financially) homes, in Ohio.
Little Miami was allowed to operate at state minimum standards. There was talk about the dissolution of the 4,100 student district and its absorption into districts, with taxpayers
who weren’t libertarians or who lived in homes that they could afford. In the past couple of years, the community climbed out of its hole. The superintendent could be a good guy or he could be someone who was arrogant and capitalized on anti-public school bias in the community.
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Hello, I just discovered that Ohio superintendent Greg Power published an email article in which he commented on “assessment madness” that is ruining education, and said “Enough is Enough.” Interestingly, on Monday, March 2, I published an article entitled “When is Enough, Enough” on this very same topic. You can read my article now posted on my blog at http://windowsonmyworld.weebly.com/blog and look for the first March entry with that same title.
Thank you,
Dr. Judith Peyton Sinclair
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Dr. Sinclair, many of us have said, “Enough is enough.” And it is.
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Please remove my name from your lists, and from all your subscriptions. Thank you. Dr. Sinclair
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Dr. Sinclair, I do not sign anyone up and I don’t remove anyone. You do it yourself.
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Yay! Stand up for our kids!
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