Sunday, March 31, 2013

Why I won't let my son take the PSSA

Why I won't let my son take the PSSA

March 31, 2013 12:10 am

I am an English professor. So you can imagine how my pride was hurt when my 9-year-old son Jacob started bringing home low scores on his practice reading tests for the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment.

My husband and I have been helping Jacob with his test-prep reading homework every weeknight this year, and it has been a grim slog. At times I have found myself getting angry when Jacob has fidgeted, or when he has had trouble focusing. Sometimes I have gotten angry when he simply hasn't been able to answer the questions.

Then one day this March it dawned on me. I am getting angry at my son about a test. A test that I do not like. A "high-stakes" test that will put so much pressure on Jacob that it probably will not reflect his true abilities. I also realized something else: Jacob does not love to read.

After doing some research and talking with other parents, my husband and I decided to "opt out" Jacob from the PSSA tests. We are opting him out because we do not like what high-stakes tests are doing to Jacob, to our family, to his teachers, to his school and, ultimately, to our entire education system.

High-stakes tests like the PSSAs are used to evaluate, close and punish public schools, including my son's school, Pittsburgh Linden, a K-5 magnet school in Point Breeze. Linden's Adequate Yearly Progress score is bound to Linden's PSSA test results. According to the federal No Child Left Behind Act, every public school in the United States must be 100 percent proficient in reading and math (based on test scores) by 2014.

Last year, Linden did not make AYP. In fact, only six Pittsburgh Public Schools did. A neighboring school, Colfax, which is one of the best schools in the East End, has been labeled "low-achieving" and is currently under something called "Corrective Action II." Under this label, a school can be reconstituted, chartered or privatized.

High-stakes tests also warp the educational environment. This March, as Linden is gearing up for the PSSAs, the hallways were stripped bare as per state law. Artwork, motivational slogans, student-made posters, the Women's History display my kids helped to make, my daughter's picture of herself as a "writer" when she grows up, the "dream" statements everyone filled out in January with the large cutout of Martin Luther King -- all of it has come down. During testing season, access to Linden's new iPads -- for which I helped to write the grant that allowed us to acquire them -- will also be curtailed.

The curriculum at Linden is narrowing, too. As testing has ratcheted up, and as Gov. Tom Corbett's billion-dollar cut to Pennsylvania's K-12 education budget have kicked in, schools across the state are dropping programs that are not measured by tests.

Last year at Linden the third-grade band program was cut, dozens of hours of music instruction were cut, our science programming was reduced, and we were slated to lose our art teacher (fortunately we were able to save her). We lost dozens of hours of library instruction, and children are allowed access to the library only once every two weeks. Ironically, the loss of our library hours will hurt the students more when it comes to testing. A recent study found that "[w]ith a full-time librarian, students are more likely to score 'Advanced' and less likely to score 'Below Basic' on reading and writing tests."

Also, there is the stress. Jacob, only a third-grader, has cried, gotten dejected and thrown fits over his test-prep requirements, both at home and at school. Sixth graders in our district will take 23 different tests this year -- up from nine the previous year.

During the tests, students are treated like prisoners, with limited bathroom breaks and constant monitoring. These conditions are especially hard for special-needs children and children with Individual Education Plans.

Teachers are also stressed. My son's third-grade teacher has been working so hard this year that he arrives many days as early as 6 a.m. and stays for hours after school, sometimes as late as 9 p.m. From around the district I am hearing stories about teachers crying in the hall -- devastated by the harm they believe the tests are inflicting.

Let me be clear. I believe in evaluation as a tool -- I use quizzes and other testing techniques in my college classroom. But high-stakes tests, tests used to label schools, teachers and students as failures, are damaging our nation's educational system.

Here in Pittsburgh and across southwestern Pennsylvania, the movement to opt out of standardized testing is taking root. In the Pittsburgh Public Schools there are parents at Colfax, Greenfield, Liberty, Linden, Montessori and Phillips who are opting their children out of the PSSAs. Across the region, some parents in Mt. Lebanon, Somerset County and Westmoreland County are doing so as well. In Mt. Lebanon, a group of parents opted out when their children's school cut back on recess, extended the length of the school day and reduced other school services, such as counseling and nursing -- all to make way for more testing.
The opt-out movement is also swelling nationwide. Earlier this year, teachers in several Seattle high schools refused to administer a high-stakes test called the MAP. In Portland, Ore.; Providence, R.I.; and Denver, Colo., students themselves have been leading the charge against the tests. Just last month in Texas, more than 10,000 parents rallied against an increase in testing and decrease in funding for Texas public schools. Some of these actions are coming under the banner of United Opt Out National (unitedoptout.com).

Next month, while Jacob's classmates are nervously sharpening their pencils and getting hushed by their teachers, Jacob is going to be in the Linden library, reading for pleasure -- a pastime I have encouraged and rewarded since I realized that Jacob isn't keen on reading.

With this act of civil disobedience, our family will contribute to the revolt against the standardized testing that is hurting students, schools and the quality of education. I want my children to learn, but also to love to learn. Don't you?

Kathy M. Newman is an associate professor of English at Carnegie Mellon University (kn4@andrew.cmu.edu).

First Published March 31, 2013 12:00 am
http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/opinion/perspectives/why-i-wont-let-my-son-take-the-pssa-681537/

13 comments:

  1. I'm not sure the English professor is correct in the statement: "The curriculum at Linden is narrowing, too. As testing has ratcheted up, and as Gov. Tom Corbett's billion-dollar cut to Pennsylvania's K-12 education budget have kicked in, schools across the state are dropping programs that are not measured by tests."

    From the PA Dept of Education they say the Basic Education Funding Appropriation has increased by $90,000,000. If there was any cut it actually came from Obama. The Feds gave the districts a one time increase and told them it was a one time increase and that they needed to get their financials houses in order. They didn't and now the school districts are passing the blame for their inability to rein in spending on the Gov. 

    http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/education_budget/8699/basic_education_funding/539259

      
    The Governor's Budget for 2013-2014 includes $5,493,629,000 for the Basic Education Funding appropriation.  This is a $90,000,000 increase (1.67 percent) over the amount appropriated in 2012-2013.

    So somebody has got their facts screwed up! The professor or the PA Dept. Of Education., maybe one of the newspapers can do there job for once and do some real investigative reporting.

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  2. 11:41PM the newspaper who carried this will not report what you did - it's the Posti-Gazette. Ol' JoPo and like liberal progressive P-G want to put the entire blame on the Gov for political reasons, not educational reasons. This aspect is definitely not about or for the children.

    Don't confuse them with the facts ! They're not good at dealing with them.

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  3. 8:33 you'll find this piece from Walter Williams interesting as well.

    http://m.townhall.com/columnists/walterewilliams/2013/03/13/educational-rot-n1530968/page/full/

    He tells us why we have a college professor telling us a .55 mill tax increase is like a zero mill increase, and why a CMU professor believes that the state has cut education funding. Of course, it could never be that the people teaching never have any responsibility for poor student performance. But they love to take credit as in "if you can read this [bumper sticker] - thank a teacher!

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  4. While I admit I don't know if Professor Newman is right or the PA Dept. Of Education, but I find it funny you don't haveto look very far to find articles like this one:


    Feds to cut $1.3 billion in education funding, but the tests will survive

    Sent to the Washington Post, Feb. 22, 2013

    “U.S. schools brace for federal funding cuts,” Feb. 21, did not mention that despite anticipated cuts of $1.3 billion in federal funding of education, there are no plans to cut back on the common core standards, accurately described by Susan Ohanian as “a radical untried curriculum overhaul and … nonstop national testing.”

    The common core requires that all students be connected to the internet in order to take the tests that enforce the standards. This represents an investment of billions. New York City and the State of Florida have budgeted about a half a billion each just to set up internet connections for all students, and you can be sure that as soon as the infrastructure is in place, it will be declared obsolete, resulting in a never-ending flow of taxpayer money to computer and testing companies.

    The Post reported that most of the cuts will affect programs for poor children and students with disabilities. The feds are decreasing funding for teaching and learning but continue to demand that districts and states fund testing, investing in weighing the animal rather than feeding it.

    Stephen Krashen

    http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2013/02/feds-cut-funding-but-tests-will-survive.html

    No mention by the professor of any federal education funding cuts in her article is there?
    Isn't that curious!?

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  5. More facts that seem to escape Professor Newman.

    "The loss of educational funding across the country results from various factors, including depressed revenues, difficulty in raising new funds, rising costs and depleting emergency federal aid, according to the report.
    Still, a few states have increased educational funding for various reasons. Some states like Maryland, Massachusetts and Iowa have prioritized and focused on sustaining or improving education funds amid tighter finances. Alaska, Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming have faced fewer budget cuts and can draw on large oil and gas revenues.
    The results of the CBPP report are more telling than shocking, as it sums and contextualizes what prolific reports on school budgets have spotlighted over the last few years. While states balance their budgets, they also face the added burden of less federal support as $100 billion in federal stimulus money for education dries up."

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/2011/10/07/k-12-education-funding-mo_n_1000396.html

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  6. Birks, Posti et al. never blames a dem president when they can blame a rep gov. Rep president Bush was blamed for everything.
    Anyone know how many Lebo kids opted out ?

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  7. One has to wonder with average annual expenditures increasing in the Mt. Lebanon School District of over $1,000,000 just how much more do they need to quell their incessant whining that they aren't getting enough?

    They have falling enrollments, stagnant measurements of achievement, ever increasing staffing and payrolls, new fees and we get the same song and dance.
    Its all for the kids they say,but who is suing whom for $900,000 in a greivance. Who got higher than inflation paytaises, who pay less than private sector employees for health insurance and who has a more generous retirement package.
    When does the whining stop?

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  8. It will never stop.
    I was checking out http://www.lebocitizens.com/Lebo_Citizens/The_Facts.html and was reminded about the Act 34 Hearing, when I spoke about the 10.5% tax hike, the CAC, the top five threats according to the comprehensive plan, the Honorable Joseph M. James affirmed the Mt. Lebanon Zoning Hearing Board’s earlier decision that the Mt. Lebanon School District was not entitled to a variance for the currently planned high-school renovation, and so much more.

    I never heard back about my questions concerning the budget. We're supposed to go to the budget forum tomorrow and make our presentations, and the board won't listen and they'll do what they damn well please.

    Bullies keep winning in Mt. Lebanon.
    Elaine

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  9. There is one time to properly stand up to bullies and unfortunately no one can do it for you (figuratively Elaine, as you have done more than your share of standing up.
    People need to educate themselves. Look at both sides of an issue or tax increase, then vote!
    36% voter turn out is deplorable. And an uninformed cconstituency is even worse.

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  10. Exactly right 11:41.

    It wasn't Corbett's cut to education. It was Obama who provided a one-year stimulus to education funding which was subsequently withdrawn. Was Corbett supposed to hike PA taxes $3,000,000,000 to fill in the gap left by the Obama stimulus?

    Unfortunately, this incorrect statement detracts from the rest of the article which is quite interesting otherwise.

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  11. 4:58 agree, the rest of the article is quite interesting. Too bad the more money for education agenda gets in the way.
    -- 11:41

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  12. There is and will be more and more of our state "education" tax $'s going to the school districts - to fund the outrageous and exponentially increasing 50% share of teachers pension funding, and reimbursement payments for Taj Mahal school building projects. The PTA suck-ups and union's don't want to admit that.

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  13. I think there are facts to support the Professor's position. They are collected by a Pittsburgh blogger. Corbett did indeed cut the education budget. http://yinzercation.wordpress.com/the-facts/

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