Showing posts with label Opting Out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opting Out. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2014

Advocacy a Waste of my Time

This is the last post on the BuildBetterSchools blog that will disappear on October 26th. Most of its contents is now available here at The School Buzz, but this post was my last one there, to voice my opinion on how advocating/fighting for quality schools that serve the common good will remain a dream, because not enough people are united for the cause, and many are misguided about what quality education is. 

After advocating for my own, and then also for other kids for twenty years , I have come to the sad conclusion that my time was utterly wasted. Why did it take me so long to realize that no matter what committee a parent serves on, and no matter what useful information or research they bring to the table, their opinions are simply ignored. Is it because of the infinite hope we cling to that surely some day things will be different?

Is school today really that much different, never mind better, from when you were 'educated'? I bet not, especially not right now with all the testing, the lock-step schedules and the scripted lessons that quash authentic learning in classrooms across the nation! Thankfully my kids escaped that fate while they were in elementary school. Thankfully they played in kindergarten, had recess, and were lucky to be able to learn through projects, not just books and computers.

I wanted my children's  school experience to be much better than it had been for me, so I became an involved parent. But, all my time invested in attending school accountability meetings and schoolboard meetings, was for naught. If anything, schools are now worse for kids, toxic even!

One positive thing came out of my involvement.  I got passionate about education. I felt like I was in hog heaven each time I visited my local university's library. I had access to many good and interesting books by notable authors and experts. I became knowledgeable about education, but how many others do? Certainly not the people who serve on schoolboards and in the legislature who make policies and laws, and who heed the wishes and demands from business and corporations rather than the advice from education experts whose warnings and suggestions are willfully ignored! Their books are collecting dust on library shelves. Some had never even been checked out,  others just a handful of times, and this at a university that focuses on teacher education!

A few other longtime advocates and activists I know, also see that improving education is  a near impossible feat. They fear though that showing their discouragement will dash the hope of others. But, should we keep ignoring the fact that no one in charge of public education, at any level, really cares about what child development experts and neuroscientists say that children need to learn best and thrive holistically?

Only a paradigm shift in education will truly benefit the common good, but will not happen unless a critical mass of people demand it. Almost all of us were raised to unquestioningly respect authority, so it is uncomfortable to request changes. Many parents are apprehensive of going into a school to talk to the principal as memories  from their own school days  of being subjugated may resurface. Few adults reach the level of self-esteem and self-confidence to dare advocate for their own child. Fewer still dare question the whole concept of mandatory education!

The intent of  education is believed by many to give children broad experiences so they can become literate in the truest sense, to learn to think , question, analyze, conclude, and  to help make their own life and society better for all. But, John Taylor Gatto argues  that public schools were  meant to serve the needs of the ruling elites, by teaching the kids of lower socioeconomic classes to conform.  I agree!

Many times I heard teachers talking about the importance of instilling "work ethic" in high school students, and, to my amazement, many parents agree with that! It is instilled by means of meting out punitive grades for homework not done (or handed in just one minute late) which result in a lowered GPA even if the scores on tests and quizzes are all A's.

Work ethic, as a major goal of schooling, likely stems from the beginning of the 20th century when schools already were heavily influenced by the nation's first industrialists who needed skilled laborers to work in their factories. When Frederick W. Taylor introduced his principles of scientific management which were to increase production with less waste and fewer costs, those were also used to make schools run more efficiently. Learning had to be done for a specific purpose inside strict parameters, and that concept has not changed over the decades. Kids still have to learn this, and disregard that, even if they are interested more in that than this. It is a good way to ensure that many dislike school and do not learn much substance. The situation is worse now with the many standardized tests kids need to take each year.

One mom, who has tried tirelessly to inform parents that opting their kids out of the state testing is possible, said:
"I've been trying for more than 7 years here ... to convince parents to band together against testing but schools are closing right and left and charters springing up everywhere in my home district. I and a teacher here in town hosted an opt out event, put out flyers, advertised on the radio, invited everyone we knew and absolutely NO ONE showed up. I cannot tell you how discouraging that was. I've given out leaflets at schools. I don't know what else I can do. I'm tired. So I have a public Facebook page and I post. ..I don't want anyone to think I'm giving up; though I think it's a David and Goliath battle."

"We're winning small battles here and there but it's going to be years; as many as it took us to get this far.... There are more and more parents opting out every year but no one seems to want to band together; at least not here. They don't want to call attention to themselves. So, whenever I get the opportunity, I spread the word; while my kids and my husband roll their eyes and find the door."

I told her I admire her for her tenacity, and that a bit of her discouragement should be shared.

Perhaps it will shake some awake!

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Some of the many good books I have read:

  • All work and no play..How educational Reforms are harming our Preschoolers by Sharna Olfman

  • Education's Missing Ingredient by Victoria M. Young

  • Educational Genocide by Horace (Rog) Lucido

  • Endangered Minds by Jane M. Healy

  • Free to LEARN; Why Unleashing the Instincts to Play Will Make Our Children Happier, More Self-Reliant, and better Students for Life by Peter Gray,

  • Insult to Intelligence - Frank Smith
  • Life in Schools - An Introduction to Critical Pedagogy by Peter McLaren (Life in Schools has been named one of the 12 most significant writings worldwide in the field of educational theory, policy and practice by an international panel of experts)

  • Seeds of Tomorrow by Angela Engel

  • Wounded by School by Kirsten Olson

  • The Education of Sam Sanders by T.S. Poetter


And many others by Diane Ravitch, John Holt, Alfie Kohn, John Taylor Gatto, and more!







Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Support Parents in Opting Out!

By Don Perl from The Coalition for Better Education

"...Our billboard campaign is off the ground.  We have had a few early donations to the cause and our account at the Weld Schools Credit Union is just over $1,000.  The donations have come from Boulder and Greeley, Colorado.  Each year we have seen more parents exempt their children from this boondoggle of testing.  The 2014 figures show that 1,412 parents exempted their children, up from 946 in 2013.  I am attaching a photograph of last year’s billboard.  This year’s boards will have a similar look, of course with the change of acronym to PARCC.

TCAPWe have contracted with Mile Hi Outdoor Advertising for two billboards.  One on Route 85 south of Greeley, and the other in a high visibility area in South Denver at Hampden and Santa Fe Avenues.  The two billboards will cost $3,700 and will go up in mid-January, symbolically around the celebration of the works of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  We will have the billboards for at least one month and likely for longer if all is well.

 

All donations are greatly appreciated, no matter the amount.  “Revolutionary headquarters” is at the following address:

 

The Coalition for Better Education, Inc.

2424 22nd Avenue

Greeley, Colorado 80631

 

In appreciation and solidarity,

 

Don Perl

The Coalition for Better Education, Inc.

www.thecbe.org

 

Department of Hispanic Studies

University of Northern Colorado

Greeley, Colorado 80639

don.perl@unco.edu

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Test Prep! Watch and Weep!

"Worksheets don't grow dendrites" ~ Marcia Tate

Watch and share this video by Kaydonna Wolfcale,  a teacher who quit because of the rigid education reforms, and weep for all kids in public schools today!



Texas STAAR test prep

If this example is not enough reason to sign the White House petition to stop standardized testing in America's public schools, I don't know what will be persuasive.
Direct the Department of Education & Congress to Remove Annual Standardized Testing Mandates of NCLB and RttT

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/direct-department-education-congress-remove-annual-standardized-testing-mandates-nclb-and-rttt/1lSSvnYK


Also see: Do You Care about Kids or Data?

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Schoolboards Utterly Useless Looking Out for Kids

"What happens when the Commissioner of Education comes to town? Does your local school board become more responsive to parent/teacher concerns, or LESS ? A Wappingers Falls NY mother is prohibited from giving a 20-minute Common Core speech, that she was initially granted by the schoolboard, after Commissioner King's appearance. One board member walked out of the meeting.-- Wappingers Falls, NY. October 15, 2013"

Here you have it; something I have long suspected, namely that it is useless to attend schoolboard meetings. Up until now I thought it was perhaps only my local  schoolboard's stance to ignore public input on important education issues, but it is likely true for most!

Wappinger schoolboard member John Lumia says:
"There are certain things that we cannot , as a schoolboard, change. There are certain things that are mandated to us...our function isn't exctly to evaluate the common core and pass judgment on it. Our job is to execute education and policy and government finances of the district, and we are kind of limited as to what we can do...we're very limited as to what we can do. So, hearing all these opinions is nice, it's great to see engaged members of the community, but there's not much we can actually do to influence the legislature from here. It's just a little far out of our reach here." Watch the segment here.

About his decision not to have a Common Core presentation by a parent he says,
common core board"I wrestled with this issue for a while, and called fellow board members so I would have their opinion. I cannot vote to allow this presentation [because] we have..presentations given to the board, and they are done by administrators and staff, and they are done by experts, sometimes consultants that we hire for various projects, and we look to certain individuals for guidance, mainly experts like I say like consultants or administrators. Although I applaud a parent coming to the board, the appropriate method of addressing the board would be during the public comment session."

In case you missed his point; most schoolboard members do believe that it is the administrators, and consultants (working for the curriculum publishers) who are the experts. That is why they ignore research and statements by the real education and child development experts. It is the reason why schools have become so toxic for kids!

Lumia said:
 "As to whether someone is qualified to provide this information. I frankly think that...only qualified individuals should be given that liberty."

Board president Ved Shravah BOE asked the superintendent if he can stop teaching Common Core in schools, if the board had voted against it. His answer: "We cannot stop it." Watch the segment here.

Ved Shravah:
common core board3"It is inconsequential what we say here...You can have 24 hour presentations; it is not going to change the fact that our children will have to learn Common Core Standards, they will have to take the tests. Our teachers have to teach, no matter what their opinion is, no matter what they think. It is mandated, it has to be done, and I don't see why we're having an argument around this issue."  Watch the segment here.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Corporate Tests Do Not Inform Instruction

Excellent testimony given to the House Education Committee in support of  HB14 - 1202 which would allow the State Board of Education to waive most of  the statewide testing requirements for a school district.  See details here.

The parent of a student in a school district with a waiver may excuse his or her child from participating in any standardized tests, including any statewide test. The department cannot penalize a school district, and a school district cannot penalize the student or the student's teacher if a parent excuses his or her child from testing.

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My name is Peggy Robertson. I am a Public School teacher in my 17th year of teaching, and one of the founders of United Opt Out National.  I support parents in opting out of high stakes testing all over the country...because I see the damage it is doing to children every day. And as a teacher, I have a moral obligation to do right by our children.

NotscoreThese tests our children take today are high stakes tests, which means that something bad could happen, should a child fail a test - the children understand this. The children know that they could be held back a year. They know that their school could be shut down. They know that their teachers could be fired.
The pressure and fear placed on our children and our teachers is immense. The school culture becomes toxic as a result.

When teachers are not testing, they feel great urgency to teach to the test due to the fear of failure. The more we test, the less time we have for our own authentic teacher assessments. Quite honestly, it is rare to see a teacher-created assessment anymore.

And these corporate tests do not inform our instruction. They narrow our instruction because the tests assess narrow learning. Narrow learning does not create thinkers and problem-solving citizens who can innovate and support a thriving democracy.
Narrow learning creates students who are obedient and follow directions.

Our country has more patents per million people than any other nation. Narrow learning via high stakes curriculum and testing will diminish our innovation very quickly.

As I help parents in opting their children out of testing, I hear stories of children who believe they are failures, children who fear their teachers will be fired, and children who sadly, state, that the test is all that counts anymore - they recognize that school has been reduced to a test prep factory.

I also hear about the damage high stakes testing does to our neediest children. Our second language learners and our children with IEPs spend more time testing and are denied more authentic learning experiences than any other children.
I speak with parents whose children pull their hair out, children who throw up, who cry, who bite their nails to the quick, and who cannot sleep at night due to these tests.

I speak to children who literally, physically, shudder when discussing the upcoming high stake tests. I speak to children who tell me they are bad readers because they failed the test, yet I know they have made one and a half year's growth as a reader.

Because I support parents in opting out of testing across the nation on a daily basis, I know very well the climate of the country in terms of parent unrest. Parents are angry.
Parents recognize that their children are being deprived of authentic learning. Parents also recognize that their children are being used for profit.

They recognize that these test costs, estimated in the billions for our country, are profiting the corporations while stripping our schools of funding for much needed resources. They recognize that corporate reformers creating and funding these testing mandates choose to send their own children to schools where high stakes testing and curriculum meant to create common children does not exist.

I ask that parents be allowed to opt their children out of these high stakes tests without negative repercussions for their children, their children's teachers and their school communities. Thank you.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Teacher says: "We are abusing children.."

"..I am here to report we are abusing children in the state of New York. There is now a common core syndrome."

From the moment I posted this short, very inspiring video on various Facebook  education  groups, the number of views went from 301 to 1,332 in just 15 minutes! Help make this video go viral, so that most anyone in the country will have heard what this teacher so unequivocally dared to say!

And remember, it is not just kids in New York  State who are abused. This unhealthy focus on student 'performance' on standardized tests  is happening in schools everywhere.



Check out United Opt Out National and their Facebook group: Opt Out of the State Test: The National Movement with 5,541 members!

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Schools Complicit in Child Abuse and Neglect

So, there! I said it. What is it based on? Well, when you hear a parent of a kindergartner say that he hates going to school, you know something is dreadfully wrong. No, kids are not beaten (I trust!), but I heard of a teacher who did not allow a child in third grade to go to the bathroom, or get cleaned up after she peed her pants, all because there's a  strict lock-step schedule to be followed. Every school in my district is on the same page at every hour.

Stories like this do not make it into the news, so parents still think school is a good place for their kids, never mind that kids are now deprived of recess which, research bears out, enhances learning capability. Never mind that kids in  kindergarten no longer get to play (at all!) with dolls, cars, blocks,  and jigsaws, or do quality crafts that help develop fine motor skills. Those learning activities are now deemed unnecessary as kids "need to be prepared early to 'succeed' and 'compete' in a global economy".

Someone on the Facebook group Opt Out of the State Test, discussing Diane Ravitch' latest book " Reign of Error" wrote,
"..in my small town, I don't think parents see the connection with test scores. If parents routinely are measuring their kids against others by asking all their friends what their kids scored, then we have an uphill battle to educate them. As I read, I am constantly trying to decide where to start educating my community.

Our parents need to feel assured that the "answers" are not necessarily in homeschooling, post secondary (dual enrollment) online schooling and open enrollment. Charters are 50 miles away. Instead of taking a complacent role that are school is here, I see us pro-actively promoting and advocating for our district so that fewer parents feel the need to look elsewhere."

In response I shared that in our district, young kids' needs are neglected in all regular schools, so any parent who can seek out more appropriate education (in my opinion only one of the three charters here qualifies), or who can homeschool, absolutely owes it their child to do so!

My heart still aches for all the kids, year after year, who enter kindergarten and are trained like dogs, not just with learning how to read by scripted Reading First curriculum, but also by means of the PBIS program. Plus, no recess, and no play in kindergarten.

Sadly, parents have been brainwashed to believe that school is a, "safe and nurturing place where all kids will have a chance to learn and reach their fullest potential", as written in many a school's mission and vision statement.

As a young parent I trusted those 'good' intentions, and back then in the early nineties, school was still a relatively good place for kids. I say relatively because, seriously...how many kids do you know of who will say they love school? But now, schools have become toxic, here in Greeley, Colorado especially, and their toxic overhaul in 2006 was used as a shining example for other failing districts to follow!

And now parents buy into the propaganda that all these reforms and tests, to track their kids' performance,  are needed so their kids can 'succeed' and 'compete' in the 'global economy', never mind what the experts say whose findings are never even presented to parents, because school administrations are complicit in keeping the reforms going. And how do they do that?

By insidious coercion and threats. A parent shared this letter (click on the photo to enlarge) she received from the superintendent when she chose to opt out her child from testing, and to her credit, DIBELS testing as well.

[caption id="attachment_1760" align="aligncenter" width="300"]An Opt Out threat An Opt Out threat[/caption]

PTA's and PTO's should step up to the plate, but they too believe the propaganda. See what the New York State PTA shares on the issue: Testing Opt-Out, Just the Facts