The Network for Public Education supports opting out of Common Core tests.
“The Network for Public Education stands in full support of parents, students and educators who choose to teach and learn about the reality of high stakes tests, opt out of high stakes tests, speak out against high stakes tests and who refuse to give those tests to students.
“Right now, in communities from the highest need to the most affluent, students, parents and educators are being punished for the courageous act of informing others about available options to opt out of high stakes tests and acting upon those options. These reprisals, often for merely learning and teaching about students’ rights, violate basic human rights and common decency.
“There is no evidence that these tests contribute to the quality of education, or help close the “achievement gap.” Since NCLB, these tests have hindered, not helped, school improvement efforts. The scores of US students in the international PISA tests have remained flat for the dozen years of high stakes testing.
“These tests, particularly those associated with the Common Core, have become intrusive in our schools, consuming excessive time and resources. These are not the kind of tests that we took when we were children. Students in grades three to eight must spend ten or more hours on testing, and enter their answers on computer keyboards. Since teachers will not see their scores for months they have no diagnostic value. They have resulted in narrow instruction and curriculum that focuses on test preparation.
“The Common Core tests, such as PARCC, SBAC and others Pearson has developed to measure the Common Core standards, have been designed to yield widespread failure for students, and thus are an inaccurate reflection of what our students are capable of doing.
Inequities in education are a real and devastating reality in our education system. High stakes tests exacerbate this inequity with their negative, disparate impact on students of color, students in poverty, English language learners, and students with disabilities.
NPE Board member Carol Burris wrote recently,
“…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.”
“NPE recognizes that not everyone is in a position where opting out of the tests is a viable option. However, we strongly support those who make that decision, and we encourage administrators, school board members and elected officials to honor this choice. We encourage teacher unions to support and defend teachers taking this stand and to support members’ rights to freedom of speech when they speak out on such issues of importance.
“Most of all, we encourage all involved to circulate information and educate ourselves, each other and especially students to make decisions about their own education including around the issue of high stakes testing.
“We do not take this position lightly, but we do so in response to a testing system that has moved far beyond what is useful, and has become a force of fear and failure in our schools; a system that is now directly attacking parents, students and educators who courageously stand to defend students.
“In order to defend our students, high-stakes testing must be halted. We stand in full support of those who opt out and encourage others to do so.”

This is good to know, as our school and district is making it difficult for students to opt out of the tests. Our students are starting to understand the futility of the tests.
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Excellent! Says it all. Parental opt-out joins “Black Lives Matter” as one of the most important democratic movement now underway. If opt-out continues spreading, it can overtake renegade school authorities, bought politicians, smug mass media, and the billionaire boys club which has been abusing our kids, wrecking our public schools, looting our school budgets, and proclaiming dishonestly that CCSS is the civil rights issue of our time.
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All officials of the NEA and AFT should focus on this one sentence from the posting:
“We encourage teacher unions to support and defend teachers taking this stand and to support members’ rights to freedom of speech when they speak out on such issues of importance.”
Time has run out because silence is consent:
“If you don’t speak out now when it matters, when would it matter for you to speak out?” [Jim Hightower]
And the time has run out to find some compromise between the wrecking ball of self-proclaimed “education reform” and genuine teaching and learning:
“The opposite for courage is not cowardice, it is conformity. Even a dead fish can go with the flow.” [Jim Hightower]
As Señor Swacker might put it, GAGA time is over. *And he, and I, don’t mean Lady Gaga.*
😎
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I just read the older post entitled “Teacher: How New Jersey is Trying to Break its Teachers.” What that teacher says is so true and it’s happening more and more. I know teachers who are spending all their time writing interim tests and interim interim tests (that’s right!), going over data, and filling in grids and sheets. There’s no more time for teaching or preparation. This is one BIG reason teachers will quit this profession. It is now full of wasted time compiling and going over worthless data. The opt-out or refuse movement is not only railing against big business, it is railing against the insidious Technopoly (Postman) in which we now find ourselves. Hooray for that!
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“If you torture your data long enough, it will confess to anything.”
A business model has no place in education. The edufakers forced a failed business model down our throats and are about to pay the price in parental outrage.
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I love it…is this original
“If you torture your data long enough, it will confess to anything.”
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Cross posted at.
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/The-Network-For-Public-Edu-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Education_Education-Funding_FAILURE_Learning-150310-860.html#comment536706
with this comment:
Thank goodness for the NPE. Finally a source that tells th public the truth about the war on public education, as the privatization movement goes to the legislatures to end public schools.
Submitted on Tuesday, Mar 10, 2015 at 3:04:04 PM
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Then there are districts & parents (and realtors) that only seem to care about how the “Opt Outs” will affect their ranking on the state report card. Frustrating. http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2015/03/09/common-core-opt-outs-drop-district-report-card-scores/24666923/
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I was listening to NPR and wondered if anyone else heard this program about health being related to other thing: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2015/03/10/377566905/a-sheriff-and-a-doctor-team-up-to-map-childhood-trauma
We just might be getting the data needed to push back on reforms and put money where it will count in more ways than one!
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Please read article I’m Slate about Sonya Mayor argument. It is based on a constitutional issue. I think what the Feds are doing to states is unlawful.
I read the blog about Vermont. I do not think the Feds can dictate to states punitive measures. Perhaps I am not seeing the differences in constitutional points. Thanks
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