The following was posted as a comment on the blog:
Dear Dr. Ravitch,
I have spent the last week and a half reeling from the shot across the bow that public education took on March 31st when the New York State Legislature ostensibly signed off on its destruction with the passing of the New York State Budget, and its attached legislation, S2006B-2015. As a teacher who is passionate about what she does, with two years of failing State Growth Scores, I know my days as a teacher are numbered. I am left with only one choice, to continue to act out of love for my students until the day comes when my district will be forced to remove me from the classroom and students I graciously serve.
My first act of love for my students, since the passing of this legislation and the absolute betrayal of my own elected officials, is the following letter I sent to the Board of Regents this afternoon.
Dear New York State Board of Regents:
This letter is in response to New York State Law S2006B-2015, dated March 31, 2015. I write you as a teacher of thirteen years who loves her profession and her students more than words could possibly capture. There has not been one day in the classroom that I wished away. Not one paycheck that I did not regard with awe over the fact that I could be paid to do a job I loved so deeply. Not one August that I did not greet with excitement in anticipation of new students, new challenges and new victories. Nor one end of school year I did not confront with sadness over the end of a ten-month partnership with my students filled with reading and writing and thinking and questioning.
Teaching is my passion. Every single day I ask myself what went wrong? Who did I not reach? What can I do tomorrow to push harder and support the growth of my students? I sincerely love teaching because after thirteen years, I am clear on only one thing – I will never have all of the answers. And I like that challenge. Each year brings new students, new families, new strengths and new areas of opportunity into my classroom. My voracious appetite for meeting their respective needs is confronted by the infinite possibilities that education offers.
This year, we had an interesting scenario. It became very clear on reading comprehension assessments that students understood what they were reading, but of the fifteen students in my class receiving Academic Intervention Services (AIS) for reading, out of a total of twenty-seven students, eight continuously earned failing scores on weekly assessments. We asked ourselves, is it the vocabulary in the questions? No. Is it vocabulary in the choices? No. We realized that students could not see the correct answers in the choices because they lacked the transferal skills to get themselves from what they knew the answers were to the choices given. We started giving the students the questions without choices, and having them write their own answers. Then we gave them the choices and they had to select the choices that most closely resembled their answers. Our failure rate dropped substantially from eight students to one to two students. This is what teaching is. Every single day we must go in, assess what our students need from us, and devise ways to meet those needs.
I often tell people that a teacher’s job is never, ever done. I could work around the clock twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week and still have things I want to accomplish in the classroom. As teachers, we have to eek out as much time as we can before school, during school and after school, and spend that time on the work we determine offers our students the greatest return on investment. This is why grading assessments we provide is so important to us. Students and teachers require continual assessment feedback so instructional time can best serve students’ needs.
Where is all of this going? It boils down to assessment. Your board has been asked to craft an APPR plan that bases 50% of a teacher’s APPR on assessments you deem appropriate for this purpose. Much of what I am about to discuss pertains solely to the current grades three through eight state testing program, but please keep in mind that these thoughts relate to any assessment we deem appropriate for removing a child’s teacher from his/her classroom.
Any assessment we use for the state’s 50% of the APPR must:
1. Include reliability and validity testing that demonstrates the instrument’s ability to measure what we are asking it to measure. Assessment in New York State public school classrooms must measure a student’s progress toward New York State Standards.
2. Be created by an entity that does not also sell curricular materials to school districts. The 2013 New York State 6th ELA exam included proprietary material that Pearson had also included in its series, Reading Street, which it sells to districts. This is a serious conflict of interest.
3. Have the ability to measure all growth a student experiences during a school year. The current methodology provides simple scores of one, two, three and four limiting its ability show us where growth has or has not transpired, for a variety of reasons.
4. Inform teachers and parents of information both parties do not already know. We know who has difficulty reading and who does not. We must use an assessment that offers rich details about where our students struggles are, as well as what students are doing well.
If we continue on our current path, teachers like me who love what we do, and have an innate desire to be the best teachers we can for our students, will be gone. For the last two years, I have been given a one and a two respectively for my State Growth Score. If you proceed with the State Legislature’s plan, and your current method of assessments, you will be taking good teachers away from the students who need them, using fraudulent instruments. With your June 30th deadline looming, I beg you to contemplate the gravity of this system, and as the law prescribes, use the next few months to speak with teachers and parents who are invested in this system, to craft a plan that places children first.
In all earnest, I am willing to meet with you anytime to discuss the frailties of our current system and measures we can take to meet the law’s deadline in a way that best serves public school children. They are what matter most.
Warm wishes,
Melissa K. McMullan
6th Grade Teacher
Comsewogue School District
Port Jefferson Station, NY
Thank you Melissa!
This is beautifully written. It appears that the creators of our new evaluation have deficient reading and comprehension skills if these and other eloquent appeals are disregarded.I believe that we must go to court if the new law is not appealed or amended, for we will all be out of work otherwise.
As beautiful as this letter is, it just makes me sad. Sad that Melissa’s job is threatened. Sad that she and others like her may no longer be working with our children. Sad that she has to take the time to write this letter. Sad that our leaders are either clueless or corrupt (Some are both). Sad that teachers are not respected enough to be allowed to design how to assess the children they teach. Sad that she has had to accept that we will all be judged through an APPR. And especially sad that children are being used as pawns by ignorant (at best) politicians.
Janice,
SAD … indeed. It’s horrific. But then, that is the deformers’ agenda, to horrify and sadden while they rape and pillage.
Thank you New York State Senate Education Committee Chairman John J. Flanagan, Jr. for doing all you can to shaft public education and public school teachers. You didn’t get NYSUT’s endorsement in 2010 and you are angry. You rake in tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the billionaire backers of charter schools. You are a disgrace to the office you hold. The people of your district are learning more about you every day and seeing that you care more about yourself that the children that attend our schools.
Politicians have sold out our students. They would rather support vendors of educational services that promote the stacking and ranking of our students and play the blame game with caring teachers like Melissa than engage in meaningful discussion on educational issues. The pursuit of knowledge must be distilled onto scantron sheets because the corporations demand the “one size fits all” assessment, while a great many students would do better through more constructivist form of assessment.
Melissa’s letter points out that Pearson included reading passages from their instructional materials in their assessment. How many additional copies of their texts were sold as a result of that single unethical practice? How many instructional leaders who feel tremendous pressure to improve outcomes picked up on Pearson’s not so subtle message to “buy our instructional materials because they closely parallel the Common Core Standards/Assessments.” This whole thing is corrupt from top to bottom! More New Yorkers need to fully understand that former Commissioner David Steiner quietly resigned that post after accepting expensive international travel through the Pearson Foundation and signing a $32M contract for Pearson assessments. Corrupt from the start!
What a great letter. Thank you for sharing it.
#IAmMelissa
A couple of things:
1. A test must ” Have the ability to measure all growth a student experiences during a school year. ” This is not possible to measure with one test or any test for that matter.
2. “the frailties of our current system” The current APPR system is not about frailties. It is an evaluation plan designed to fail students and teachers. That’s not “frailty.” It’s a planned and concerted attack against students and teachers.
3. No test that was designed to assess students was ever expected to measure teacher “effectiveness.”
Great points!
Practical knowledge with experiences is the true wisdom and it represents for nobility.
Conscientious educators and scholars who have wisdom will always have compassion and courage.
All leaders of all fields, who only have theoretical knowledge without living through whatever they blindly support or believe in, are cowardly, bully, snobbish and dangerous to the welfare of society, community and honest/noble people.
I hope that all conscientious educators with wisdom will unite in order to come up with the BEST strategy, plan and solution for preserving, protecting and restoring the true American Public Education to its original intent and design = cultivation of living in democracy with responsibility and appreciation.
I just went to watch the movie “Women in Gold” which depicts how cowardly Austrian leaders in WWI who co-operated with Hitler to loot and to bully all “good” and “noble” families” who are famous in music and painting.
I mention this movie because the American Supreme Court has the wisdom in its judgment. I am sure that it would be the right time and moment that all conscientious educators will apply what they are teaching in order to regain what belongs to American Public according to American Constitution’s Main Goal = DEMOCRACY. back2basic
I am a conscientious educator willing to stand up and fight for rich, authentic public education. We must do so for the students we love dearly, especially those for whom we are the only voice. I will not relent until children in my classroom are unharmed by political and corporate benefactors.
Regent Tilles provided the only response to my letter (which went to every member of the board). Here is his response which indicates quite clearly that the only choice we have now is to starve the data:
“I agree. I don’t know that the new law allows us any discretion but I won’t vote for the prescription that is suggested. Thank you for your input.”
Regent Tilles 4/9/15
The founding fathers knew that the tree of liberty must occasionally refreshed with the blood of tyrants…Sue NYSED? Perhaps it would bring about change. Opting out of tests sends a better message. Our union leaders need to fight back harder! Say no to b.s. APPR scams, even if we are offered a hand in creating them…NYSUT had a hand in this as well, but many said nothing. Everyone needs to resist and protest in any way they can. A little rebellion now and then is needed so that teachers like Melissa won’t screwed out of their careers.
Also lost in this conversation is simply logic: WE test our children ourselves to assess their progress–which is ultimately reflected by their grades and REPORT CARD. That is the only document that is necessary. Maybe we should assess our legislators by voter turn out, how many times they vote, write laws, pass laws and how often these laws are not obeyed
I’m the mother of a sixth grader with comprehension issues, and I plan to try the strategy you describe in paragraph 3 of your letter. It makes perfect sense. Thank you!
It’s a shame this well-written and well-reasoned letter will never be read by the people to whom it is directed.
Facts, reason and reality matter nothing to them; it’s all about power, control and money.