Archives for category: Opt Out

In a hotly contested election for the State Senate seat of convicted Dean Skelos, Todd Kaminsky appears to be the winner by a slim margin. The absentee ballots are not yet counted, but if Kaminsky’s lead holds up, he will be a member of the State Senate. StudentsFirst poured nearly $1.5 million into defeating him and trying to elect the candidate from the Republican machine. This election should make clear that StudentsFirst can be beaten and that they are a front for the Republican Party.

 

Kaminsky’s victory is a victory for the leaders of the Long Island opt out movement, who strongly supported his candidacy and the legislation he proposed as a member of the Assembly. Kaminsky wants to decouple test scores from teacher evaluation, which would reduce the absurd pressure to raise test scores and the time lost by the arts and other subjects. Parents want their children to have a well-rounded education, not a test-prep curriculum.

 

The parents of Long Island have become a political force to be reckoned with, and a shining example for parents across the nation. Parents united can never be defeated. Not even by big money.

 

 

Julie Borst, a parent in New Jersey, reports that New Jersey administrators are going to absurd lengths to compel students to take the PARCC tests, no matter what their parents want. Why do the administrators engage in dictatorial and abusive actions to force these pointless tests on children? Why is their need so urgent? The tests provide no useful information to help children. They have no educational value. Their only function is to rate students and compare them to other students their age.

Borst says flat out: No. It is my child, not yours and not the state’s.

She writes:

 

 

“I’ve been watching in horror as the PARCC testing “season” began in New Jersey last week. I am unabashedly in the Opt Out corner. Oh, sorry, forgot, this is New Jersey, where we play word games. “Refuse” was the word of choice last year, as opting out is not “allowed.” This year “refusing” is getting kicked back to parents too. NJDOE has been in full spin mode for several months and we know the districts with the highest refusals rates from last year have caught an earful.

 

“First, though, let’s be crystal clear about something. When a parent opts out /refuses /insert your choice of it’s-never-going-to-happen here, they are NOT asking for anyone’s permission. They are very simply informing you of what they are choosing for their child. You are expected to respect that decision. End of story.

 

“Parents aren’t opting out because the test is hard. Amazingly, that insipid thought is still floating around and a “news” source published it (I refuse to link to the NYPost. Go Google that hot mess of “journalism” if you must.). They. We. I. Am doing it because public education has become a marketplace for the next best shiny, never-been-tested, device, curriculum, test, insert latest crap your local board of ed got suckered into buying…Chromebooks anyone? None of which has anything to do with educating our children.

 

“Leading up to the testing window, there were stories of stupid stuff…reward parties, bids for prom, getting out of taking the English final exam, the cheer on PARCC videos…demonstrating the level of desperate these people have sunk.

 

“Once the testing started, truly awful stories started pouring in, and continue to this week, about how districts were handling students whose parents refused PARCC. You really have to wonder what is going on inside the heads of these teachers, principals, superintendents, and county superintendents.

 

“I wonder if they have thought about the real damage done to the trust that any really good school must have with its students and parents. Listen carefully, hurting children is not going to get you that trust. You’re going to lose it immediately, and there will be nothing you can do to get it back.”

 

She then tells stories about how children were treated by administrators who decided they should be punished for opting out and sought to make them as uncomfortable as possible.

 

This will embolden parents to opt out in greater numbers next year.


Want to end the obsession with standardized testing? Opt your children out of the state tests. Ignore the threats from state and federal officials. The tests today have taken over too much of the school year. Teachers should prepare and give tests that cover what they taught.

 

What if all students opted out of testing? That’s democracy in action. The elected officials who mandate these tests would take notice. They might even discover that no high-performing nation in the world tests every child every year.

 

The tests today are pointless and meaningless.

 

The tests are meaningless because the results are returned months after the test, when the student has a different teacher. The tests are meaningless because the scores provide no information about what the students learned and didn’t learn. The teacher is not allowed to find out what students got wrong.

 

Officials claim that the tests help students and teachers and inform instruction. Balderdash. The tests rank and rate students. Worse, the developers of the Common Core tests selected a passing mark so high that the majority of children are expected to fail. The passing mark is a subjective judgment. What exactly is the value of telling children they are failures when they are in third grade?

 

Schools have cut back on the arts, civics, science, history, and physical education because they are not on the test.

 

The tests are given online because it is supposed to be cheaper. But many states and districts have had technological breakdowns, and the testing period starts all over again. Students who take pencil and paper tests get higher scores than similar children who take online tests. It may be cumbersome to scroll up and down or sideways, wasting time.

 

In some states and districts, children with disabilities are expected to take exactly the same tests as children their age, regardless of the nature of their disability. Florida became famous for trying to force a test on a dying child. He cheated the state by dying before they could test him.

 

When students write essays online, most will be graded by computer. The computer understands sentence length, grammar, and syntax. But the computer does not understand MEANING. A ridiculous essay that is complete gibberish can get a high score.

 

The testing regime is destroying education.It is driven by politicians who think that tests make students smarter and by educrats who fear to think an independent thought.

 

There are two ways to stop this madness. One would be to require legislators and policymakers in the states and federal government to take the tests they mandate and publish their scores. This would prove the value of the tests. Why shouldn’t they all be able to pass the 8th grade math test?

 

Since this is unlikely to happen, the best way to restore common sense to American education is to stop taking the tests. Parents should discuss the issues of testing with their children. Explain to them that the tests can’t measure what matters most:   Kindness, integrity, honesty, responsibility, humor, creativity, wisdom, thoughtfulness.

 

The best and only way to send a message to the politicians is to let your children refuse the tests. Do you really care how their scores compare to those of students in other states? If you want to know how they are doing, ask the teachers who see them every day.

 

In 2012, Leonie Haimson was first to report the ludicrous “Pineapple and the Hare” story that embarrassed Pearson and New York State. She learned about it on her blog, the NYC Parents Blog, where teachers, principals, and students described the problems they encountered.

 

Once again, Leonie (a member of the board of the Network for Public Education) is first to bring the first-hand reports about the flaws in the ELA exams.

 

 

Here are some of them:
“These included overly long, dense and grade-inappropriate reading passages with numerous typos, abstruse vocabulary and confusing questions; many of which teachers themselves said they couldn’t discern the right answers. On the third grade exam, for example, an excerpt from a book called “Eating the plate” was actually fifth grade level and sixth to eighth grade interest level. There were many reading passages with Lexile levels two or three grades above the grades of students being asked to comprehend and respond to these texts.

 

“In 6th grade there was a poem from the 17th century that the teachers in our building read in COLLEGE. 11th grade level.”

 

On the eighth grade exam, one reading passage featured obscure words like “crag” and “fastnesses”. As one teacher wrote, “What are fastnesses?…I asked eight of my fellow colleagues to define this word. 1 of 8 knew the answer. Unless you are a geology major, how is this word a part of our everyday language, let alone the reading capacity of an average 8th grader? And our ESL students?”

 

I even asked my husband, a professor in the Geosciences department; he didn’t know what “fastnesses” meant either.

 

 

There were several passages that included commercial product placements as in years past, this time featuring the helmet manufacturer Riddell, Skittles candy, Stonyfield yogurt, and Doritos. (Riddell is being sued by a thousand NFL players for deceptive claims that their helmets protected against concussions.)…
Two new problems emerged. One was the omission from many of the test booklets of blank pages that were supposed to be used by students to plan their essays, or the titles of the pages were left out. Instructions to deal with these problems came from the state only after many children were in the midst of writing their essays or after they had completed the exams. In these cases, teachers pointed out, this represented an unfair disadvantage to their students, who were forced to either use the limited space at the front of the booklet to plan their essays or didn’t plan them at all.

 

But perhaps the most heartbreaking was an unforeseen but brutal consequence of the untimed nature of these exams, the major innovation made by Commissioner Elia that was supposed to reduce the stress levels of kids. Instead, many students labored for many hours, taking three to five hours per day to complete them, and sometimes more.

 

Here’s one comment from Facebook:

 

“This afternoon I saw one of my former students still working on her ELA test at 2:45 PM. Her face was pained and she looked exhausted. She had worked on her test until dismissal time for the first two days of testing as well. 18 hours. She’s 9.”

 

This is a travesty; no child should be subjected to such a punishing regime. It also appears to violate the NY law passed in 2014 that limits state testing time to one percent of total instructional time.

 

 

In any case, it appears that the parents who chose to opt their children out of the exams were wise to have done so. All in all, the number of opt outs seem to have held steady from last year’s 240,000, or even perhaps increased, with even higher rates of test refusals in Rockland County, NYC, and Long Island, which surpassed its record rates last year, with more than 97,000 students opting out, or about 50% of eligible kids compared to about 47% last year.

Bob Schaeffer of FairTest reports the latest testing news from across the nation:

 

 

 

Two big stories as testing season gets underway in many states — the surging opt-out movement and the collapse of many states’ computerized exam delivery systems — both demonstrating the ongoing failure of politically driven test-and-punish policies.

 

National Why All Families Should Opt Out of High-Stakes Standardized Tests
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2016/04/03/diane-ravitch-why-all-parents-should-opt-their-kids-out-of-high-stakes-standardized-tests/
National Testing Time at Schools, Is There a Better Way
http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/04/health/school-testing-alternatives-measure-progress/index.html
National Opt-Out Movement Aims to Reach More African American and Latino Families
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/04/opt-out-movement-aims-to-lure-more-african-american-latino-parents-221540#ixzz44smB
National Three Cheers for the Opt-Out Movement
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-thompson/three-cheers-for-the-opt_b_9606536.html

 

Multiple States Some Standardized Testing On Hold In More Than a Dozen States
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/standardized-testing-hold-dozen-states-38090436
Multiple States Updated FairTest Chronology of Computerized Testing Problems
http://www.fairtest.org/computerized-testing-problems-chronology
Multiple States Number of Jurisdictions With High School Graduation Tests Drops Significantly, Now Just 15
http://www.fairtest.org/graduation-test-update-states-recently-eliminated

Alaska State Cancels Annual Test After Computerized Exam Failure

State schools chief cancels test after connection problems

California High School Diplomas at Last for Those Who Failed Exit Exam

High school diplomas at last for students who failed exit exam

Colorado Local Groups Educates Parents and Students About Opt-Out Rights
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/local-group-on-a-mission-to-educate-parents-and-students-on-their-right-to-opt-out

Connecticut Campaign to Rollback Test Use for Teacher Evaluation
http://news.wfsu.org/post/testing-season-has-opt-out-proponents-hoping-more-will-join

District of Columbia How Test Data Obsessed School Policies Drive Inequality
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2016/03/31/d-c-parent-how-data-obsessed-school-reform-helps-drive-rising-inequality-in-nations-capital/

Florida Computer-Based Testing Frenzy Begins
http://www.tallahassee.com/story/life/family/2016/03/29/computer-based-testing-frenzy-begins/82384142/
Florida Testing Season Has Opt-Out Proponents Hoping More Will Join
http://news.wfsu.org/post/testing-season-has-opt-out-proponents-hoping-more-will-join
Florida Teacher Letter to Students Explains That Test Scores Don’t Measure Their Worth
http://www.local10.com/education/teacher-writes-emotional-letter-to-students-ahead-of-state-testing

Georgia Tired of School Testing Overkill, Georgia Cuts Back
http://www.myajc.com/news/news/local-education/tired-of-school-testing-georgia-cuts-back/nqyc9/

Illinois Opt-Out Advocates Organize to Expand Movement
https://www.wbez.org/shows/wbez-news/will-parents-opt-their-kids-out-of-parcc-test-like-last-year/c336d6c2-978d-4831-942f-cb1ac68caaa5
Illinois Refusing PARCC Tests: Why and How
http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/winnetka/community/chi-ugc-article-concerns-about-the-parcc-tests-and-how-to-o-2016-04-04-story.html

Maine Teach to the Test Paradigm Fails to Prepare Students for Real-World Problems

Sea Change: Teach-to-the-test paradigm fails in the face of problems like global warming

Massachusetts How to Opt-Out of the State Tests Video

Massachusetts All School Districts Should Be Able to Adopt Test Opt-Out Policies
http://wbsm.com/if-amherst-pelham-can-opt-out-new-bedford-should-be-able-to-refuse/
Massachusetts School Board Member Opts Own Child Out of State Tests
http://lawrencereceivership.com/2016/03/your-right-to-opt-out-of-parcc-and-mcas-testing/

New Jersey As Testing Begins, Will Students Again Opt Out in Droves
http://nj1015.com/parcc-testing-underway-will-nj-students-opt-out-in-droves-again/

New Mexico ACLU Challenges Ban on Teacher Criticism of Tests
http://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2016/03/30/new-mexico-teachers-challenge-ban-on_ap.html
New Mexico State Legislator Seeks Clarity on Opt-Out Penalty Threats
http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/senator-looks-for-clarity-in-opting-out-of-testing/article_338648dc-e4ba-5245-bb91-75e3a35d6e4e.html

New York Parents, Educators Organize to Repeat Opt-Out Success
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/education/parents-teachers-hope-repeat-testing-opt-out-movement-article-1.2581979
New York Black Principal Lauded for Score Growth Now Speaks Out Against Tests
https://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20160330/eastchester/bronx-principal-lauded-for-test-growth-now-speaks-out-against-them
New York What Does the Opt-Out Movement Want This Year?
http://ny.chalkbeat.org/2016/03/30/what-does-the-opt-out-movement-want-this-year/
New York Failed Tests Lead to Impending High School Graduation Crisis

Failed Tests and New York’s Looming Graduation Crisis

Ohio Local Superintendents Blast Test-Based School Report Cards
http://www.athensmessenger.com/news/local-supts-state-report-card-not-an-accurate-representation-of/article_370769fb-d5fc-5d07-9acb-59f66081225e.html

Oklahoma Bill to Terminate State End-of-Course Tests Considered by Legislature
http://www.tulsaworld.com/communities/skiatook/schools/measure-to-eliminate-end-of-instruction-exams-to-be-considered/article_9d460100-574e-570e-bc3d-d7f0c6b0e11e.html

Pennsylvania Standardized Testing Opponents Forecast Increase in Opt Outs
http://triblive.com/news/allegheny/10216576-74/tests-students-opt
Pennsylvania Test Scores Are Not a Strong Predictor of School Success
http://www.pennlive.com/opinion/2016/03/test_scores_arent_always_an_ac.html

Rhode Island Cyber Attack Postpones Testing
http://wpri.com/2016/03/30/cyber-attack-postpones-parcc-testing-at-warwick-schools/

Tennessee State Tries to Slow Growing Opt-Out Movement
http://tn.chalkbeat.org/2016/04/04/state-seeks-to-limit-opt-out-options-emphasizes-testing-balance-as-tnready-part-ii-approaches/
Tennessee Board Agrees Schools Stressed by Testing
http://www.murfreesboropost.com/city-schools-stressed-by-tests-board-agrees-cms-44033

Texas Computer Testing Glitch Wiped Out Many Students Answers
http://www.houstonpress.com/news/staar-testing-glitch-erased-untold-number-of-students-test-answers-8285376
Texas Students Opt Out of State Testing
http://www.kiiitv.com/story/31596941/houston-area-students-opt-out-of-staar-testing
Texas My Son Is Much More Than His Test Score
http://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/latest-columns/20160330-kathleen-thompson-my-son-is-much-more-than-his-staar-test-score.ece

Teachers Will New Exams Make the Profession More Overwhelmingly White?
http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-04-04/will-new-teacher-tests-make-the-profession-more-overwhelmingly-white

ACT/SAT Security Breaches Hamper International Admissions Test Administrations
http://www.educationdive.com/news/security-breaches-plague-international-sat-administration/416434/

What the Testing Juggernaut Gets So Wrong About American Schools
http://www.alternet.org/education/what-testing-juggernaut-americas-schools-gets-so-wrong-about-education

More Than a Score: Jesse Hagopian TED Talk

Is Education Being Measured To Death?
http://educationopportunitynetwork.org/is-education-being-measured-to-death/

Politicians Think Your Kids Need Standardized Testing — But Not Theirs
http://www.thenation.com/article/these-politicians-think-your-kids-need-high-stakes-testing-but-not-theirs/

Kindergartener’s Unexpected Test Answer Is Going Viral
http://www.seventeen.com/life/school/news/a39211/this-kindergartener-hilarious-test-answer-is-so-wrong-but-so-perfect/

Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director
FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing
office- (239) 395-6773 fax- (239) 395-6779
mobile- (239) 699-0468
web- http://www.fairtest.org

Jessica Fogarty is a parent, a former teacher, and a school board member in the Tullahoma, Tennessee, school district.

She sent me this message and asks for your help:

“Shortly after my daughter experienced major anxiety taking the state’s practice MIST tests, I realized that I needed to research testing in my state.

“My superintendent, Dan Lawson, has been extremely supportive in my efforts to appeal to the TN DOE to reduce testing and to allow our district to select an alternative to TNReady. I requested meetings with the commissioner (she finally met me the week before Part 1 was administered but despite all the facts presented and an all-out plea on my daughter’s behalf-she has continued with this tragedy of a test), I have sat on the floor outside legislators’ offices and written countless letters (our local Senator sponsored an education bill, SB 1984, but it was opposed heavily by the state and killed in committee), and I attempted to attend any feedback session offered to me (the state scheduled them in December and cancelled these sessions a week later “due to low registration numbers”).

“My district and fellow school board members have fought so hard for our students, however all the reasonable facts and pleas have fallen on deaf ears.

“I am desperate to help the teachers and students of my district and those across the state as well. With the blessing of my superintendent, I started a petition on Change.org. It is titled: “Stop Part 2 of TNReady”. In 48 hours, the petition has over 500 signatures. It is the amazing comments under the petition being made by parents, teachers, and even a student that demonstrates the need for the TN DOE to respond.

“However, I have a limited social media presence. I am just a concerned mother. I am reaching out to any and all that can help spread the word. I understand that this petition is just a “statement move”, but thousands of signatures and comments will make a powerful statement. I have to know that I did everything I could possibly do to help my daughter.”

Jessica, here is my advice: Refuse the test. Your daughter doesn’t have to take it. If enough parents join you, the state will listen. Your daughter belongs to you, not the State Education Department.

Thank you,

Jessica Fogarty

Despite a major effort by state and federal officials to threaten or cajole parents to let their children take the tests, despite a media campaign by corporate reformers to persuade parents that testing is good, the New York opt out movement is back again. A Twitter site created by reformers (@optoutsowhite) mocked the opt out as being the white suburban moms that Arne Duncan ridiculed. A parent (@africaisacountry) responded with #optoutmademewhite.

Carol Burris reports here on the first returns.

The effort to stop opt out failed, she writes.

“The campaign had little, if any, effect. In some schools, only a handful of students took the test. Eighty-seven percent of the students in Allendale Elementary School outside of Buffalo, New York opted out. Eighty-six percent of test eligible students in the Long Island district of Comsewogue refused the test, and 89 percent of students in Dolgeville in the Mohawk Valley said “no.”

“Long Island continues to be the hotbed of testing resistance. Newsday reported that 49.7 percent of all Long Island students refused the test Tuesday even though the Newsday editorial board has repeatedly urged parents to have their children take it. Patchogue-Medford Superintendent Michael J. Hynes characterized Opt Out as “a thunderclap” sent to Albany. Seventy-one percent of the students in his district refused the Common Core tests.

“There is also evidence that the Opt Out movement is gaining ground with parents of color, with many no longer willing to buy the spin that taking Common Core tests will improve their children’s life chances.

“Ninety-seven percent of the more than 1,000 students who attend Westbury Middle School in Nassau County are black or Latino, and 81 percent are economically disadvantaged. On Tuesday, 50 percent of those students were opted out of the tests by their parents. Last year, the number was 2 percent.

“Last week, Westbury parents filled a forum sponsored by Long Island Opt Out in order to learn how to refuse the test. When a district official tried to convince those in attendance that testing helps improve educational opportunities for minority students, one mother pushed back. “Don’t you dare tell parents that these tests will help them… these tests tear our kids down. They don’t lead to success.”

Jamaal Bowman is the principal of Cornerstone Academy for Social Action, a highly regarded middle school in the Bronx. Ninety nine percent of his students are black or Latino and 84 percent are economically disadvantaged. Last year, only 5 of his students refused the test. On Tuesday, 25 percent opted out.”

Dr. John Thompson, historian and teacher in Oklahoma City, anticipates the collapse of corporate reform in this outstanding post. He gives much of the credit to the opt out movement, which stood up to political and corporate power to protect their children. Who ever thought it was a great idea to subject 9-year-old children to 8 hours of testing? Who thought it would be a good idea to fire teachers if test scores didn’t go up every year? Who thought it was a good idea to drain resources from public schools and give them to privately managed charter schools?

 

Parents certainly didn’t. They refused to be bullied by school officials and politicians.

 

Thompson writes:

 

“Three cheers for the Opt Out movement! When the history of the collapse of data-driven, competition-driven school improvement is written, the parents and students of the grassroots Opt Out uprising will get much – or most – of the credit for driving a stake through the heart of the testing vampire.”

 

Thompson thanks Tom Loveless for pointing out that all of these alleged reforms have not produced the promised miracles. But he faults all those who continue to believe that testing, punishments, rewards, and competition improves education.

 

But he gives Loveless a demerit for continuing to accept the premises of corporate reform.

 

“One cheer for the Brookings Institute’s Tom Loveless, and his discussion of Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and for noting the failure of CCSS to raise student performance. Okay, maybe he deserves 1-1/2 or 1-3/4ths cheers for his resisting changes to the reliable NAEP tests in order to please Common Core advocates, and for concluding, “Watch the Opt Out movement.”

 

Loveless notes that “states that adopted CCSS and have been implementing the standards have registered about the same gains and losses on NAEP as states that either adopted and rescinded CCSS or never adopted CCSS in the first place.” He then gets to the key point, “The big story is that NAEP scores have been flat for six years, an unprecedented stagnation in national achievement that states have experienced regardless of their stance on CCSS.“ Now, Loveless says, “CCSS is paying a political price for those disappointing NAEP scores.”

 

“The big story, however, is the failure of the entire standards-driven, test-driven, competition-driven model of school improvement. Loveless is free to adopt his own methodology for his latest research paper on education reform but he deserves a “boo” for continuing to reduce complex and inter-related processes to a bunch of single, simple, distinct, quantifiable categories….

 

“Loveless, Brookings, and other reformers deserve a loud round of boos for pretending that the failure of Common Core standards is unfair and/or regrettable. On the contrary, the political and educational battle over national standards is a part of the inter-connected debacle produced by a simplistic faith in standards and curriculum; bubble-in accountability; and the federal government’s funding of teacher-bashing, mass charterization, and the top-down reforms of the last 1-1/2 decades.

 

“While I appreciate Loveless’s candor in acknowledging that the stagnation of NAEP scores in the last six years is unprecedented, his focus on standards misses the other big points. These realities have not been lost on the grassroots Opt Out movement….

 

“Perhaps we’re seeing the last days of the education blame game. Maybe Loveless and other pro-reform analysts will give up on trying to pin the rejection of their policies on parents and teachers. As parents refuse to allow their children to take the tests, it will become even more impossible to set cut scores, meaning that it will become even more impossible to claim that systems can identify the children and adults who supposedly should be punished for their scores. Once the punitive parts of school reform are repudiated, little or nothing will be left of this unfortunate period of education history. And, the Opt Out movement will deserve the credit it is granted in closing that chapter.”

 

 

 

 

 

Jaime Franchi of the Long Island Press has established a reputation for in-depth reporting on education. She does it again, with a comprehensive analysis of New York’s opt out movement.

After the historic opt out of 2015, where some 240,000 students did not take the tests, Governor Cuomo made a concerted effort to tamp down parent anger. He appointed a task force to make recommendations about the Common Core standards and tests, which John King had botched. He promised that the tests would have no stakes for students or teachers, at least for a while. The state commissioner took steps to alternately warn and placate parents.

Despite the efforts to court parents, the opt out leaders decided they were being played. They thought the moves by Cuomo were a facade. And they determined to continue their fight in 2016.

No one knows whether there will be more or less or the same number of opt outs. What matters is that parents across the state realize that there is power in numbers. They cannot be ignored.

MEDIA ALERT: Wednesday, April 6, 9:30 AM

Parents to Gather at Senator Cullerton’s Office to Demand Action on Opt Out Bill

Parents demand Senator Cullerton to call standardized testing opt-out bill; stop blocking democracy

Parents from 12 schools in Illinois Senator John Cullerton’s district will come together on Wednesday at 9:30 am at his district office at 1726 W. Belmont Ave, to demand that he remove the brick he’s placed on the state testing opt-out bill, HB306, and allow the bill to be called for a vote.

HB306, which has five Senate sponsors led by Illinois State Senator William Delgado, is currently awaiting assignment to the Illinois Senate Education Committee. This bill would clarify parents’ right to opt their children out of state standardized testing without fear of legal or academic repercussions.

The bill is a response to a massive rise in the number of parents who choose to opt their children out of state testing. Some students who refuse testing face mistreatment—including being forced to sit-and-stare during 8-10 hours of testing without even a book to read. The opt out bill would prohibit mistreatment and punishment of students who opt out.

“Parents deserve a voice in this matter,” said parent Vanessa Caleb Hermann, a mother of two CPS students at Waters and Coonley Elementary Schools. “The burden of opting out should not rest on children as young as or those with special needs.”

HB306 passed the IL House last spring, but has yet to even be assigned to committee. Parents are raising the issue now as bills have until this Friday, April 8th to pass from committees to the Senate floor.

No schools, districts or states have ever lost federal funds due to students opting out of state testing. Six other states already have opt out laws on the books. Last year more than 40,000 Illinois students did not participate in PARCC testing.

“After a massive grassroots effort last year, the voices of regular parents were heard by the Illinois House, and this simple yet critical bill passed,” said Cassie Creswell, organizer with More Than A Score. “It is disappointing that Senator Cullerton is unilaterally blocking this bill from being called for a vote, rather than allowing his colleagues to weigh in on it as their constituents want them to do.”