Marie Corfield, teacher and education activist, tells here the worst PARCC story she ever heard. It is short and sad.
Can you top this?
Marie Corfield, teacher and education activist, tells here the worst PARCC story she ever heard. It is short and sad.
Can you top this?

The Story reminded me of the anti-war version of laying burdens down:
I’m gonna lay down my burdens down by the riverside
Down by the riverside down by the riverside
Oh I’m gonna lay down my burdens down by the riverside
Ain’t gonna study war no more
Well I ain’t gonna study war no more ain’t gonna study war no more
Ain’t gonna study war no more
I ain’t gonna study war…
We need new anthems that capture the spirit of collective action for our time– a movement for economic and social justice of which the struggle for democratic equitable education is an integral part.
http://www.arthurcamins.com
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Right on!
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Marie’s wonderful and touching story is a blessing to all of us who opt out our kids from PARCC.
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Reblogged this on Who's Minding the Children? and commented:
This is incredible!
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Thank you for sharing!
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A beautiful story. I would have responded to Marie directly, however that would have meant registering with yet another of our ‘Big Brothers’. (The original internet, designed with public money, has been thoroughly co-opted and, therefore, corrupted).
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Thank you, John. Yes, it seems that Sting was right, “Every move you make… I’ll be watching you.”
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I have said this before, and I am saying git again, this is a visual world… someone needs to make a documentary and SHOW the stories, not jus t of th kids, but of the trauma to teachers who never expected the contempt that has been heaped on them.
My story is just one of many which would bring people to tears. David Paker, Walter Porr, Pi Lian Tu, Lorna Stremcha… all stories of teachers that were in that first assault, the one that took out the teachers so the schools would fail.
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NJ has had its share of standardized tests before PARCC: NJASK was attached to NCLB; HSPA (high school proficiency assessment) was required for all 11th graders. Neither produced the level of fear and anxiety we are now seeing with PARCC. When children pray to God to deliver them from a test, something is very wrong.
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Yes, I took “achievement tests” way back in the late 50’s to early 60’s in elementary school. There was no fear attached to them that I remember. They were just something we did every other year or so. The fear is conveyed to these student from adults: teachers,administrators, and parents – in other words, stakeholders. They all have or feel they have some stake in the results of tests that children take. There is something very wrong here.
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That brings tears to my eyes. My third grade child is a wreck over the NYS tests. I’m sure she would have written that too if given the opportunity.
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Finally an issue that the religious right and secular liberals can agree on–end common core, end high-stakes testing!
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Unfortunately, this definitely will NOT be “the worst PARCC story…ever heard.” In fact, there’s a pretty sad post from a Chicago mom since this one. Wait for it–we’ll, once again, probably be hearing stories about hospitalized (physically, even terminally ill & mentally ill) children having to take the tests. I think I’d made a comment on a recent post about an autistic student who needed to tell the teacher/test administrator that he refused to take CCRAP (because parent opt out letters weren’t being accepted), but that he was unable to verbalize this decision &, so, was made to take the test.
Pretty sad story.
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