The editorial board of the Albany Times-Union editorial board is one of the wisest in the nation. It understands, as few other editorial boards do, that the annual standardized tests are a waste of instructional time that do nothing to help students. Their only error in this editorial is to assume that the tests measure school performance. They don’t. They measure school demographics, which can be obtained without the testing.
The editorial board objects to the state and districts’ efforts to bribe or threaten students to take these useless tests.
Which word or words best describe some schools’ approach to last week’s state English tests for grades three through eight?
(a) misguided
(b) disappointing
(c) both of the above
Take out your No. 2 pencil and bubble in (c). New York has been working hard to make testing better. But last week’s reports of how schools are incentivizing test participation show we have a long way to go.
Some schools.. have dangled a deal in front of their students: Take the statewide English and math tests and you’ll get out of taking your core subject finals in June. Other schools have promised pizza parties if enough students take the tests or have held pep rallies to encourage them.
Still others have taken a sterner approach, pressuring parents or doing away with “refusal rooms” for students whose parents opted them out…
All of these approaches are troubling.
Let’s recall what the tests are for. They aren’t a measure of children’s progress. They’re a measure of schools’ performance. They’re not designed to help the kids who take them, at least not directly. The results don’t even arrive till the next school year…
Instead, these assessments — mandated, along with a minimum 95 percent participation rate, under federal law — have warped the curriculum, chipping away at social studies, science, art, even recess, in the push to provide more English and math instruction. Emphasizing standardized tests over regular classroom work — yes, including final exams — is a distraction from real education.
Pep rallies for an exam? Why not a pep rally to encourage, say, participation in the science fair? And bribes and cajolery are not the tools of a system that’s working correctly. They’re signs that we’ve lost sight of what’s really important. Hint: It’s not increasing a school’s test participation rates.
And perseverance and resilience? Better for children to learn to persevere through a long-term project like a science experiment or a poetry portfolio; better to learn resilience through a chance to revise a tough math worksheet or the challenge of presenting in front of the class. Perseverance certainly isn’t taught by tests plagued by the kinds of computer glitches we saw last week, which only raise kids’ frustration and parents’ ire…
Save the pep rallies for things that really count.

New York has no intention of letting go of standardized testing despite all the evidence it has no value and Questar has presented a flawed product. The state has a $44.8 million dollar deal with Questar until November 2020.
We need to do a better job explaining why standardized testing in harmful to students. New York like so many states continues to believe that standardized testing is a form of accountability.https://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/ny/2019/04/08/state-teachers-union-elia-rosa-questar-computer-based-tests/
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MaryEllen Elia loves standardized testing.
So long as she is State Commissioner, tests will matter more than education.
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Excellent. Looks like the Albany Times-Union is one of the last newspapers left in the nation with actual journalists and editors rather than the norm, stenographers and apparatchiks.
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which very frighteningly argues that Big Money will soon be buying it out
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Yes. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, once a great paper, recently had an article about their continued downsizing woes. They had 320 reporters a decade ago and only 33 today! It’s no wonder the cult of Individual-1 thrives.
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John Oliver’s hilarious take on testing pep rallies is now more apt than ever:
The corporate ed. reform industry hit back hard against this piece, which is a measure of its effectiveness.
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Jack, THANKS. Gotta love John Oliver.
The entire situation is ridiculous.
OPT OUT! OPT OUT! OPT OUT.
Have you noticed the new TERM, “Grit?”. Now the deformers found a new term and want kids to be gritty. HUH?
Btw, lawyers are now telling physicians how to do their jobs. My physician friends have given me examples and they are truly OMG’s.
Kinda like male politicians telling females what to do with our own bodies. DUH.
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The parents know that it is all about the zip code. Many purchase their homes on that basis. And would not have it any other way. The testing only validates their decisions. For many who support it. It is flattering to their egos to have it reaffirmed year after year.
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Zip codes? Not exactly.
Well educated parents want the same for their kids; sometimes more (see Lori Loughlin et.al.). Nothing matters more than this.
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This sounds like a flock of corrupt want-to-be fascists are getting very frustrated that the U.S. isn’t like 1999 Iraq or 1938 fascist Germany and Italy where the corrupt, power-hungry leaders had the power to arrest, torture and exterminate anyone that refused to do what they were told.
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My students will soon be taking all their tests online…if the computers allow it. Rumor has it we are going back to paper next year. Meanwhile, a list of students was emailed to me who would be getting out of class early to help with the testing pep rally. This is the time of year when I have to hold my tongue. I am anticipating the need for counseling.
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“Why not a pep rally to encourage, say, participation in the science fair?”
Because participation in the science fair is its own reward. If you’re in it for the pep rally, you should re-thinking being in it. That, by the way, applies to sports too. How about if we ditch the pep rallies entirely?
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I saw a group of Success Academy students on the subway the day after the NYS ELA exams. They were coming from Dave & Buster’s.
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