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They're for education, against the test

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  • They're for education, against the test

    They're for education, against the test

    TCPalm.com (Stuart, Florida)
    March 4, 2013

    By John Young, [email protected]

    Jesse Hagopian is doing more than teaching history. He is answering
    history's call.

    With Hagopian in the lead, most of the teachers at Seattle's Garfield
    High School have made recent history's most important statement about
    what drags down public education in 2013.

    They have refused to give the test.

    In this case it is MAP, the Measure of Academic Progress. The teachers
    say it is time-consuming, costly and serves no true diagnostic
    purpose.

    Since Garfield teachers declared their boycott weeks ago, other
    Seattle teachers have joined the protest. The school district has
    threatened them with their jobs. Tellingly, however, it also has said
    it might re-examine the test.

    For all who value public education, let these teachers win their
    battle.

    As one who was educated in public schools, and whose children were as
    well, I cannot express sufficiently my impression that those who are
    most gung-ho about testing are least interested in true quality public
    schools.

    To the contrary, they are most interested in assailing those schools
    based on false comparisons, then promoting schemes like school
    vouchers and for-profit charters.

    The test in question in Seattle is developed by the Northwest
    Evaluation Association. It uses interactive computer software to
    supposedly demonstrate student readiness. Seattle teachers don't get
    to see the results, but they are evaluated, in part, based on them.

    Administered in addition to Washington's mandated state test, MAP is
    different from many state tests because it is low-stakes, at least for
    the students. Their grades are not affected by the results, and they
    often give halfhearted efforts, though teaching careers may hang on
    them.

    Beyond that matter, what is affected, say the teachers, is the
    `astounding' amount of instructional time lost - five hours per school
    year for each student.

    Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers did readers a service by focusing on
    the time and cost of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test - FCAT.

    It reported on how school districts spend untold time and thousands of
    dollars on benchmark tests, called `testing of the test' - students as
    guinea pigs to see if the state's demands are or can be met by
    overtaxed teachers. On top of $62 million spent by Florida are
    unfunded demands school districts assume to administer FCAT.

    Dollars and instructional times lost: None dare call it waste.

    The sad thing is that so many citizens salute this toilet-paper banner
    under the guise of `achievement' and `excellence.' The fact is that no
    standardized test meant for everyone of every imaginable learning
    level can deliver on such pretenses. Is that so hard to understand?

    The teachers of Garfield High understand. They understand that what
    they are trying hard to achieve - true education - is being filleted
    with a long sword on the altar of standardization.

    So, horrors, instead of playing along, they have said, `We will remain
    at our posts and teach.' What say, America? Off with their heads?



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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