Parents, in growing numbers, have been refusing the Common
Core aligned test for their children. Over 50% (see correction) of the students
in New York City refused the test last year. Yesterday I wrote about Jia
Lee who said she found it unconscionable
to give the new Common Core aligned tests to her students. Another teacher,
Jennifer Rickerts of New York laid out, in very clear terms, why she also
would be refusing to administer the new CC tests to her students. She
found herself in a “deep moral conflict” after reading the test guide and
knowing what it said it would be asking her 11–12 year old students
to do. “Today I am a broken woman,” she said. Her full
letter is in Valerie Strauss’s column in
the Washington Post. Below are excerpts.
I have the greatest job on
earth. I’m a teacher. This year, I began my 22nd year at
the Ichabod Crane Central School District, where I have taught
Grades 2, 5, and 6. I love my students and I am very passionate
about teaching. I also stay involved with educational shifts and
new strategies. I try to exemplify this in the leadership roles I
assume as Grade Level Chair, English/Language Arts Liaison, and Middle
School Student Mentoring Coordinator. I have always thought of
myself as somewhat “old-school” because I respect the chain of command,
respect my elders, and consider myself patriotic. I am a rule
follower…
Over the last few years, I
have seen many parents cry about their child’s New York State test
scores, and I have seen students cry because they can’t complete the
tests. I began to question the validity of the assessments as they
became more and more daunting for my students, but I believed
that if I continued to incorporate the Common Core Learning Standards
and provide the highest quality instruction, my students would be evaluated
fairly. During this period, I kept the faith in our great state of
New York and our educational leaders, hoping that there
would be a fair resolution for the children…
I read the “New York State Testing Program’s Educator Guide to the 2015 Grade 6 Common Core English
Language Arts Test,” and
I sobbed. I am so disturbed by the descriptions of
the test in this guide that I find myself in deep moral conflict
regarding the administration of the 2015 Common Core English Language
Arts Test to my students.
My students are 11– and
12-years-old. They are at the cognitive level that Jean Piaget, revered
cognitive theorist, characterized as “concrete-operational,” meaning
they can think logically about concrete events but have difficulty
understanding abstract or hypothetical situations. Yet
in the guide, it states that students will “evaluate intricate
arguments.”
In addition, “students will
need to make hard choices between fully correct and plausible, but incorrect
answers that are designed specifically to determine whether students have
comprehended the entire passage.” This is not developmentally appropriate
for my students, and I find it cruel and harmful to suggest that it is.
I do not believe in knowingly setting my students up for
failure. I cannot remain silent for one more day without speaking
up for my students…
The guide also indicates
that students will be reading difficulty levels, or Lexiles, as
high as 1185, which is the level eleventh-grade students are required to
understand. When children read, if the difficulty level significantly exceeds
their instructional level, the lack of fluency causes a dramatic breakdown
in comprehension.
Clearly, this is a set-up for the
kids to fail. As students learn, they make sense out of new information
through schema. Schemata are cognitive frameworks to which they
can add to, or modify, as they learn new information.
One could compare the requirement for children to understand
these passages to expecting them to master algebra before establishing
number sense; there is no foundation to build knowledge upon.
If a student has no context,
they are not likely to comprehend the text at the deep level required to distinguish
fully correct answers from plausible, but incorrect answers. In
addition to these inappropriate, unfamiliar concepts and time periods,
students will be expected to sift through authors’ use of “intentionally
incorrect grammar and/or spelling” and “passages drawn from works commonly
taught in higher grades.” Finally, in the guide it states that “Students
will be required to negotiate plausible, text-based distractors.
A distractor is an incorrect response that may appear plausible.”
In summary,
we are going to ask 11-year-olds to read and comprehend passages that are
taken from higher grades, some at 5 years above their level, with controversial
and provocative language, based on abstract literature and historical
documents that the students have not learned about yet, and choose an
answer from several plausible choices? We are going to
have our students spend nine hours of seat time, allowing
extra time for our Special Education students, on these inappropriate tests? (Add
another nine hours for math.)
And after all is said and done,
we will reduce each child to a number: 4, 3, 2, or
1, based on their performance, providing the teachers and parents
with little to no information about what they can and
cannot do?
No. No, I cannot.
With all due respect to my students,
their parents, my administration, and Board of Education, I must go
on record as strongly objecting to this test. I respectfully request
reassignment on the dates of the 2015 Common Core ELA Assessment. - Jennifer Rickert
A 1–4 will not provide anyone with rich information
about a child’s ability of knowledge. Even if teachers are provided with
more information, arriving at the end of the school year it is unlikely it
would contain anything they did not already know about the student, and coming
from a test they did not develop or even see it would have even less meaning.
Our state will spend $4.3 million on this test. Our state
also plans to use SBAC developed interim tests for the grades not receiving
the big summative test in the spring, starting next year. These are
six “shorter” tests given throughout the year, again neither designed nor
seen by teachers, most likely with the same flaws as the summative ones. But
hey, how great for McGraw Hill who is designing the test items. They will have
even more data flowing in to them from our student with which to continually
change their product. They will be using our kids in “non-tested” grades to
help develop test validity for their
summative spring tests. And we get pay even more for this testing
privilege.
At some point we need to step off the testing treadmill.
Are there any Jia Lees or Jennifer Rickerts in Missouri willing to stand up
and refuse?
You can watch Ms. Rickerts deliver her testimony. youtube
please specify correct url
please specify correct url
Correction: 50% 0f students in Jia Lee’s New York City
school refused the test. 30,000+ overall in New York City refused. For a table
with more specifics see this link. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0AuLBonoXvLu9dFF1NmtyeWxGTmpRazYtcXoyVGFMeVE&usp=drive_web&pli=1
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http://agenda21news.com/2015/01/teachers-refuse-test/#more-4592
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