Testing is not an option.
There is a family in
Frederick County, Maryland that does not want its three children tested on the
PARCC assessments. Their reasons are
sufficient for them. First of all they
do not believe the tests measure what their children have learned. Secondly, their children become very
emotionally upset at the prospect of taking the tests and have had meltdowns. Thirdly, they believe the schools have
exceeded their authority by requiring that every child take the tests. Frederick County said it does not have the
authority to exclude children from the testing.
The County schools and the parents appealed to the State Board of
Education. The State Board in essence
refused to decide. The response was that
there is not a mechanism for test refusal on the part of children or
families. Of course, this is a
non-answer.
Let’s look at the parental
concerns. School systems have instituted
pacing guides (another ruination of our children’s education_ to assure that testing
time will cover all content. You will
notice the goal is to “cover” the content not to learn it. As schools move more strongly into Common
Core Curriculum, what is covered will more closely resemble what is being
tested.
As to kids becoming
emotionally upset during testing, it is my belief that this situation is a
reflection of the emotional state of the parents and/or the teachers.
Now to the final reason given. Does required testing exceed the authority of
the school system? I do not know the
answer to that. I would guess it is possible that at some point the courts will
decided. But we have been mass testing
kids for a very long time. But I do know that since we allow parents veto power
over the books their kids will read, and veto power over certain curricular
elements, why can’t they have veto power over testing?
There is another family in
Frederick County that has a severely disabled daughter. Her disability is not sufficient to be
exempted from the testing. The lowest 2%
of disabled children may be exempted.
However, the parents say that their child cannot read yet she is being
tested on a test that requires reading.
To do this clearly makes a farce of the whole procedure.
Across the country families
and their children are upset with the amount of time spent on testing and on
testing preparation. One of the large issues today is the high stakes of these
tests. We are not just collecting data
we are evaluating teachers, principals and whole school systems based on the
results. Are these tests valid enough to have that kind of consequence? Just because we have the capacity to measure
something does not mean we need to use up children’s education time to do so.
During the days of the draft,
there was a process called conscientious objection, whereby a citizen could opt
out of military service because of deeply held beliefs. Maybe it is time to let
children, families and school systems conscientiously object to all this
testing.
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