Today, a dozen civil rights groups released a statement critical of those who oppose standardized testing. Their statement is titled: “We Oppose Anti-Testing Efforts.”
The Network for Public Education disagrees with this criticism and declares its support for those who refuse the tests. We believe that those who resist the overuse and misuse of standardized tests serve the cause of equity. The NPE statement was written by Seattle teacher Jesse Hagopian and the NPE board.
Please read both original statements. The NPE statement contains many links for documentation.
Resistance to High Stakes Tests Serves the Cause of Equity in Education
Authored by Jesse Hagopian and the NPE Board of Directors
Today several important civil rights organizations released a statement that is critical of the decision by many parents and students to opt out of high stakes standardized tests. Though we understand the concerns expressed in this statement, we believe high stakes tests are doing more harm than good to the interests of students of color, and for that reason, we respectfully disagree.
The United States is currently experiencing the largest uprising against high-stakes standardized testing in the nation’s history. Never before have more parents, students, and educators participated in acts of defiance against these tests than they are today. In New York State some 200,000 families have decided to opt their children out of the state test. The largest walkout against standardized tests in U.S. history occurred in Colorado earlier this school year when thousands refused to take the end of course exams. In cities from Seattle, to Chicago, to Toledo, to New York City, teachers have organized boycotts of the exam and have refused to administer particularly flawed and punitive exams.
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan attempted to dismiss this uprising by saying that opposition to the Common Core tests has come from “white suburban moms who — all of a sudden — their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were, and their school isn’t quite as good as they thought they were.” Secretary Duncan’s comment is offensive for many reasons. To begin, suburban white moms have a right not to have their child over tested and the curriculum narrowed to what’s on the test without being ridiculed. But the truth is his comment serves to hide the fact that increasing numbers of people from communities of color are leading this movement around the nation, including:
Members of the Baltimore Algebra Project organized a die-in of recent Black graduates who took over a Baltimore school board meeting in protest of the school closures that had been facilitated in part by labeling them failing with test scores. Heritage High School graduate Antwain Jordan said of the plan to close his alma mater, “The education system, there is no value on black life in this country. That’s nothing new, it’s not a secret. It’s the status quo, which is why these things are allowed to happen.”
During the first week in March, several New Mexico schools with Latino/a student populations of over 90% organized mass walkouts against the Common Core PARCC tests in Albuquerque and across New Mexico, with the message, “We are not a test score.”
On Feb. 17th the Newark Student Union, an organization led primarily by students of color, occupied the Newark school district headquarters in part because of their opposition to the implementation of the new Common Core tests.
On April 7th Gerald Hankerson, the President of the Seattle/King County NAACP chapter launched a press conference against the new Common Core, Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC), tests, by saying, “…the Opt Out movement is a vital component of the Black Lives Matter movement and other struggles for social justice in our region. Using standardized tests to label Black people and immigrants ‘lesser,’ while systematically under-funding their schools, has a long and ugly history in this country.”
You would expect the multi-billion dollar testing industry not to celebrate this resistance. Conglomerates such as Pearson, the over 9 billion dollar per year corporation that produces the PARCC test, could stand to lose market share and profits if the protests continue to intensify. But it is unfortunate that more civil rights groups have not come to the aid of communities resisting the test-and-punish model of education. In a recent statement issued by the national leadership of some of the nation’s most prominent civil rights organizations, they wrote:
“Data obtained through some standardized tests are particularly important to the civil rights community because they are the only available, consistent, and objective source of data about disparities in educational outcomes even while vigilance is always required to ensure tests are not misused.”
We agree that it is vital to understand the disparities that exist in education and to detail the opportunity gap that exists between students of color and white students, between lower income students and students from more affluent families. There is a long and troubling history of schools serving children of color not receiving equitable access to resources and not providing these students with culturally competent empowering curriculum. Moreover, the schools are more segregated today than they were in the 1960s—a fact that must be particular troubling to the NAACP that fought and won the Brown vs Board of Education desegregation decision. For these reasons, we understand why national civil rights organizations are committed to exposing the neglect of students of color.
Yet we know that high-stakes standardized tests, rather than reducing the opportunity gap, have been used to rank, sort, label, and punish students of color. This fact has been amply demonstrated through the experience of the past thirteen years of NCLB’s mandate of national testing in grades 3-8 and once in high school. The outcomes of the NCLB policy shows that test score achievement gaps between African American and white students have only increased, not decreased. If the point of the testing is to highlight inequality and fix it, so far it has only increased inequality. Further, the focus on test score data has allowed policy makers to rationalize the demonization of schools and educators, while simultaneously avoiding the more critically necessary structural changes that need to be made in our education system and the broader society.
We also know that standardized testing is not the only, or the most important, method to know that students of color are being underserved; student graduation rates, college attendants rates, studies showing that wealthier and predominantly white schools receiving a disproportionate amount of funding are all important measures of the opportunity gap that don’t require the use of high-stakes standardized tests.
The civil rights organizations go on to write in their recent statement on assessment,
That’s why we’re troubled by the rhetoric that some opponents of testing have appropriated from our movement. The anti-testing effort has called assessments anti-Black and compared them to the discriminatory tests used to suppress African-American voters during Jim Crow segregation. They’ve raised the specter of White supremacists who employed biased tests to ‘prove’ that people of color were inferior to Whites.
There are some legitimate concerns about testing in schools that must be addressed. But instead of stimulating worthy discussions about over-testing, cultural bias in tests, and the misuse of test data, these activists would rather claim a false mantle of civil rights activism.
To begin, we agree with these civil rights organizations when they write that over-testing, cultural bias in tests, and misuse of test data are “legitimate concerns about testing in schools that must be addressed”—and in fact we hope to hear more from these civil rights organizations about these very real and destructive aspects of high-stakes standardized testing. Moreover, we believe that when these civil rights organizations fully confront just how pervasive over-testing, cultural bias and misuse of data is in the public education system, these facts alone will be enough to convince them join the mass civil rights opt out uprising that is happening around the nation. Let us take each one of these points in turn.
Over testing
The American Federation of Teachers (AFT, the second largest teacher’s union in the nation) conducted a 2013 study based on a analysis of two mid-size urban school districts that found the time students spent taking tests claimed up to 50 hours per year. In addition, the study found that students spent from between 60 to more than 110 hours per year directly engaged in test preparation activities. The immense amount of time devoted to testing has resulted in students in a constant state of preparation for the next high-stakes exam rather than learning the many skills that aren’t measured by standardized tests such as critical thinking, collaboration, civic courage, creativity, empathy, and leadership. The new Common Core tests are only in math and language arts and thus have served to skew the curriculum away from the arts, physical education, civics, social studies, science, music, and a myriad of other subjects that students of color are too often denied access to.
Cultural bias
Standardized tests have repeatedly been found to contain cultural biases. The process by which test questions are “normed” tends to eliminate questions that non-white students answer correctly in higher numbers. In New York, the number of Black students rated “below standard” jumped from 15.5% to 50% with the introduction of new Common Core tests. English learners did even worse – 84% tested “below standard” on the new tests. This sort of failure has devastating effects on students, and does not reflect their true abilities.
Violations of student privacy
Common Core tests are associated with the collection of unprecedented levels of data from individual students, with few safeguards for student privacy. These systems allow for-profit testing companies, and third party companies, access to information that could be used against the interests of students in the future.
However, if those problems weren’t enough there are a myriad of other ways that these high-stakes standardized tests are being used to perpetuate institutional racism.
Perhaps the most curious omission from their letter is the fact that they assert that, “The anti-testing effort has called assessments anti-Black and compared them to the discriminatory tests used to suppress African-American voters during Jim Crow segregation,” yet they offer no rebuttal of the assertion that the standardized tests today share many of the characteristics of the discriminatory exams of the past. As a recent editorial by the social justice periodical Rethinking Schools asserted:
The United States has a long history of using intelligence tests to support white supremacy and class stratification. Standardized tests first entered the public schools in the 1920s, pushed by eugenicists whose pseudoscience promoted the “natural superiority” of wealthy, white, U.S.-born males. High-stakes standardized tests have disguised class and race privilege as merit ever since. The consistent use of test scores to demonstrate first a “mental ability” gap and now an “achievement” gap exposes the intrinsic nature of these tests: They are built to maintain inequality, not to serve as an antidote to educational disparities.
This is why some of the most prominent early voices of opposition to standardized testing in schools came from leading African American scholars such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Horace Mann Bond, and Howard Long. Du Bois, one of the most important Black intellectuals in the history of the United States and a founding member of the NAACP, recalled in 1940, “It was not until I was long out of school and indeed after the [first] World War that there came the hurried use of the new technique of psychological tests, which were quickly adjusted so as to put black folk absolutely beyond the possibility of civilization.”
The great educator and historian Horace Mann Bond, in his work “Intelligence Tests and Propaganda,” wrote this statement that so clearly reveals one of the primary flaws of standardized testing that persist to this day:
“But so long as any group of men attempts to use these tests as funds of information for the approximation of crude and inaccurate generalizations, so long must we continue to cry, “Hold!” To compare the crowded millions of New York’s East Side with the children of Morningside Heights [an upper-class neighborhood at the time] indeed involves a great contradiction; and to claim that the results of the tests given to such diverse groups, drawn from such varying strata of the social complex, are in any wise accurate, is to expose a fatuous sense of unfairness and lack of appreciation of the great environmental factors of modern urban life.”
Bond was expressing then what is today know as the “Zip Code Effect,”—the fact that what standardized tests really measure is a student’s proximity to wealth and the dominant culture, resulting in wealthier, and predominately whiter, districts scoring better on tests. Their scores do not reflect the intelligence of wealthier, mostly white students when compared to those of lower-income students and students of color, but do reflect the advantages that wealthier children have—books in the home, parents with more time to read with them, private tutoring, access to test-prep agencies, high-quality health care, and access to good food, to name a few. This is why attaching high-stakes to these exams only serves to exacerbate racial and class inequality.
This point was recently driven home by Boston University economics professors Olesya Baker and Kevin Lang’s 2013 study, “The School to Prison Pipeline Exposed.” In this peer-reviewed study they reveal that the increases in the use of high-stakes standardized high school exit exams are linked to higher incarceration rates. This landmark study should be a clarion call to everyone interested in ending mass incarceration to end the practice of high-stakes exit exams in high school and work towards authentic assessments.
A July, 2010 statement authored by many of the same civil rights organizations that penned the aforementioned letter titled, “Framework for Providing All Students an Opportunity to Learn through Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act,” stated:
“The practice of tracking students by perceived ability is a major civil rights obstacle…Ideally, we must provide opportunities for all students to prepare for college and careers without creating systems that lead to racially and regionally identifiable tracks, which offer unequal access to high-quality.
We agree with this statement and thank these civil rights organizations for raising concerns about the terrible effects of tracking on the public schools and the detriment that tracking has been to Black students, other students of color, and low-income students.”
We only want to emphasize that the standardized exams they are now defending are one of the most significant contributing factors to the tracking and racial segregation of students into separate and unequal programs and schools.
In that same “Framework” document the civil rights groups write:
“Because public schools are critical community institutions especially in urban and rural areas, they should be closed only as a measure of last resort. And where a school district deems school closure necessary solely for budgetary or population reasons, the burdens cannot be allowed to fall disproportionately on our most vulnerable communities.”
Again, we agree, but we want to point out that it is the use of test scores in labeling schools as “failing” that have contributed to clear cutting of schools that serve students of color in cities around the nation—most notably the closing of 50 schools in Chicago last year all in Black and Brown neighborhoods.
We call on the civil rights community to support the work of educators around the nation who are working to develop authentic forms of assessment that can be used to help support students to develop critical thinking. Innovative programs like New York City Consortium Schools have a wavier from state standardized tests and instead use performance based assessments that have produced dramatically better outcomes for all students, even though they have more special needs students than the general population—and have demonstrated higher graduation rates, better college attendance rates, and smaller racial divides in achievement than the rest of New York’s public schools.
Finally, we ask that you consider the rousing call to action against the new Common Core tests that was recently issued by the Seattle/King County NAACP chapter in the following statement:
It is the position of the Seattle King County Branch of the NAACP to come out against the Smarter Balanced Assessment tests, commonly referred to as SBAC. Seattle and Washington State public schools are not supplied with proper resources and a lack of equity within our schools continue to exist.
The State of Washington cannot hold teachers responsible for the outcome of students test results; when these very students are attending schools in a State that ranks 47th out of 50 States in the Nation when it comes to funding education. Furthermore, Washington State cannot expect the majority of students to perform well on increased targeted performance assessments while the State continues to underfund education in direct violation of a Washington State Supreme Court Order. We also know that our students of color are disproportionately underfunded and will disproportionately be labeled failing by the new SBAC test.
For this reason, we view the opt out movement as a vital component of the Black Lives Matter movement and other struggles for social justice. Using standardized tests to label Black people and immigrants as lesser—while systematically underfunding their schools—has a long and ugly history.
It is true we need accountability measures, but that should start with politicians be accountable to fully funding education and ending the opportunity gap. The costs tied to the test this year will run into the hundreds of millions of dollars. If the State really wants students to achieve academic performance at higher levels these dollars should be put in our classrooms and used for our children’s academic achievement, instead of putting dollars in the pockets of test developers.
We urge families to opt out of the SBAC test and to contact their local and state officials to advise them to abide by the State Supreme Court McCleary decision to fully fund education.
–Rita Green, MBA; Seattle King County NAACP Education Chair
We join the Seattle NAACP in calling for true accountability for educational opportunities. For too long, our nation has labored under the illusion that “shining a light” on inequities is an adequate remedy. Inequitable opportunities are manifestly evident to anyone who cares to look. The use of tests for this purpose has become part of the problem, rather than a solution. We reiterate our support for parents and students who make the difficult choice to opt out of high stakes tests, and call on our nation’s leaders to shift policies away from these tests.

These groups will be outflanked if they pin hopes of equitable funding to standardized tests. Wealthy children are already advantaged and can skip the impact of these tests. Middle class kids, all races, will be in the suburbs and continue to score higher. Poor intercity and rural kids can point to the tests all day long, but that doesn’t make dollars flow. If tests continue to unfairly punish and blame teachers for income inequality, no educator will want to teach where they are fired unjustly in a few years.
Here in Ohio, we had the state supreme court rule many times education funding was flawed. Legislators have done little.
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These groups are most certainly reflecting the desire of some pro-charter school big donors — such a shame. The biggest question is why they have not said a word during the past many years when test results obviously showed the results of underfunding for the schools serving low-income students of color. If there has been no accountability in 10 years of testing, why are these groups assuming there will be some in the next 10? And why would they hope to continue to give the testing industry hundreds of millions of dollars to learn something we already know instead of fully funding public schools that serve low-income students?
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I would be very interested to see the donor lists of these organizations and I would bet the rent that many, if not all, receive huge sums from reformists and that reformist alumnae sit on their boards. I know the Urban League has questionable ties. Dirty money for dirty politics. Sad day. The Black Agenda Reportmuas dealt with this issue very well. The fact that they blindly and unquestioningly accept the so-called “validity” of these hokum tests shows the underlying disconnect between their staed position and research-based reality.
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Yes, The Black Agenda Report has addressed this matter several times, including this article, “The Black Misleadership Class Needs Unmasking”
http://blackagendareport.com/content/black-misleadership-class-needs-unmasking
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Also see, “Corporate Funding of Urban League, NAACP & Civil Rights Orgs Has Turned Into Corporate Leadership” http://www.blackagendareport.com/corporate-funding-urban-league-naacp-civil-rights-orgs-has-turned-corporate-leadership
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And there is also this youtube video: “The Black ‘Mis-Leadership’ Class”
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If you go to the Gates foundation website you can easily track the money they have invested in a number of these groups. The messaging campaign on behalf of testing is now moving to administrators of higher education, many already obliged to these “change agents, from grants awarded to them or looking for perks. The campaign is being lead by Michael Kirst. He is asking higher educators to accept PARCC SBAC test scores in lieu of others like ACT and SAT. In effect, the campaign is saying that academic freedom in making decisions about college admissions should be tossed, just follow the crowd of true believers in the Common Core and tests…and the higher administrators are hopping on the bandwagon, many without looking beyond the fancy press from the pros hired to portray the Common Coe and tests as if a gold standard. SBAC cut scores have been set so that 89% of students in grade 11 are unlikely be proficient at the level required to be deemed college and career ready. The opt out movement will really take off when the scores on these tests are released in late summer, early autumn..
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The civil rights groups are suggesting in this letter that dialogue with the powers that be would be a better idea than opting out. But dialogue has not worked. President Obama, Arne Duncan, Governor Cuomo, and all the other politicians, “reformers,” etc. have not listened. The time for mere dialogue has passed. The action of opting out is finally getting everyone’s attention.
I fully support those who are opting out. It is time for real reform. The reform we need to make right now is to end the excessive testing. It is such a waste of instructional time and resources.
If we need data from standardized testing, then we can just use sampling. We will have valid data at a fraction of the cost in terms of wasted time and resources. To suggest that we must choose between testing as it is done now or no testing at all is a false dilemma.
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http://www.civilrights.org/about/the-leadership-conference/executive_commitee.html
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Civil Rights groups should file a class action against Public Education claiming local school boards knowingly allow ‘disadvantaged kids’ to pass from grade to grade and then graduate without cirriculum mandated mastery of the basic skills needed to get and keep a ‘good’ 21st century job. Nothing will change until the ‘haves’ acknowledge the ‘have nots’ must get a good education to avoid the collapse of our economic system. Sadly, if school boards won’t reallocate resources for altruistic reasons maybe the courts can show them it’s in their best interest to finance after school and weekend ‘catch-up’ sessions for the needy with funds from gifted student programs. It should be the mandate of this institution called Public Education, don’t you think?
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I”m all for spending more on public education, especially for summer sessions and tutors for struggling students. That’s a great idea. We can stop testing so much and shift resources to actual teaching.
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What’s your solution to the problem of “social promotion”? What should be done with a child who is not on “grade level” by the end of the year? Especially considering that a child held back even once, let alone multiple times, is at significantly greater risk of dropping out of school altogether, and without a diploma it is virtually impossible to get a legitimate job, let alone one that pays a living wage.
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Of course no test is perfect but to say they’re “invalid” is plainly incorrect. As with everything in the real world, analysts must use limited data to improve both learning tools and their responsiveness to the individual needs of students. Personalize learning is the obvious objective with interactive software the only economically feasible solution. So why hasn’t Gates or Apple provided us with a suitable platform?
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The pet dream of ending social promotion runs into reality here:
The formula for predicting HS dropouts:
(Student age in June of 8th grade) + 4 = 19 or older.
Nor can we have 17 year olds mixing it up with 8th graders.
Instead of calling for an end to social promotion. how about a call for quality Pre-K and small class sizes.
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Diane, the answer isn’t holding a kid back for a year! It’s paying teachers trained to use engaging, interactive learning software to bring ‘failing’ kids up to speed as soon as their shortfall is detetected (through testing). These help sessions would be held after school and on weekends win two objectives: (1) get help To the child AFSAP (2) potentially inconvenience the parent so as to get them engaged in motivating the student. Funds to pay for ‘extra help’ for these deserving kids will come from the regular budget forcing school boards to consider using cheaper automated, personalalized learning tools for everyone.
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Unfortunately, the intensive assistance these kids need to bring them up to level is expensive and districts are eliminating programs, not expanding them. I remember special half year programs instead of simply repeating a grade. – grade 1 1/2, not quite 2, to focus on reading or math issues. Repeating a grade doesn’t address the reasons a child failed the first time around – it’s just more of the same.
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Hey, Folks, Anytime someone here suggests that the answer for poor children who are struggling in school is “software,” who is so against elected school boards that he says they should be sued, but who fails to mention politicians that starve public schools by cutting budgets and diverting funds to charters and for-profit enterprises, know that you are hearing from a corporate “reform” troll. This is one who stands to profit, too: https://www.linkedin.com/pub/kent-harris/33/14a/a01
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After thousands of students at Seattle high schools opted out of the SBAC test during the past couple of weeks, the Washington State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Randy Dorn, has called for an investigation into teachers in Washington state who may have encouraged students to opt out of the SBAC test. It will not take much of an investigation to find that Jesse Hagopian has written a book about this topic. The right to an education free of high stakes testing is the civil rights issue of our time. Thank you Jesse and NPE for sticking up for the rights of our kids to have a real education and not just Drill and Kill Test Til You Drop Pearson Propaganda.
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Yes – in my district they have issued stern “warnings” about teacher-encouraged opt-outs and the reprimands we may receive if they find out we informed parents about opting out. Like our parents and students aren’t capable of finding the opt out information on their own and making their own informed decision?
Randy Dorn can take his opt-out witch hunt and his good buddy Arne and stick ’em both down a rat hole. There are plenty of rats in Olympia, I’m sure he’ll be able to find one pretty quick.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
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“But instead of stimulating worthy discussions about over-testing, cultural bias in tests, and the misuse of test data…”
But that’s exactly what the anti-excessive testing parents did. They started a real debate.
In Ohio we got a committee of people who actually live here and work in our schools to make decisions on testing- not the Fordham people, not StudentsFirst- people who work with our kids in our schools.
“Requiring students to take standardized tests that are shorter and given once a year instead of twice is among the recommendations of an Ohio Senate advisory committee charged with studying the issue.
The committee, appointed last month, also recommended that the testing window be close to the end of the school year to provide more time for classroom instruction and less disruption.
The 30-member committee of teachers, parents, school leaders and policymakers serving on the committee were charged with providing advice to the Senate on how to improve state testing.”
The tests consumed public schools, and no one did anything to stop it. It went on for years, and the Common Core tests would have worked the same way if the anti-testers hadn’t intervened. The Common Core tests WERE being used that way in NY-Cuomo took those test scores and immediately used them to beat up public schools and push his political agenda. That would have happened in huge swathes of the country.
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It saddens me to see that the very people who the test hurts the most are the ones who cry – “don’t stop, keep on punishing me, it’s the only way I know you still care”.
We’ve known for years that standardized tests are skewed in favor of suburban white kids (yes, even back in the 1970s we knew that the SAT was rigged). Now that the test is screwing everybody, there is a strong reaction. Yet, even after all the publicity, the leaders of the minority groups don’t seem to realize the harm that is being done in the name of “equality”.
Out of everyone, they should realize that the system is discriminatory. And the teachers who are fighting against Common Core, especially in the urban areas, are fighting for the rights of their minority students.
Why don’t more people realize that? Why do so many believe in the rhetoric?
Ellen #Confused
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Also, I hate to say it. but this is deeper than testing as far as leadership at the top. This is a way of thinking, an approach to management , and the testing is just one piece.
This is Future Ready. The administration’s big push for tech in public schools.
It starts with (incredibly!) a mandated standardized assessment (which they contracted out) and goes on to direct nearly every aspect of how a school district should use technology.
They don’t trust principals to make any decisions. They’re trying to manage and control every aspect of how they use technology in schools. They can’t “partner” with public schools if they’re directing everything. That isn’t how “partnerships” work.
“The Future Ready District Assessment includes a series of questions to help each district frame its vision for student learning, identify key changes needed to achieve that vision, and specify how technology can align overall efforts to achieve higher college- and career-ready standards. The assessment evaluates a district’s readiness in seven key areas that drive student learning: curriculum, instruction, and assessment; professional learning; technology, networks, and hardware; budget and resources; data and privacy; use of time; and community partnerships.”
http://www.futurereadyschools.org/assessment
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Future Ready is about helping tech corporations grow their Ed businesses
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It’s manipulative, because they set and define the terms of what makes a district “future ready”.
Here’s a sample report card for a hypothetical district. The administration and the contractor put every district inside this box- if the district doesn’t meet these requirements they get a lower score:
Click to access Sample%20Future%20Ready%20Schools%20Self-Assessment.pdf
That isn’t “empowering” managers. It’s tightly controlling them and also limiting any debate. Why are these goals the gold standard? Who decided? Where’s the evidence that a big investment in devices is a good value for schools?
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Another promoter of this mantra is Cincinnati-based KnowledgeWorks.org an early enthusiast and still pressing for competency based personal learning and all of that jazzy language to criticize all place- based education in schools and demean low-tech or no-tech education in favor of on- line everything–available all the time with badges and certificates awarded for competence and other achievements, Their future scenarios are worth a look along with the many new and pretentious titles for specialist who will help the learner navigate the wonders of the new virtual educational landscape with lots of avatars, none of these teachers.
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US News and World Report: Maybe parents are absolutely right to opt their kids out
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/knowledge-bank/2015/05/05/parents-opting-out-of-common-core-tests-have-a-point
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NPE will fight fire not with just fire, but with sound reasoning and empiricism.
NPE is my lifeline. WE are strong in numbers. Together, we will save our schools . . . . .
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HI Diane,
Thanks for sharing my post from last week! I have a new one. Take the time to read it if you can! Thanks again and Happy Teacher Appreciation Week!
http://thejadededucator.blogspot.com/2015/05/happy-teacher-appreciation-week.html
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From October 28, 2014: “Eleven civil rights groups urge Obama to drop test-based K-12 ‘accountability’ system”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/10/28/eleven-civil-rights-groups-urge-obama-to-drop-test-based-k-12-accountability-system/
Four of the organizations which signed that document also signed the May 2015 document, representing opposite positions on October 2014 and on May 2015. Why???
The four organizations playing both sides of the fence have an asterisk before their names and are in bold:
10/28/2014: Eleven civil rights groups urge Obama to drop test-based K-12 ‘accountability’ system
Signatories
Advancement Project
Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
*League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF)
*National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
National Opportunity to Learn (OTL) Campaign
*National Urban League (NUL)
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF)
National Council on Educating Black Children (NCEBC)
National Indian Education Association (NIEA)
*Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC)
5/5/2015: Civil Rights Groups: “We Oppose Anti-Testing Efforts”
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
The American Association of University Women (AAUW)
Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD)
Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, Inc. (COPAA)
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF)
*League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
*NAACP
National Council of La Raza (NCLR)
National Disability Rights Network (NDRN)
*National Urban League (NUL)
*Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC)
TASH
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This is excellent, but they don’t really count; they were not funded by Gates.
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Some were Gates funded, La Rasa among others. I checked on this some time ago. Not all were. The Gates database is easy to search.
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Many were funded by Gates, usually multiple times, including the Leadership Conference, NAACP & National Urban League, and evidence of that was provided below. Others were Gates funded as well, including La Raza as Laura mentioned, such as this:
National Council of La Raza
Date: November 2014
Purpose: to support advocacy for education systems that ensure students graduate from high school ready for college and prepared to achieve a postsecondary degree or certificate with labor-market value
Amount: $2,999,967
Term: 36
Topic: Global Policy & Advocacy
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: United States
Grantee Location: Washington, District of Columbia
Grantee Website: http://www.nclr.org
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Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC) was also funded by Gates several times, including this:
Date: October 2013
Purpose: to support the Southeast Asian American Action and Visibility in Education (SAVE) Project in the areas of data disaggregation and Common Core State state standards implementation
Amount: $440,035
Term: 25
Topic: Global Policy & Advocacy
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: United States
Grantee Location: Washington, District of Columbia
Grantee Website: http://www.searac.org
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The headline of the Washington Post article is a misinterpretation.
This statement does not contradict the civil rights groups’ position in other statements.
They aren’t “playing both sides of the fence.”
The main point of this statement by civil rights groups is that accountability is not strict enough. It isn’t strict enough insofar as accountability fails to lead to equitable resources.
This statement does not criticize the test and punish regime. It might be interpreted as saying that others besides teachers should be held accountable or punished for not providing equitable resources. But this statement does not, for example, criticize the misuse of test data for closing schools.
The statement uses “reform-y” jargon in various places: concerning the goals of education (“college and career readiness”), and teacher evaluations (“require … effectiveness in the classroom”).
The statement does not have enough detail about educational practice to raise issues about misuse of students’ time and effort in pursuit of test scores.
The statement does not say anything about how measurements are made. So it cannot be making any criticism of this.
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That is your interpretation, Aaron, which you have every right to, but that does not make it correct and it most certainly differs from my interpretation, WaPo’s and the opinions of others here.
To me, it looks more like Gates et al. smacked those folks down and said, “Hey, we paid you big money to say Rah, Rah and instead you said blah, blah and dared to mention the importance of the validity of standardized tests, which has not been established for PARCC and SBAC (or CCSS for that matter), so jump the broom for us and fix this!”
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I hope you are right, Teacher Ed.
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Thank you Reteach 4 America for pinpoint the duplication. I follow your lead to re-emphasize about IMPORTANT TRAIT in career as lawyer, politician, and business corporate.
To the general public, in other word, NAIVE and TRUSTING people by nature:
Please keep in mind that people who are MONEY MINDED and lusty for fame, power, and control, will always be manipulative and twisted WORD USAGE for their gain.
For this simple reason, we need to scrutinize, to vigilantly and critically examine their past actions, deeds, educational background, career, marriage, circle of acquaintances and living lifestyle. These will give us the general picture of how well or how bad intention will dominate in their position in near future.
1) Would you trust any broken or empty promises from politicians in their past actions and deeds?
2) Would you trust any TRICK and DIRTY CONNECTION from lawyers to win the case at any price and at the expense/loss of their clients?
3) Would you trust any bullying in wages and benefit coverage plan for workers from business corporate who lobbies to IMPROVE your children’s GOOD PUBLIC EDUCATION?
If people say yes to all three questions, they will surrender their democratic rights WITHOUT CONSCIENCE, and lack of consideration for their ancestors who fought hard in the past 200 years to free slavery and to build this famous, powerful, and democratic AMERICA, where all “puppet leaders” from many CORRUPTED countries (China, VN, Malaysia, Arabia…) send their children and wealth (looted from our charities in the name of helping their people), and relatives to buy all important lands like Manhattan in New York!!!!! Back2basic
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Thank you for engaging in and sharing this critically important discussion. It reminds me of the 1960s when the major, established organizations and churches in the black community considered Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. to be too radical. More needs to be written about those struggles, which continued through his death. Today’s national holiday in MLK’s honor belies the derision he took from The Establishment — including the African American part — through his lifetime.
I believe we face a similar situation today. It is compounded by the fact that a member of that Black Establishment is president of the United States.
But right, and the daily school lives of our black and brown and economically-deprived students, are at stake. So we can’t ignore this part of our fight. Thank you to NPE and Jesse Hagopian for this important contribution.
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Agree. Jessie and the board have the moral high ground.
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Honored to have your comment. Please know many of us out here who follow this blog have become enamored with your work, and truly appreciate your kind of non-retirement, especially as some of us approach that crossroads and look for ways to intensify our participation in this fight. Thank you!
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“Data obtained through some standardized tests are particularly important to the civil rights community because they are the only available, consistent, and objective source of data about disparities in educational outcomes even while vigilance is always required to ensure tests are not misused.”
Saying that tests are 1)the only available source…2) consistent and 3) objective?
Not sure I agree with any of that.
I would say if I wanted to suppress a growing population of people victimized by free market governance, I would shift tons of money to corporations to spin out some tests, and craft some diversionary “ed reform” (class warfare) to have the little people turn on each other and their own schools. Can’t be having that citizenry knowing who is really to blame.
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The only data available, other than . . .
Attendance data
GPA data
Honor roll data
Credits earned
Failure rates
AP course offerings/enrollment
IB program offering/enrollment
Class size data
LD/ED classifications
Pre-K enrollment
Graduation rates
College acceptance
Completion rates at 2 or 4 year colleges
Employment/unemployment rates
And it could all be disagregated by sub-group!
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This is the part 2 of the truth about profile of three leaders in “The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights”
1) Mr. Henderson is a graduate of Howard University. He is a member of the Bar in the District of Columbia, and the United States Supreme Court.
(President and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
President and CEO of The Leadership Conference Education Fund)
2) Ms. Lawson holds B.A. and M.A. degrees from Pennsylvania State University and Notre Dame University, respectively.
She is married to Warner Lawson, Jr. who TEACHES LAW at Howard University
(Executive Vice President and COO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Executive Vice President and COO of The Leadership Conference Education Fund)
3) Nancy is married to Harold Zirkin, an INVESTMENT ADVISER in Bethesda, Maryland.
(Executive Vice President for Policy of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Executive Vice President for Policy of The Leadership Conference Education Fund)
In conclusion, all President who is a lawyer (connection from corporate backer?), and two Vice Presidents, one does not indicate her major of her degree in BA and MA (whose spouse teaches Law at University where her organization president graduated from = coincident connection?) and one only indicate her marriage with investment adviser without any education background. (through money connection?)
How could they represent and lead the EDUCATION FUND without any knowledge, experience, and expertise specifically in education discipline/major QUALIFICATION?
Should and would people validate their viewpoint or just dismiss their voice completely? Back2basic
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Like the NAACP and National Urban League, the Leadership Conference has been paid by Bill Gates to promote the federal education “reform” policies that he bought, as shown here:
Leadership Conference Education Fund, Inc.
Date: September 2014
Purpose: to support the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund, Inc. to educate, inform, convene and communicate with its national coalition of civil rights advocates about the US Program’s Education Strategies
Amount: $1,730,567
Term: 18
Topic: Global Policy & Advocacy
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: United States
Grantee Location: Washington, District of Columbia
Grantee Website: http://www.civilrights.org
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A very nice exercise on the alternative to draconian testing. simple and powerful. Thank you.
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It’s bad enough to think this group is misinformed, but to discover they have been “bought” to believe a certain way is disheartening (to say the least).
What happened to integrity?
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Here is an example of what the NAACP got from Gates for “to promote education policy reform at the state and federal level…”
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Date: June 2011
Purpose: to promote education policy reform at the state and federal level, engage the Campaign for High School Equity (CHSE) partners in advocacy efforts, collaborate with CHSE to produce and develop communications strategies to increase public awareness, maximize the NAACP’s convening power by seeking supplemental support for critical convenings, and develop its fund development capacity
Amount: $1,006,106
Term: 43
Topic: Global Policy & Advocacy
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: United States
Grantee Location: Baltimore, Maryland
Grantee Website: http://www.naacp.org
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So the price of letting yourself be made into a fool is only a million dollars. They sold themselves out too cheaply.
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Here is an example of what the NAACP got from Gates “to promote education policy reform at the state and federal level…”
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Date: June 2011
Purpose: to promote education policy reform at the state and federal level, engage the Campaign for High School Equity (CHSE) partners in advocacy efforts, collaborate with CHSE to produce and develop communications strategies to increase public awareness, maximize the NAACP’s convening power by seeking supplemental support for critical convenings, and develop its fund development capacity
Amount: $1,006,106
Term: 43
Topic: Global Policy & Advocacy
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: United States
Grantee Location: Baltimore, Maryland
Grantee Website: http://www.naacp.org
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Sorry about the duplicate.
Here is an example of what National Urban League got from Gates for “communications:”
National Urban League Inc
Date: June 2011
Purpose: to support the NUL Equity and Excellence Project and build the capacity of the NUL Policy Institute to advocate more effectively at the federal and state levels
Amount: $3,899,279
Term: 43
Topic: Communications
Regions Served: GLOBAL|NORTH AMERICA
Program: Communications|United States
Grantee Location: New York, New York
Grantee Website: http://www.nul.org
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So I’ll be devil’s advocate and ask this question. My son’s school is about half lower income kids. Their parents sometimes feel that the school has lower expectations for their kids- they don’t use that language but that’s the general idea- the school starts out with higher expectations for the children of college-educated or professional parents.
A lot of people have preconceived notions about other people- lawyers, judges teachers- so I think we can admit that at the outset. I’m a lawyer and I’ll admit I’ve seen it in my profession.
Our school has a “gifted” program- it’s a small district and honestly the program isn’t that big a deal- it’s not that different than the general program but we do have one. Kids are placed in the gifted program using 3 measures- teacher recommend. grades and the Iowa test. The point of the Iowa test is to add an objective component- to correct for possible bias of the two more subjective measures.
Is that something we need? Inclusion of a less subjective measure to allow for possible bias/preconceived notions by individuals? I would say “yes”.
Is a concern about having wholly subjective measures applied to their children valid for African American parents? I would say “yes” – they should be concerned about that. That’s a reality for them.
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Or, you could arrange for the Torrence tests of creativity, really fun, low stress, and with an unparalleled record of tracking some relationships between scores and later in life accomplishments in the arts, sciences, and such. A version is provided for hand scoring. I have no stake as a marketer. I work in arts education and met E. Paul Torrnce more than once as these tests were were being developed. The test is now available from Scholastic.
I think the problem with many gifted programs is the same as we see in the general curriculum..insufficient attention to the passions and affinities of students for achievements that have a academic component but are not strictly academic, including the many forms of accomplishment in visual, performing and literary arts; caring for each other, for elders, for pets and so on. It is all too easy to imagine that students who live in quiet desperation playing the game of going to school and taking tests have no poetic insights, songs they want to compose and sing, or stories to tell is unconventional formats, perhaps with peers, or gifts of tinkering with things, fixing them, giving them a new purpose…
Schools should be places were these potentials in students are honored and not always relegated to after- shcool programs, or considered enrichments, a bonus to be earned if and only if you do x,y, z.
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Laura, as a former teacher at a Gifted and Talented School (which gave the Torrence), I couldn’t agree more. The needs of GT students are many and varied, and their talents and interests are not taken into account with the CCSS.
Another example where one size does not fit all.
Ellen T Klock
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These are good, difficult questions. I agree with your answers, although there loads of new, thorny questions they raise.
But the position you’re devil’s-advocating seems a bit different from the one advocated by the civil rights groups referenced in this post. The civil rights groups are saying they’re concerned that subjective assessments *overstate* minority student performance. You seem to be writing about a concern that subjective assessments *understate* minority student performance (or “aptitude,” or whatever we pretend that G&T tests are measuring). No?
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I agree that it’s different. I just used that example because that’s an actual issue here. I have heard it expressed more than once by those parents. They think my children get a kind of benefit of the doubt that their children don’t get. I would tend to think that’s operating, to a greater or lesser extent.
It’s a small enough place where the last name can matter. If the family has a history of bad behavior or low achievement there’s a kind of “apple doesn’t fall far from the tree!” thing that comes in. I’ve seen it in judges, so I don’t know why teachers would be immune.
So, a less subjective measure would be a real help to those children, if it went their way. Of course, it could also harm them.
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When students cannot rise to meet higher expectations, teachers are forced to lower them. Student ability and motivation/effort levels determine the degree to which we can set the bar. Reasons aside, this is the limiting factor for any teacher trying to establish high expectations for their students. Try implementing IB programs in a struggling NYC or CPS high school and watch what happens.
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Chiara, you are on to something, but there are good reasons for *any* student to want some feedback from outside the school’s walls.
The civil rights organizations are primarily concerned (as Flerp has already noted) with the dynamic described in this piece by Michael Winerip in 2011: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/24/education/24winerip.html. Easy grading, easy tests, a few scrubbed Regents exams, and teachers and admins saying everything’s great! Then it comes time for an open-admissions community college, and whoops, it turns out that the kids are actually performing at middle-school level. I honestly don’t think that was preferable to what’s happening now.
The reins of the opt-out movement, at least in New York, have been seized by people who want to eliminate standardized testing altogether. What the leaders of the movement don’t understand is that this stance isn’t going to fly with the majority of parents in New York State. They want and appreciate that feedback.They just want the tests to be shorter, fairer, and more transparent.
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We don’t necessarily want to completely eliminate standardized testing. The NY opt out movement was in response to Common Core tests in grades 3 to 8 that were designed to produce an artificially high failure rate of 70% statewide. Tests that were designed to trick and trap students into failure; tests that have absolutely nothing to do with improving teaching and learning. There was no opt out movement for 12 years under NCLB using NY standards because the tests were reasonably fair and grade/age level appropriate. The test-and-punish aspect of the Regents Reform Agenda under RTTT was a factor as well, turning classrooms into continuous test-prep sessions whuch many parents rightfully objected to.
Reasonable, minimum competency standards and reasonable, grade span testing (3, 8, 11) with the elimination of punitive consequences would be a compromise that almost everybody could agree to. Except of course, our Grand Supreme Educational Thought Leader.
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Thanks, Tim. I completely understand that complaint, that side of the threat- good grades but not learning anything. I also know they’re talking about test scores in the aggregate- they believe that gaps will show that will direct resources to those gaps. I don’t agree with that. I think if people wanted to fix funding disparities they would have done that- weren’t waiting for “data!”- they didn’t and don’t want to fix funding disparities.
Data won’t save us, it won’t make us more honest or better people, so I don’t buy that part of their argument.
I DO buy the complaints by parents at my school that there are some other things operating that are NOT strictly merit-based in the more subjective measures. So maybe if I said “these Iowa tests don’t measure ability!” they might say “well. those measures you prefer don’t measure ability either- I’ll take my chances with the objective measure”
In teachers’ defense, my own kid’s grades have been reliable. I know that (partly) because they went on to take the ACT and go to college. I could have predicted my three older children’s ACT scores within 3 points, based on their high school grades and what I know about them from spending time with them.
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My daughters didn’t do well on standardized tests – barely getting 1000s on the SATs, yet all three graduated from college. One daughter now makes over twice as much as I did when I was her age (as a teacher).
Not everyone excels on these tests. Remember, Thomas Edison was labeled an idiot at six so his mother took him out of public education and home schooled her son. Much too often truly gifted students aren’t the best students. That’s why they are lumped in with other special needs kids.
Enrichment programs are great, but they should be available to all students, not just the lucky labeled few.
The appeal of charter schools is that parents believe their child is getting special treatment above and beyond what is provided by “public” education. This misnomer is partly to blame for the charter school epidemic.
Why don’t we put the emphasis on enriching the educational experience for all children, especially for those who have limited access to the outside world due to poverty. (Remember the commercial encouraging parents to take extra vacation days implying family trips to Paris. How many minimum wage job holders get vacation days? How many get to take their families on trips outside the confines of their neighborhoods? How do these limited experiences impact their results on standardized assessments?)
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I also don’t believe that there would have been any real movement on testing without the opt out parents.
They’re effective advocates. I wasn’t one of them but the truth is they moved my state legislature to act, and every public school kid in this state will benefit from a real debate on testing- a debate that isn’t dominated by national ed reform groups.
The “accountability hawks” have no one to blame but themselves. They were so terrified of losing control of the narrative they wouldn’t budge an inch. Oh, well.
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The real problem is racism, in particular racism in social institutions. Public schools are only one example of such institutions.
Trying to address racism by measuring children is a rather roundabout way to address racism.
The kind of measure that would really measure what we want to know would be magical. We want to know whether what children are doing now in schools will enable them to flourish in US society 20 years from now. We cannot measure that because we cannot time-travel, and because there are many other factors in whether children will flourish in the future, and because there are many ways to flourish.
So the best we can do is to try to ensure that schools give students many ways to learn, and many things to learn. The standardized testing mania goes the opposite way, reducing education down to a few subjects, and then drilling students in a few skills.
The most absurd examples are standardized tests in art and music, which the new NYS law now requires.
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http://unitedoptout.com/2015/05/06/press-release-from-united-opt-out-national-response-to-civil-rights-groups/
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Exactly.
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Jesse Rhodes wrote a book titled “An Education in Politics: The Origins and Evolution of No Child Left Behind.” His take on what he calls “civil rights entrepreneurs” is interesting. He points out the connection of these folks, corporations, and testing.
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I wish these civil rights groups would answer Peter Greene’s question: http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/
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Cross-posted
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Civil-Rights-Groups–We-O-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Civil-Liberties_Education_Rights_Testing-150506-806.html#comment544006
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Test scores have not resulted in any tangible fix for the supposed failure they supposedly identify.
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A good example of hedging ones bets – for, against, and neutral.
No amount of hand washing can cleanse a hypocrite.
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Thank you Dienne for a link to Dr. Peter Greene.
To Chiara and Tim:
Chiara, could you confirm certain criteria and characters that a person MUST have in order to pursue and to succeed to become lawyer like you?
Tim, I do not know your profession. I hope that you like to play or enjoy watching sport.
Could anyone can be trained, tested and pushed to be super star in sport?
If both of you can answer truthfully to your conscience, knowledge, and experience, then you can come to the conclusion that:
CCSS = Characterize Choice states Standard as per PUPPET MASTER who pays and decides people’s children lives to become.
NCLB = Nullify Color Learning Best by imposing improper and invalid procedure in testing scheme without a feedback to students, teachers, and parents.
RttT = Rectify to the Totalitarianism, with the help of
VAM = Validate All Minds from K-12 to higher education.
Here is the expression from Dr. peter Greene about the implication of “FLASHY” slogan from edu-reformers regarding college or career readiness.Hopefully, both of would take time to reflect and deeply think about HUMAN RACE.
[start quote]
Let’s check off the embedded mistakes
* public education is terrible
* “high achievers” are the same as “college-educated” entrepreneurs
* talent and ambition can’t be fulfilled in rural areas
* leader types from outside must swoop in to fix this
And the usual huge omission– there’s NO suggestion here that these philanthropic political entrepreneury education thought leaders NEED TO involve, consult with, or amplify the voices of the people who actual live and work and lead and pursue lives that they find full, rich and rewarding in these rural spaces.
[end quote]
Here are some quotes, and biography from communist and fascist leaders that reflect the current chaos in America Public Education.
1) “The great mass of people…will more easily fall victim to a big lie than to a small one.”
2) Mao Tse-tung manufactured a crisis that only he could solve. Mao told his followers that bourgeois elements in China were aiming to restore capitalism, and declared these elements must be removed from society.
Mao ordered the closure of China’s schools, and young intellectuals living in the cities were sent into the countryside to be “re-educated” through hard manual labor.
Mao was creating general economic and social chaos in the country and was considered as genocidal monster and political genius to public.
3) Hitler did not do particularly well in school, leaving formal education in 1905 (16 years old). Unable to settle into a regular job, he drifted. He wished to become an artist but was rejected from the Academy in Vienna.
At the age of 15, he failed his exams and was told to repeat the year but he left without a formal education instead.
At the age of 18, he moved to Vienna with money inherited after his father’s death in 1903, in order to pursue a career in art, as this was his best subject at school.
Therefore, in this thread, Jesse Hagopian has seen through the future of PRISON PIPELINE to color + unfortunate children as a result of these INVALID testing scheme.
To whoever supports or believes in these INVALID tests, please put yourselves in the shoes of children who live without love, support and resources because their parents were cheated and robbed by SOULLESS, and GREEDY bankers (mortgage sub-prime scheme and fluctuate interest rate?), corporate (Walmart closed stores permanently for washroom renovation???), corrupted government officials (with thread of invalidate teaching license, or jailed term for non-compliance to INVALID testing scheme?)
In conclusion, body and mind will be faded with time, but our spirit will remain and carry over many re-incarnated lives. All prodigies and genius with civilized manner who have been on earth countless lives, are the proof. There is no need for test, BUT true learning with joy, respect, and civility.
It is for you to judge, Chiara and Tim. Thank you for feedback. Back2basic
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Yesterday, when our local (Pittsburgh) superintendent of schools came to our union hall for her annual conversation with our building reps, we saw again the importance of this conversation. She is Broad trained, and Gates-ified via the big grant we’ve suffered under for five years. Thumbnail of this interchange:
She: Please don’t pass on to the children the fears and worries that abound over the PSSAs (our state version of The Test, this year being the first Common Core revision; just past).
I: Thank you for your concerns for the children, but this is not easy to do in the high-stakes-for-the-schools-and-teachers climate in which they are taking it. Would you be willing to join in with the superintendents and principals and other school leaders who are speaking out against this?
She: No. I’m a middle of the roader on testing. But I must say that without these tests we would not have realized how big the gap is between the education results for our African American students and our other students.
Unbelievable in 2015? Don’t we wish. We have so much information, and so much validation for our understanding that these tests do not show teaching/learning, etc. But we can fool ourselves into thinking that we have finished the job of gathering and using this information. The other side is hard at work. Even as with one hand they destroy the public schools which are the only hope for real education for our children, with the other hand they spread their mistruths and feed on the real hunger parents have for real education for their children. We have a lot of work to do.
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