Archives for category: Teachers and Teaching

I was interviewed today by a Seattle radio reporter who said that the teachers who refused to give the MAP test may be fined 10 days pay.

I told him they were acting in the finest tradition of American resistance to unjust authority. I mentioned Thoreau and King as Americans who blazed the trail of resisting injustice. King taught us the power of collective action. He taught us that unity of large numbers of people can defeat money and political power.

There are two ways the Garfield teachers can win.

One is if teachers at every other school in Seattle join them. In unity is strength.

Second, if they are fined, I will personally lead a campaign to raise money to make up what they lose. I urge the Garfield teachers and their friends to open a bank account. I will gladly make the first contribution.

A Seattle parent explains why the Garfield teachers have the support of parents like herself.

Hi everyone,

For his first school-library experience in kindergarten, my five-year-old son was not allowed to check out a book. Instead he was placed in front of a computer with a set of headphones and told to take a test for an hour.

That was my family’s introduction to the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP®), a computerized, adaptive test for math and English, administered to Seattle public school children in grades K-9, three times a year since 2009.

Seattle parents were told the test would help teachers inform instruction and lead to personalized teaching for our children. Instead, it has cost our schools weeks in lost class-time and library access, reams of administrative busy work, and as much as $11 million in scarce district funding. It has also proven to be an unreliable tool, and one which our district is seriously misusing.

Seattle public school children are already fed a veritable alphabet soup of tests, beginning in kindergarten – MAP®, MSP, EOC, HSPE, SAT, ACT, and now, tests tied to the Common Core State Standards.

So when the teachers at one of Seattle’s most highly respected schools, Garfield High School, made national news on Jan. 10 by announcing that they will no longer administer the MAP® test, I applauded their courageous act.

Here’s why:

In 2010, a small group of Seattle parents met with the school district’s test administrators. We wanted to know more about this new test. Why did our children have to take it so often, and at such an early age? Was it intended to take so long? Did the district know that libraries were monopolized by MAP-testing for weeks at a time?

We were told that MAP® should take an hour, but kids may take longer; that it is not well suited for kids in grades K-2 because of their limited reading and computer skills; that advanced learners tend to hit the ceiling so it was of limited use for them; and yes, 40 percent of our school libraries were rendered off-limits three times a year because of MAP®.

I also learned that MAP® is not appropriate for English Language Learners or children with special needs, and that the margin of error in 9th grade exceeds the potential margin of growth.

Above all, the test is not aligned to our district’s curriculum, so it is not a relevant or meaningful assessment tool. This is the main – and legitimate – grievance of the Seattle teachers who oppose it, and a good reason for parents to object to it as well.

In fact, almost from the beginning, parents have reported bewildering swings in their children’s MAP® scores. Then in 2012, the vendor, Northwest Evaluation Association, Inc., announced a “recalibration.” It retroactively recalculated Seattle student test scores for three years, changing some by as much as 20 points. Parents jammed the district web site trying to find out what had happened to their children’s scores.

In Seattle, MAP® has morphed into an all-purpose, arbitrary gauge of most everything. The district is using it to determine eligibility for advanced learning programs, to screen fifth-graders for math placement in middle school, and now, in an apparent bait and switch, to evaluate teachers, a purpose for which even vendor, NWEA, has said it is not designed.

MAP® in Seattle has effectively become a high-stakes test.

Endless testing is not the education experience I want for my children, and that is why I have opted my children out of MAP® for the past three years. I want them to become critical and creative thinkers, not subservient test-takers. I don’t want my children or their teachers shackled to a faulty testing product, or any standardized test, for that matter. That is why I support the Garfield teachers. That is why parents and teachers are saying: Enough – and opt out!

Sue Peters is a Seattle Public Schools parent, a founding member of Parents Across America, and the co-founding editor of the Seattle Education Blog.

Our compatriots in Australia are watching the growing rebellion against high-stakes testing with interest and hope.

They are impressed by the courage and unity of teachers at Garfield High School. They are also encouraged by the Republican opposition to testing in Texas.

They are watching events here closely.

They know what happens here, for good or ill, will affect their schools.

The world is watching and hoping for better ideas to come from our shores.

I think the Garfield High teachers are a model for teachers across the nation.

They show that collective action works. If one person speaks up, he or she gets fired.

When an entire faculty resists, together their voice is heard around the world.

Not everyone agrees, of course. Mike Petrilli of the conservative Thomas B. Fordham Institute (where I was a trustee for many years but am no longer) strongly condemns the Garfield teachers. He thinks they are shirking their duty. He thinks they are trying to avoid being held accountable. He thinks they should not compare themselves to Martin Luther King Jr.

I disagree with Mike.

Martin Luther King taught the nation–and the Garfield teachers–about the power of collective action against injustice. He showed them that the powerless, acting in concert, have power even if they don’t have money.

Teachers know better than think tanks that testing has become obsessive and pointless. President Obama has frequently inveighed against teaching to the test. The teachers are exercising their conscience, are manifesting professional responsibility, and are supporting what they believe is right for their students.

Dr. King taught them the power of the boycott. He taught them to stand firm against what they know is wrong. He taught them to have courage regardless of the odds against them.

And lest we forget, Dr. King did not fighting for privatization of public services; he did not demand high-stakes testing for children. He demanded equality of education opportunity, not a regular application of the bell curve. Dr. King demanded an end to poverty and war. He died helping the sanitation workers of Memphis organize a union.

                                                                                                                                                         StephanieGadlin@ctulocal1.com

 

Chicago Teachers Union Launches Campaign Against ‘High-Stakes’ Standardized Testing, Supports Seattle Teachers Boycott

 

CHICAGO—The Chicago Teachers Union (CTU has  launched a campaign in support of local and nationwide efforts to eliminate standardized non-state mandated tests—also known as “high-stakes testing”—from public schools. Test scores fail as measures of learning when high-stakes testing advanced by corporate education reformers dominates curriculum, and also fail to consider non-classroom stimuli that affects school-age children, especially in urban areas.

 

Children who do not have access to health care, who are hungry, who are fearful of violence in their communities, who do not have books or access to other informal learning at home, whose parents have limited education, and whose families are constantly stressed by economic problems are at an extreme academic disadvantage. These factors are highly related not only to testing outcomes, academic achievement, future education and socio‐economic success, but also to the racial, ethnic and class origins of individuals.

 

The inequitable history of American society, politics, institutions and economic relations are at the root of these outcomes. As a result, when academic outcomes are averaged across subgroups such as race and class, glaring gaps appear.

 

“These issues are the things that are important to our families, not performance on standardized tests,” said CTU President Karen GJ Lewis. “I think it’s important for us to go on record about this because we are likely to start seeing a more active anti-testing movement in Chicago.”

 

“The U.S. has gone far overboard in the overuse and misuse of standardized tests,” said Monty Neill, Ed.D., Executive Director of the National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest). “Now, teachers, parents and community activists are pushing back in places like Chicago and Seattle and even in Texas, where the testing craze began.”

 

Teachers at Garfield High School in Seattle are currently boycotting the district-mandated Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) standardized test. A group of teachers at Curie Metropolitan High School in Chicago successfully boycotted and ended a district-mandated test a year ago. Teachers, parents and students throughout Chicago and the U.S. have serious concerns about a number of aspects of standardized testing, including cultural bias, the disruption of early childhood learning and day-to-day classroom routines, and the lack of accommodations for special needs students.

 

“We see all these actions around the country, from resolutions to strikes to other kind of protests as linked to the loosely-knit resistance of people saying, ‘Enough is enough,’” Neill said. “It’s time to get back to real teaching and learning.”

 

CTU research reveals  a few quick facts on standardized testing:

 

  • ·         Since No Child Left Behind the testing industry has experienced double‐digit growth. In 2008 K‐12 testing was a $2.6 billion industry.
  • ·         Errors in standardized tests resulted in thousands of students flunking, not passing college entrance exams, and incorrect state rankings.
  • ·         CPS candidates in the National Board Certification program reported spending in some cases ten full school days per year (48 hours) on standardized test preparation. (CTU, NBCT Candidates internal survey)
  • ·         Three out of five community college students need at least one remedial course because they are ill prepared for college. Less than 25% of these students earn a degree within eight years.
  • ·         Excessive reliance on standardized tests results and test prepping makes for a poor transition from K‐12 to college.

 

CTU Vice President Jesse Sharkey and his wife, Julie Fain, have delivered a formal letter (Full text below) to the principal of their sons’ school exercising their right as parents to opt their children out of all non-state mandated tests for the current school year.  In correspondence to Dr. Joenile Albert-Reese, principal of Chicago Public Schools’ (CPS) AN Pritzker School, Sharkey and Fain declared that testing is not in the best interests of their children’s education, and will no longer allow them to participate.

 

“I’m a CTU officer, but before that, I’m the father of two school-age children and to that end, I’m against the misuse of standardized tests and support the efforts of teachers, school administrators and other parents to resist the standardized testing insanity,” Sharkey said.

 

_ _ _

 

Joenile S. Albert-Reese

AN Pritzker School

2009 W. Schiller Ave.

Chicago, IL 60622

 

January 15, 2013

 

Dear Dr. Reese,

 

We are writing to inform you that we are exercising our right to exempt our children, Leo Sharkey and Caleb Sharkey from all non-state mandated tests for the current school year. This includes, but is not limited to: NWEA/MAP, REACH, DIBELS, and mCLASS. We will permit Caleb to take the ISAT. In addition, please do not place the grades, ISAT scores, or results of previous standardized tests of either of our children on display in the classroom, hallway, or other public place.

 

During whole class standardized testing we understand that our children will be provided with appropriate accommodations in order to engage in quiet, self-guided activity like silent reading, drawing, writing, or other appropriate activities so as to not disrupt the classroom in any way.

 

We do not take this decision lightly given the high stakes attached to performance on these tests for everyone involved-our children, our school, and our teachers. Unfortunately we do not believe these tests to be in the best interests of our children’s education and cannot continue to allow them to participate.

 

We have become alarmed at the incredible increase in high stakes standardized testing at CPS. This year our kindergartener is scheduled to take fourteen standardized tests. Our fourth grader is scheduled for twenty-four tests, including the ISAT, which is spread over 8 sessions, and REACH assessments in PE, library, music and Spanish. It’s simply too much, and too much of a drain on scarce resources at our schools.

 

These tests carry significant consequences for students, teachers and schools, and we see the effects of this. The curriculum becomes narrowed to cover what is on the tests. Teachers and students become stressed and demoralized. Ceaseless testing is driving out creativity, curiosity, and independent thinking.

 

We note that elite private schools have no use for standardized tests of any kind. They trust their teachers to assess students’ progress with authentic, multiple measures and intense attention given to each student. We are concerned that CPS is going in the opposite direction-towards larger classes with more standardized testing.  We also do not support a competitive culture around testing where prizes are given for results or students’ scores are posted in public (a clear violation of their privacy).

 

We look forward to the time when our schools can nurture the natural inquisitiveness and love of learning all children should have instead of seeing them as data points on charts and spreadsheets. We are proud, grateful members of the Pritzker community. We look forward to many years of working together to improve our children’s education.

 

We are happy to discuss this matter further.

 

Sincerely,

Julie Fain and Jesse Sharkey

 

John Thompson examined the studies comparing the relative cost and benefits of older and younger teachers, and he reads the findings differently from the Education Week reporter.

Here are my thoughts on your question.

These studies had different purposes so, if used properly, they would have different effects on policy discussions. For instance, the North Carolina study investigates, “different responses to pension incentives.” It develops “a conceptual model of teacher retirement behavior and employ(s) a unique data set to estimate the causal effect of pensions on teachers’ exit decisions.” It explains, “Teachers in my sample are in their fifth or higher year of teaching … .”

In other words, it offers no support for reformers seeking to replace veteran teachers with TFAers or other inexperienced teachers in the hope that student performance will increase.

Also, in North Carolina “the most- and least-effective teachers in North Carolina are the first to leave, a new study finds. By six years out, however, more-effective teachers are much more likely to retire than less-effective ones.” So, if we conclude that inexperienced teachers are as effective and cheaper as experienced ones, and keep the buy-outs in perpetuity, what would happen after the least-effective veterans are gone? That question should give pause to “reformers,” who in my experience are committed to driving Baby Boomers out in order to keep young teachers away from our professional judgments, as well as save money.

Secondly, the Los Angeles study found an increase in student performance after retirements and it focused on peer effects and the decision to retire. So, it could be an anomaly (due to that unique retirement law and its effects on one district) or, it could have been the most important study for policy purposes. After all, West Ed had discovered that for every $1,000 cut from per-student spending, teachers in the state were 4 percent more likely to retire. That suggests that conditions inside schools can have a big effect on who takes early retirement, and that has a big effect on whether those early retirees are a valid sample for discussing the effectiveness of teachers.

The LA study found “that the retirement of an additional teacher in the previous year at the same school increases a teacher’s own likelihood of retirement by 1.5-2 percentage points.” It conducted “robustness checks indicate that teachers’ responses to colleagues’ retirements in the previous year are not driven by coordinated retirements of spouses, a subsequent increase in workload or a distaste for working with less experienced teachers.”

But, it did not check for the factors that teachers would cite as likely explanations of variance in who retires and why. After all, we are more likely to throw in the towel after being worn down by the challenges of high-poverty schools and/or mismanagement. So, the chances are that the sample of early retirees was not representative but that the economists did not ask teachers to help design a better methodology for comparing teaching effectiveness.

Thirdly, the Illinois study found that the poorest and lowest-performing schools saw the biggest test-score gains after early retirement. Those results may say a lot about the nature of those schools, but thus say very little about the teaching profession as a whole. The sad truth is that the top talent in the toughest schools tend to be worn down and move to schools that are less maddening. Moreover, low performers tend to be channeled towards low-performing schools.

The question is how these serious problems should be addressed. Some “reformers” want to move teachers around like chess pieces, and they will claim that these articles give support to their top down policies.

I suspect that many relevant findings reflect early retirement packages (especially when they use data back to 1992) being used as a substitute for a lot of missing policies. Yes, low performing teachers were more likely to take the offer, suggesting that they were used in lieu of the dismissing ineffective teachers. The solution to that issue is fair and efficient methods of removing ineffective teachers, as opposed to today’s “teacher quality” gimmicks.

High-performing teachers were also more likely to retire early and that reflects a lack of a career ladder. So, the studies document the need to better capitalize on the strengths of the best teachers. To take a military metaphor, if the best lieutenants kept getting pay raises, but they could not be promoted, they would get better at leading their own platoon, but their wisdom would not affect more than those few soldiers. A better system would be for systems to institutionalize ways of drawing on the experience of top teachers – experience that they are paying for – for setting effective policies.

We should not be like the “reformers” and deny truths such as the reality that “many teachers may feel ‘pulled to stick it out a few more years’ in order to receive their full pension benefits, even if they are no longer interested in teaching.” As one local union leader explained to me, the best tool for removing older, ineffective teachers would be the passage of universal health care. His efforts to counsel out such teachers were undermined by the reality that older persons with health problems are locked into their jobs by the lack of health care options. Similarly, Toledo’s Dal Lawrence describes his decision to fire a friend. His fellow teacher later said that the job’s stress had gotten to him and the union’s dismissal of him through peer review saved his life.

The following may sound like special pleading, and I have less confidence in it, so I would not showcase the following speculation. But, in regard to the Illinois study, in the early 1990s the crack and the murder epidemic were peaking. Their replacements in the mid-1990s entered a profession where NAEP scores were increasing. The same could also be true of the L.A. study which covers the peak of the Clinton economic boom 1998 to 2001. So, the veteran teachers might have seen additional increases in their test score growth if they’d remained during the up years.

My district did early retirements in the “jobless recovery” of the mid-90s. It thus got the budget problems behind it in the least disruptive way. Soon afterwards, test scores increased as Oklahoma City finally got out of our two-decade Great Recession. And, that influences my views on how the studies should be read.

During the 2007 Great Recession, my district rejected the buy-out option. Oklahoma embraced the Colorado teacher evaluation law and Oklahoma City used the SIG and other “reforms” to “exit” veteran teachers who it thus labeled as “culture killers.” In the most notorious example, a Transformation school “exited” 80% of its teachers. Now, 5% of that school’s juniors are on track to graduate. The elementary school that feeds my old school brought in so many young teachers that it made the newspaper because of the rampant fights and chaos that resulted, so that they even had to close the school to get reorganized.

The first step in analyzing the economic studies should be to consider “Rational Expectations.” Why would a talented young person commit to a profession, start a family, and buy a house when he or she would become expendable after their effectiveness peaked? We should also ask what would be more cost effective – periodic buy-outs that we all acknowledge aren’t an optimal approach or the churn of today.

Reformers condemn buy-outs and other practical but unlovely policies as “the status quo.” But, they should honestly face all of the facts and ask whether their policies have been worse than the imperfect ones of the “status quo.” They should not cherry pick economists’ findings. They should do a cost benefit analysis of their theories.

As I argued this week, neither we should not be afraid of admitting hard truths.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-thompson/the-challenge-of-overcomi_b_2521436.html?utm_source=Alert-blogger&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Email%2BNotifications

We should be transparent when discussing the difficulty in creating learning environments where equally good teachers in rich and poor schools can get equally good results. Especially in the inner city during an age of “accountability,” teachers get burned out. After all, in the inner city the biggest beneficiaries of such policies would not be teachers, as much as the students who are also burned out by our deplorable conditions.

If the evidence shows that teacher effectiveness increases steeply in the first few years and then levels off, why should we feel threatened by that? Isn’t it likely that the same is true of most jobs? Would we get better doctors or better UPS drivers if we started to harass them out of jobs after their first decade or so?

Even President Obama, last week, returned to the position that we can’t balance our budget by reneging on Social Security and Medicare. It is only the contemporary school “reform” movement that argues that teaching is the only profession that would attract more talent if contacts signed in good faith could be torn up at the whim of non-teachers.

And, finally, while pure research may yield information on high- and low-performing teachers, policy should focus on the vast majority in the middle. The ultimate pyrrhic victory is using abusive teacher evaluations the way we are doing now – undermining the entire profession to get rid of low performers.

Social media is opening up a whole new world for those who lack access to the mass media.

In the mass media, we hear of great miracles.

Via social media, we learn the inside scoop.

This blog has a stunning story to tell about the experience of those who enter the New York City Teaching Fellows program.

It tells of idealistic and hopeful recruits who feel they are being used as cannon fodder: poorly trained and sent into some of the city’s toughest schools.

This is how the program begins: “We spent the summer drilling Doug Lemov’s Teach Like a Champion classroom management techniques. It was eerily similar to basic training–been there, low-crawled under that–and at times had the haunting dehumanized uniformity reminiscent of a Handmaid’s Tale. Meanwhile, many of us were grounded in our ideals of sharing our passion for learning, social justice, and community service. We knew as the summer training program unfolded that it was grossly inadequate and ill-conceived. This became ever more apparent when summer school began and we found ourselves utterly ill-equipped to properly care for our students’ intellectual and socio-emotional needs. However, ours was a tenacious bunch–seasoned overachievers who had long ago developed the stamina and fortitude to forgo sleep and self-care in order to reach a determined goal, no matter how distant.”

When our Teaching Fellow gets a letter from Chancellor Walcott thanking him for his service, he writes: “Well, you’re welcome Mr. Walcott. And thank you for supporting a program that sets interested-in-becoming-teachers and their students–who attend the least-resourced and highest-needs schools–up for failure. It’s heart-warming to know that you were once a kindergarten teacher and that you “understand” how difficult the first year teaching is…but nonetheless you support a program that is at its core unjust.”

The teacher asks whether this is a “just and effective program.”

We are left to wonder why our nation’s leaders think it is a great idea to send poorly trained people to teach the neediest students and why they care so little about supporting and retaining experienced teachers.

 

An article in Education Week reports on studies by economists claiming hat when teachers take early retirement, student test scores go up. Behind this is the assumption that new teachers are more successful than experienced teachers.

This sounds counter-intuitive to me, but I would like to know what teachers think.

A quote: “Boosting early retirement in cash-strapped districts doesn’t hurt students’ math and reading scores, according to new studies released at the American Economic Association meeting here, but pension-incentive programs may cost schools some of their most effective teachers.
Separate studies of teachers in California, Illinois, and North Carolina paint a complex picture of the choice increasingly faced by education leaders: Keep your most experienced—and expensive—teachers, or encourage them to retire to ease budget woes.”

This is a disturbing interview with Nevada’s State Superintendent of Instruction James Guthrie.

Nevada is 18th in the nation in teachers’ salaries but Guthrie seems to think they are overpaid.
He is certain there are large numbers of bad teachers in the state.

He has the governor’s ear. In his State of the State address, Governor Sandoval made clear that he wants more of those TFA to come to Nevada and raise scores and close the achievement gap.

In his State of the State, the governor said,

“”One of the most successful programs in the country today is Teach for
America – a unique corps of brilliant young leaders from America’s top
universities, who give their time and talent as teachers in schools
that need them most.

“These teachers help spur innovation and creativity in instruction that
makes the entire system better.

“Teach for America has helped make a difference in the lives of
hundreds of Nevada’s students.

“But we can do more.

I am proposing a new investment in Teach for America to help recruit,
train, develop, and place top teacher and leadership talent in
Nevada.”

So instead of investing in career educators who plan to stay with their schools for the long run, the governor plans to invest in 22-year-old college graduates who have 5 weeks of training and commit to stay for only two years.

Dumb thinking. Poor planning.

I want to test out a theory. I invite you to tell me what you think. It’s a thought experiment but very close to reality.

Suppose you wanted to destroy public education.

Suppose you wanted to make it so unpleasant to be a teacher or a student in a public school that everyone began to long for a way out. What would you do?

Let’s see. You would subject kids to tests repeatedly to the point that their parents complained bitterly. You would take away art and music, maybe physical education too, to make more time for testing. You would open a few charters, which would scoop up the best students, the strivers, and exclude the troublemakers. You would leave the public schools as refuges for the kids rejected or unwanted by the charters. Wouldn’t it be likely that all the motivated parents would clamor for a way to get their kids out too? Then there would be charters for the “good” kids and the public schools would be the dumping grounds.

Do the same for teachers but in different ways. Threaten them with termination if they don’t comply. Tell them their experience and education don’t count. Tell them their quality will depend on their students’ test scores. Watch their spirits droop as their best students leave for charter schools. Be sure to put non-educators in charge and lecture them regularly about how they are responsible if any child should fail. Snap the whip to keep them on their toes. Never treat them as professionals but as lazy time-servers who need constant reminders of their inadequacy.

In time, public education would be stigmatized and avoided by all who could get away. Is this where Race to the Top is going?

These thoughts, which have been percolating, were inspired by the following comments from a reader.

She wrote:

I was pleased to learn, thanks to Diane Ravitch, that the head of the principals’ association here in NC came out against testing last week. Ironically, my state superintendent just announced that NC will be paying (millions, I assume) to Pearson, a British company, to create tests that I and other NC teachers will have to give. NC is a nightmare to teach in right now. There have never been unions, so teachers have always been asked to do things administration could never get away with in a union state, but every work day this year is devoted to Race to the Top. My next semester begins on January 23 and the work day on the 22nd is occupied with RttT instead of finalizing my grades or planning for new students and courses. One of our RttT workshops involved using string, tape, spaghetti, and marshmellows to construct something. We also watched 30 second Disney/Pixar clips which were referred to constantly as “authentic texts.” I have been teaching English since the 1970s, and I have never seen anything like the direction public schools are going in now. I know Ms. Ravitch is strongly against charters, but I am for anything that is exempt from this madness that has over-taken public education. Public education is apparently for sale, and teachers and students are the victims. Like the Titanic, I am not sure it can be saved.