Wednesday, April 29, 2015

280 High School Students Just Told Obama To Shove It In An Epic Way

280 High School Students Just Told Obama To Shove It In An Epic Way

BuzzPo Staff

4/24/2015

Source …..

Obama Surprised = Common Core

280 high schoolers – the entire junior class of Nathan Hale High School in Seattle, Washington – have effectively told President Obama and his band of progressive buffoons that they can take their Common Core and shove it.

When state testing began on Tuesday, not a single junior showed up on campus to participate, as the entire student body had collectively decided to exercise their legal right to opt out of the ‘Smarter Balanced’ exams.

“They didn’t skip school all day,” commented district spokeswoman Stacy Howard, according to the Seattle Times. “They just didn’t show up during the testing period.”

The Nathan Hale students weren’t the only ones to deal this massive blow to the liberal establishment, either. According to early district estimates, about half of the juniors at three other Seattle high schools have also opted out of the Smarter Balanced testing.

“Students voted with their own feet,” remarked Doug Edelstein, a history teacher at Nathan Hale and opponent of the Common Core testing. “They felt like they knew the facts, and made their own decisions.”

Give the junior class at Seattle’s Nathan Hale High two thumbs up for taking a stand against Common Core by sharing this report!



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Peach County Geordia's Board of Education is considering converting to a charter system district

Peach County's Board of Education is considering converting to a charter district, according to the Macon Telegraph.

 

A charter system, as compared to a status quo system or Investing in Educational Excellence contract, allows for school-level governing bodies. That makes it an attractive option to board Chairman Ben McDaniel, who also noted no final decision has been made.

 

"I like the idea about the school governance ... getting more input from the community," McDaniel said.

 

Superintendent Daryl Fineran presented the attributes of the charter and IE2 options to the board at Tuesday's study session, the first public address of the issue ahead of the June 30 state deadline. He did not present the status quo model as a choice and has stated in the past that he didn't see that as a viable option.

 

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Obama ‘Education’ Secretary: If Parents Opt Out of Common Core, Feds Will Force Them Back In

Obama ‘Education’ Secretary: If Parents Opt Out of Common Core, Feds Will Force Them Back In

So, if you parents think that you have some measure of control over your children’s education, Obama’s Secretary of Indoctrination wants you to know that all your kids belong to Obama and his Common Core Scheme.

Ed Sec Arne Duncan–an old Chicago hack and Obama buddy–is warning states that they better stop this drive away from Common Core. He also warns that if this business where parents and local citizens think they have control over education continues, why, Obama is going to come down like a ton of bricks on all of you. You better drop that silly notion that your kids belong to you, America.

 Secretary of Education Arne Duncan issued a veiled threat to the parents and students who choose to opt out of Common Core testing – The Feds “have an obligation to step in.”

Federal law, under No Child Left Behind, requires 95 percent of students in a state to take the annual standardized tests in reading and math from grades 3-8. It is a requirement which until now has never needed enforcement or consideration.

With as many as 184,000 students in New York choosing to opt out, the 95 percent threshold will not only be in jeopardy, it will be an easily missed mark.

When asked what would happen in states with such a high opt out rate, whether they would have to force consequences upon schools, parents, and students, Duncan responded “We think most states will do that.” 

Remember, America, your children belong to Obama.



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Sunday, April 19, 2015

The Man Behind Common Core Math

The Man Behind Common Core Math

Jason Zimba, one of the writers of the Common Core, waits while his daughters play.      

Jason Zimba, one of the writers of the Common Core, waits while his daughters play.

Julienne Schaer for The Hechinger Report

Every Saturday morning at 10 a.m., Jason Zimba begins a math tutoring session for his two young daughters with the same ritual. Claire, 4, draws on a worksheet while Abigail, 7, pulls addition problems written on strips of paper out of an old Kleenex box decorated like a piggy bank.

If she gets the answer "lickety-split," as her dad says, she can check it off. If she doesn't, the problem goes back in the box, to try the following week.

"I would be sleeping in if I weren't frustrated," Zimba says of his Saturday-morning lessons, which he teaches in his pajamas. He feels the math instruction at Abigail's public elementary school in Manhattan is subpar — even after the school switched to the Common Core State Standards.

But Zimba, a mathematician by training, is not just any disgruntled parent. He's one of the guys who wrote the Common Core.

And four years after signing off on the final draft of the standards, he spends his weekends trying to make up for what he considers the lackluster curriculum at his daughter's school, and his weekdays battling the lackluster curriculum and teaching at schools around the country that are struggling to shift to the Common Core.

Zimba and the other writers of the Common Core knew the transition would be tough, but they never imagined conflicts over bad homework would fuel political battles and threaten the very existence of their dream to remodel American education.

When Zimba was first hired to help write a new set of K-12 math standards in 2009, the groups behind the Common Core — including representatives from 48 states — set very ambitious goals. The tough new guidelines would match the expectations set for students in higher-performing rivals like Singapore and South Korea. The standards would not only catapult American students ahead of other developed nations but would also help close the gaps between low-income students in the U.S. and their wealthier counterparts.

The Common Core would drive publishers and test-makers to create better curricula and better tests and push school districts and teachers to aim for excellence, not just basic proficiency, for their students. And the guidelines would arm every principal, teacher and parent with the knowledge of exactly what it takes to get into college and succeed.

The champions of the Common Core — including organizations like the National Governors Association and the Council for Chief State School Officers — expected the task to be difficult. Overhauling textbooks would take a lot of time, and training teachers would take even more. But the bipartisan groundswell of opposition to the standards took them by surprise.

"The creation of the standards is enshrouded in mystery for people," Zimba says. "I wish people understood what a massive process it was, and how many people were involved. It was a lot of work."

As much as supporters emphasize the democratic origin of the standards and count out the dozens of experts and teachers who were consulted, the Common Core math standards were ultimately crafted by three guys whose only goal was to improve the way mathematics is taught. That, some experts argue, is what makes the Common Core better than the standards they've replaced.

"It was a design project, not a political project," says Phil Daro, a former high school algebra teacher who was on the three-man writing team with Zimba and William McCallum, head of the math department at the University of Arizona. "It was not our job to do the politics while we were writing."

But the backlash was perhaps inevitable.

The Inner Circle

On the surface, Zimba, 45, seemed an odd choice for a major national project like Common Core. McCallum and Daro were well-known and admired in the world of math and education. McCallum is a prominent mathematician who has authored algebra and calculus textbooks and helped write Arizona's K-12 math standards. In 2009, Daro was a senior fellow at a for-profit curriculum and teacher-training company, America's Choice. In the 1990s, he was involved in developing California's math standards.

In contrast, Zimba was an obscure physics professor at Bennington, an elite liberal arts college in Vermont. He wrote a quirky math and parenting blog with posts about complex physics problems, his kids, and the occasional political issue, including a 2011 post titled, "Numbers Don't Lie (but Michele Bachmann Does)."

He grew up as an outsider. Raised in a working-class household in suburban Detroit, he was the first in his family to go to college. He chose Williams College in Massachusetts. Academically, the school was a good fit. Financially, it was more of a challenge. His friend Eric Mabery said the two got to know each other because they were the only poor people on campus. "He was the only person who had several jobs," said Mabery, now a biologist at a San Francisco startup. "He was the only other person who couldn't fly home. We had to take the bus."

But from Williams, Zimba's career took off. He was chosen for a Rhodes scholarship to England's Oxford University in 1991. At Oxford, he befriended a Yale student from Manhattan, David Coleman. Coleman went on to become a consultant for McKinsey, the global consulting firm. Zimba returned to Detroit to do stints of factory work to help support his family, but eventually he headed to the prestigious math department at the University of California, Berkeley for a Ph.D. in mathematical physics. In 1999 he reconnected with Coleman, who had an idea for starting an education business.

At first, they considered going into educational video games, but they scrapped the idea in favor of an even bigger educational trend: standardized testing. The No Child Left Behind Act was still around the corner, but a growing education reform movement, which insisted that holding schools more accountable for student test scores would increase performance, had already pushed many states to expand standardized testing.

Coleman and Zimba's business, the Grow Network, found a niche in the burgeoning field of testing by producing reports that helped schools, teachers, parents and even students themselves interpret results from the new exams. "To design a successful assessment report, you need to be thoughtful about what the teacher really needs, what the student really needs," Coleman says.

Thanks to Zimba, Coleman added, they were. Zimba had a genius for creating reports that were mathematically precise but also humanely phrased, Coleman says. Grow Network was hired by states like California and districts like New York City and was eventually bought out by the educational publishing giant McGraw-Hill for an undisclosed price.

Zimba and Coleman went their separate ways. Coleman stayed on a bit longer with the company under McGraw-Hill. After a brief stint at a liberal arts college in Iowa, Zimba landed at 

 Zimba and Coleman stayed in touch, often discussing a problem that had bothered them during their years studying standardized tests.

"We looked at a lot of standards," Zimba says. "Previous standards ranged from terrible to not good enough. The best of them were little more than test blueprints. They were not a blueprint for learning math."

Every state had its own standards, which varied widely in their expectations for students. For instance, some states required students to memorize the times tables, but about a third of states didn't, according to Zimba.

But what most worried Coleman and Zimba — and many education experts — was the sheer number of standards in most states. The common critique was that most American grade-level guidelines were "a mile wide and an inch deep," in stark contrast to the fewer but more intense expectations in high-achieving countries like Japan and Singapore.

In 2007, Coleman and Zimba wrote a paper for the Carnegie Corp., a foundation with interests in education (and one of the many funders of both The Hechinger Report and NPR). "We were just trying to think about what could really matter in education," Coleman says. "What could actually help? One idea we thought is that standards could be really focused and better. At Grow we'd spent so much time with the endless vast and vague standards."

The paper got the attention of several groups that had latched on to a similar idea, including the Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors Association, one of the original leaders of the Reagan-era standards movement. A couple of years later, when the two organizations joined forces to draft a set of "fewer, clearer, higher" standards, Coleman and Zimba were picked to help lead the effort.

The CCSSO contracted with a new organization Zimba and Coleman founded, Student Achievement Partners. It declined to disclose the amount of the contract or the total spent on the development of the Common Core but said funding was provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (another supporter of NPR), Carnegie and other foundations, as well as state membership dues from CCSSO and the NGA.

"We were looking for a skill set that was fairly unique," says Chris Minnich, executive director of CCSSO. "We needed individuals that would know the mathematics — Jason and the other writers obviously know the mathematics — but would also be able to work with the states, and a bunch of teachers who would be involved."

Writing The Common Core

In September 2009, Zimba started writing the Common Core math standards. Although his second daughter was due the same month, the standards were all-consuming. Zimba recalled getting a text in the delivery room from one of his co-writers telling him to stop responding to emails about the project: "It's time to be a dad now."

That fall, though, finishing the Common Core math standards came first. He was still on the faculty at Bennington, although on leave for part of the time, so the standards were mostly written at night, in "the barn," an old garage on his property that he had transformed into a study.

"It was hard on us as a family," he says. "I gave an awful lot." In October, his mother, who had worked most of her life as waitress, died. Zimba kept working.

They started with a blueprint that laid out what students should know by the end of high school. It was written by Achieve, a nonprofit founded for the purpose, and by the testing groups College Board and ACT. Then they began consulting the research on math education and enlisting the ideas of experts in various fields of mathematics. During the course of the next year, they consulted with state officials, mathematicians and teachers, including a union group. Draft after draft was passed back and forth over email.

"We'd be up to 3 in the morning," says McCallum. "Jason would be up till 5 in the morning."

The final drafts of the standards were released to the public in June 2010. By the following year, thanks in part to financial incentives dangled by the Obama administration, more than 40 states had adopted them. Zimba quit his job at Bennington to work full time at Student Achievement Partners to promote the standards.

The backlash didn't really begin until 2013 in states like New York, where new Common Core-aligned tests had sent scores plummeting, and Indiana, where conservatives were leery of the Obama administration's support of the standards. It hit the mainstream in early 2014, when a dad in North Carolina posted a convoluted "Common Core" question from his son's second-grade math quiz on Facebook, along with a letter he'd written to the teacher. "I have a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electronics Engineering which included extensive study in differential equations and other high-math applications," he wrote. "Even I cannot explain the Common Core mathematics approach, nor get the answer correct."

Glenn Beck and other conservative pundits picked up the post, and it went viral. A couple of months later, the comedian Louis C.K. complained about his daughter's Common Core math homework on Twitter, and late-night comedians like Stephen Colbert began mocking the standards, too. Critics called the standards too convoluted, too abstract and too conceptual because of the focus on getting students to explain and discuss their answers.

By the summer of 2014, Indiana and Oklahoma had pulled out of the Common Core, other states had passed legislation to replace the standards in the coming years, and still others are threatening to do the same this year. Supporters of the standards, including teachers unions and the Gates Foundation, are now trying to salvage Common Core by calling on states to hold off on the stakes associated with new Common Core tests, including new teacher evaluations in many states based on student scores.

The backlash has both annoyed and baffled the writers. "When I see some of those problems posted on Facebook, I think I would have been mad, too," McCallum says. Daro tells a story about his grandson, who brought home a math worksheet labeled "Common Core," with a copyright date of 1999.

They argue there's actually very little fuzziness to the math in the Common Core. Students have to memorize their times tables by third grade and be able to do the kind of meat-and-potatoes problems Zimba asks of his daughter during their Saturday tutoring sessions, requirements he believes the so-called Common Core curriculum at her school essentially ignored.

Hung-Hsi Wu, a mathematics professor at Berkeley and one of the expert advisers in the Common Core process, blames the Common Core's problems on bad — and ubiquitous — textbooks that the publishing industry is reluctant to change. "Publishers don't want to bother with writing anything because they've gone through too many sets of standards," he says.

And that is the irony of the debate over the standards, and what may be their undoing. As powerful and influential in reshaping American classrooms as the standards could be, they don't include lesson plans, or teaching methods, or alternative strategies for when students don't get it.

Even as Zimba and his colleagues defend the standards against cries of federal overreach, they are helpless when it comes to making sure textbook publishers, test-makers, superintendents, principals and teachers interpret the standards in ways that will actually improve American public education, not make it worse.

Like McCallum, Zimba agrees with the North Carolina dad that the question on his son's Common Core-labeled math quiz was terrible. But as long as Americans hold to the conviction that most of what happens in schools should be kept under the control of states and local communities, the quality of the curriculum is out of his hands. "Like it or not, the standards allow a lot of freedom," he said.

To Triumph Or Die

Zimba gave up an academic career in which he had the freedom to wonder about abstract physics problems in the peace and quiet of his Vermont barn. But, he says, "I'm now participating in a much more urgent problem."

That problem is how to elevate the academic achievement of American students, especially the most disadvantaged, so the country can maintain its competitive advantage in the global economy. These days, Zimba and his colleagues acknowledge better standards aren't enough.

"I used to think if you got the assessments right, it would virtually be enough," he says. "In the No Child Left Behind world, everything follows from the test."

Now, he says, "I think it's curriculum."

This year, Zimba persuaded his daughter's school to try out a new curriculum that's better aligned to the standards he wrote. He is also devoting his time at his nonprofit, Student Achievement Partners, to create checklists other schools can use to find good textbooks that match the Common Core. The group has published training materials, including videos in which teachers demonstrate Common Core lessons.

On a recent rainy afternoon in Manhattan, the organization gathered in a conference room to hash out ideas for an online tool, funded by the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust (also among the many funders of The Hechinger Report), that could help teachers better understand the standards.

One idea for this tool was a "swipe-y" app that teachers could use to figure out whether students grasped a standard or not — something that would function much like Tinder, the matchmaking site. In the end, the group was most enthusiastic about a more low-tech option: a hotline that teachers and parents could call to find out if the Common Core-labeled math problems they found in their textbooks and homework were good or bad.

Daro and McCallum are leading their own efforts. McCallum founded a nonprofit called Illustrative Mathematics that produces sample tasks linked to the Common Core, trains teachers and produces curriculum blueprints. And Daro is actually writing an entire Common Core math curriculum for use on tablets, to be put out next year by educational publisher Pearson.

But it's unclear whether their efforts, and similar ones by like-minded nonprofits and funders like the Gates Foundation, will trickle down to the millions of classroom teachers attempting to adapt to the new standards. Or if the bad curricula still circulating, coupled with the nation's fractured politics, will do them in.

For his part, Zimba is optimistic. "The influence of the tests on the curriculum, it's negative," he says. "They've been a pale imitation of mathematics. I've talked to teachers who say teaching these standards, 'I feel like a teacher again.' That's not going to be easy to take away. Once you taste that, that's powerful."

This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news service focused on inequality and innovation in education. Read more about Common Core.



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Take the Common Core 4th grade math test

Take the Common Core 4th grade math test

This week, more than a third of students in Monroe County's suburban school districts declined to take the state English language arts exam for grades 3-8.

The next round comes Wednesday, the first of three days of math testing for the same students. The tests take about 90 minutes each day.

file photo

stock image

There is a fine line between challenging standards and developmentally inappropriate material. The state and testing defenders say they're toeing that line; opters-out believe it's been crossed.

Here is a chance to see for yourself.

Last year, the New York State Education Department released sample questions from the 2014 math and ELA exams. The tests include multiple choice, short-answer and long-form answer.

Click or tap below or here to answer 20 multiple-choice questions from the fourth-grade math test. More detail, an annotated answer key and questions for other grades are also available.

Talk about the tests

Reporter Justin Murphy will appear on "Connections With Evan Dawson" at noon Tuesday to discuss the state tests and the refusal movement and to take callers' questions. Other local education experts will also be part of the panel discussion. The show airs on WXXI 1370 AM and WRUR 88.5 FM.



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Monday, April 13, 2015

Report debunks ‘earlier is better’ academic instruction for young children

Report debunks ‘earlier is better’ academic instruction for young children


Four- and 5-year-old students listen to their teacher, Angie Clark, read at a Des Moines elementary school in 2011. (Steve Pope/AP)

The debate about appropriate curriculum for young children generally centers on two options: free play and basic activities vs. straight academics (which is what many kindergartens across the country have adopted, often reducing or eliminating time for play). A new report, “Lively Minds: Distinctions between academic versus intellectual goals for young children,” offers a new way to look at what is appropriate in early childhood education.

The report was written by Lilian G. Katz, professor emerita of early childhood education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she is on the staff of the Clearinghouse on Early Education and Parenting. She is past president of the National Association for the Education of Young Children and the first president of the Illinois Association for the Education of Young Children. Katz is currently the editor of the online peer-reviewed trilingual early childhood journal Early Childhood Research & Practice, and she is the author of more than 100 publications about early childhood education, teacher education, child development and the parenting of young children.

In her report, published by the nonprofit group Defending the Early Years, Katz  says that beyond free play and academics, “another major component of education – (indeed for all age groups) must be to provide a wide range of experiences, opportunities, resources and contexts that will provoke, stimulate, and support children’s innate intellectual dispositions.” As the title of the paper indicates, Katz makes a distinction between academic goals for young children and intellectual goals. What’s the difference? She writes:

ACADEMIC GOALS

Academic goals are those concerned with the mastery of small discrete elements of disembodied information,usually related to pre-literacy skills in the early years, and practiced in drills, worksheets, and other kinds of exercises designed to prepare children for the next levels of literacy and numeracy learning. The items learned and practiced have correct answers, rely heavily on memorization, the application of formulae versus understanding, and consist largely of giving the teacher the correct answers that the children know she awaits. Although one of the traditional meanings of the term academic is “of little practical value,” these bits of information are essential components of reading, writing, and other academic competencies useful in modern developed economies, and certainly in the later school years. In other words, I suggest that the issue here is not whether academic skills matter; rather it is about both when they matter and what proportion of the curriculum they warrant, especially during the early years.

INTELLECTUAL GOALS

Intellectual goals and their related activities, on the other hand, are those that address the life of the mind in its fullest sense (e.g. reasoning, predicting, analyzing, questioning, etc.), including a range of aesthetic and moral sensibilities. The formal definition of the concept of intellectual emphasizes reasoning, hypothesizing, posing questions, predicting answers to the questions, predicting the findings produced by investigation, the development and analysis of ideas and the quest for understanding and so forth.

An appropriate curriculum for young children is one that includes the focus on supporting children’s in-born intellectual dispositions, their natural inclinations. An appropriate curriculum in the early years then is one that includes the encouragement and motivation of the children to seek mastery of basic academic skills,e.g. beginning writing skills, in the service of their intellectual pursuits. Extensive experience of involving preschool and kindergarten children in in-depth investigation projects has clearly supported the assumption that the children come to appreciate the usefulness of a range of basic academic skills related to literacy and mathematics as they strive to share their findings from their investigations with classmates and others. It is useful to assume that all the basic intellectual skills and dispositions are in-born in all children, though, granted, stronger in some individuals than in others…like everything else.

Katz writes that longitudinal studies of the effects of different kinds of preschool curriculum models debunk the seemingly common-sense notion that “earlier is better” in terms of academic instruction. While “formal instruction produces good test results in the short term,” she says,  preschool curriculum and teaching methods that emphasize children’s interactive roles and initiative may be “not so impressive in the short run” but “yield better school achievement in the long term.”

That reflects a finding in a report released earlier this year, titled “Reading in Kindergarten: Little to Gain and Much to Lose,” which says that there is no evidence to support a widespread belief in the United States that children must read in prekindergarten or kindergarten to become strong readers and achieve academic success. You can read about that report here.

Katz also writes in the new report that “earlier is better” is not supported in neurological research, which “does not imply that formal academic instruction is the way to optimize early brain development.” Rather, she says, the research suggests that “preschool programs are best when they focus on social, emotional and intellectual goals rather than narrow academic goals” and provide “early experiences that provoke self-regulation, initiative and …sustained synchronous interaction in which the child is interactive with others in some continuous process, rather than a mere passive recipient of isolated bits of information for stimulation.”

Katz  says that “intellectual dispositions” of young children may actually be “weakened or even damaged by excessive and premature formal instruction” and that they are “not likely to be strengthened by many of the mindless, trivial if not banal activities frequently offered in child care, preschool and kindergarten programs.” It is “incumbent” upon schools, she writes, to connect with high-risk students “in terms of the unique aspects of intellect and dispositions that they bring.”

 Here’s the full report:

https://www.scribd.com/document_downloads/direct/261471711?extension=pdf&ft=1428922907&lt=1428926517&source=embed&uahk=XydamAOFw27/Hje+LfcNZhP6kY0




Friday, April 10, 2015

Students, board square off over Smarter Balanced Assessment tests

Students, board square off over Smarter Balanced Assessment tests

More than 120 high schoolers have opted out, saying the exams are not the best measure of academic achievement 

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - Lake Oswego High School senior Haley Bertelsen testifies about Smarter Balanced Assessment tests before the Lake Oswego School Board on Monday.

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - Lake Oswego High School senior Haley Bertelsen testifies about Smarter Balanced Assessment tests before the Lake Oswego School Board on Monday.

Students, school board members and district administrators debated the merits of Smarter Balanced Assessment tests this week in the wake of an opt-out campaign that has seen at least 120 local students ask to forgo the exams. 

Almost all of the opt-out requests have come from Lake Oswego High School, where a newly formed Student Union lists “an end to high-stakes testing” as one of its goals. No students in the district opted out of standardized tests in the previous two school years. 

Student Union members told the Lake Oswego School Board on Monday that state testing is unnecessary when there are other ways of measuring academic achievement, that the tests reduce “human beings to numbers” and that educators have to “teach to the test.” 

“You see, some of the best teachers I’ve ever had didn’t teach me how to take a test,” Haley Bertelsen said. “They taught me how to love learning. They taught me how to be brave and strong and how to have a voice and how to ask for more for my education, and I don’t see how Smarter Balanced or OAKS (Oregon Assessment of Knowledge and Skills) testing or any of the other hundreds of tests will do the same thing.” 

Superintendent Heather Beck responded to the students’ comments, saying that while the Smarter Balanced tests will be different from previous math and English exams, the results will be used to benefit students. 

“I would agree that if we don’t use test data to improve the specific needs for students, as well as for our system, then you’re right,” Beck said. “There would be no point in taking the test. But of course we use that data in ways to continuously improve our system and professional development for administrators and teachers, as well as to help individual students with what they’re learning.”

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - Lake Oswego School District Superintendent Heather Beck listens to students testimony during the board meeting.

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - Lake Oswego School District Superintendent Heather Beck listens to students testimony during the board meeting.

Bertelsen, a senior, said people all over the world are judged not on test scores but on art and other things that “are composed mostly of feelings and instincts.” 

“What I don’t understand is why people think that reducing human beings to numbers is the only way to compare their academic success,” she said. 

Measuring success

Students in grades three through eight and high school juniors will take Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) tests this month and in May. The tests are designed to measure whether students are meeting Common Core standards, which have been adopted by 43 states, four territories and the District of Columbia. 

Those rigorous standards spell out what K-12 students should understand and be able to do in math and reading, and curriculum has been shifting for the past few years in an effort to help students be better prepared to meet them. 

Depending on the subject and grade level, though, some estimates indicate that as many as 70 percent of students may not meet the new standards, according to the Oregon Department of Education. 

“These results will represent a new baseline for our state,” said ODE spokeswoman Crystal Greene, “because it will be the first time we will be aligning our K-12 expectations to what it takes to be successful in college and the workplace.” 

Beck said Monday that she thinks Lake Oswego students will perform well on the tests. 

“I am not concerned that our kids are going to do poorly on this assessment,” she said. “I have been in and out of classrooms and have seen exemplary teaching all year long.” 

By law, school districts must administer the tests. But they are not pass/fail exams — students are not punished if they do not prove in testing that they’ve met the standards — and test results will not be included in students’ records unless they use them instead of the SAT, ACT or PSAT to meet graduation requirements. 

That’s all well and good, Student Union member Blake Mindemann told the board, but “I don’t think we need another congratulatory test.” The resources being put toward Smarter Balanced testing could be used to support lower-income schools, she said. 

“These resources are being wasted on testing college-bound students from affluent communities, and I don’t know about you, but I feel guilty for being complicit in a system that celebrates the affluent few at the expense of the many,” said Mindemann, a junior. 

School board member John Wendland said that with so many students opting out, district resources will have to be directed toward providing an alternate assessment. 

“If everybody took the test, we would probably be spending less time and resources doing that,” Wendland said. 

Just saying ‘no’

Opting out of Smarter Balanced exams is possible because of a state statute that allows students to bow out of curriculum by citing a disability or religious beliefs. For example, students can opt out of lessons about evolution because they believe in creationism. 

School districts are required by state law to provide an alternate activity for students who do opt out. In the case of Smarter Balanced tests, that activity could involve writing a work sample that would count toward graduation requirements. 

On Monday, Student Union member Daniel Vogel characterized that as “busywork.”

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - LOHS student Daniel Vogel shares his concerns about state standardized testing.

REVIEW PHOTO: VERN UYETAKE - LOHS student Daniel Vogel shares his concerns about state standardized testing.

“I was told by LOHS administrators that if I declined to complete the alternative assignment and instead went to class, I would receive an in-school suspension,” said Vogel, who graduates this year but is technically a junior. “Think of the headline for that: ‘Student suspended for going to class.’ That doesn’t sound right to me.” 

Vogel, who said he has a clean attendance record, said he plans to skip school during the tests in protest and not to do the alternate assignment. 

Joe Morelock, the district’s executive director of secondary education, said if students do skip class on a test day, they will be required to take the test when they return or complete a make-up assignment. 

In any case, Beck said that if not enough students participate, it will make it difficult for the district to get an accurate reading, statistically speaking, of student performance. That in turn would make it difficult to compare Lake Oswego with other districts throughout the state and across the country. 

And in the long term, it could also affect Lake Oswego High School’s performance rating, which is linked to implementation of the SBAC tests. A long-standing criteria for a top score is student participation of 94.5 percent, and enough Laker juniors asked to opt out by the April 6 deadline to put an “elite” ranking in jeopardy. 

However, ODE has asked the U.S. Department of Education for a one-year waiver on the “accountability system,” Greene said, which would give “schools and districts a break from school ratings.” If the waiver is approved, state-issued report cards will not include rankings this year. 

‘Helping or hurting?’

PAXSON KLUTHE

PAXSON KLUTHE

One of the basic goals of Common Core is to keep the U.S. in line academically with other developed nations, and Lake Oswego Education Association President Laura Paxson Kluthe said in her Monday night presentation to the board that Smarter Balanced tests are akin to those that China uses. 

She handed each board member a copy of “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon? Why China Has the Best (and Worst) Education System in the World.” The book was written by Yong Zhao, who holds the first presidential chair at the University of Oregon, where he also serves as associate dean for global education and is a professor in the Department of Educational Measurement, Policy and Leadership. 

WENDLAND

WENDLAND

“The book’s thesis is a simple one,” said Paxson Kluthe, who teaches social studies at LOHS. “Spoiler alert: High-stakes standardized tests serve to support authoritarian regimes like China’s and not democracies.” 

Wendland said he’s heard from parents that teachers are supporting students not taking Smarter Balanced tests. 

“Are you helping or hurting?” he asked Paxson Kluthe. 

“I’m philosophically in agreement with the students,” she said, adding that many teachers sympathize with the Student Union. “But I don’t proselytize in my classroom.” 


By Jillian Daley
Reporter
503-636-1281, ext. 109
email: jdaley@lakeoswegoreview.com
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Thursday, April 2, 2015

Georgia Milestones to challenge students, teachers

Georgia Milestones to challenge students, teachers

ATLANTA | Students and teachers heading back to school after the summer break can expect a new type of test called Georgia Milestones designed to gauge how each is doing.

The new testing series is to replace the Criterion Referenced Competency Tests and the end-of-course tests. It should better tie what students need to know to succeed once they pass to the next grade level while giving teachers and parents an ongoing signal of how well a student is doing and what areas of weakness need addressing before the course ends. 

Oh, and it is already ripe for criticism on two fronts: It is linked to the controversial Common Core education standards, and it will be the basis for half of teachers’ professional evaluations.

Complicating matters is that it is being implemented by state Superintendent John Barge, whose term in office ends in January after placing third in the Republican primary for governor, and by his chief assistant, Mike Buck, who lost the GOP primary to succeed Barge to Richard Woods, an avowed opponent of Common Core and Georgia Milestones.

Teacher groups worried about unfair assessments are keeping a close eye on the rollout, said Sid Chapman, president of the Georgia Association of Educators.

“With yet another testing instrument to be used as a measure of a child’s learning and a teacher’s effectiveness, everyone in the process of education will be impacted,” he said. “The debate over the relationship between student-testing and teacher-effectiveness instruments is increasing and will not easily be rectified.”

Georgia is launching the new tests as part of its three-year implementation of Common Core, a set of minimum academic standards adopted by most states and opposed by social conservatives concerned about diluting regional views of family values with texts drafted by liberals from other regions. The state has the added incentive of a federal grant that required it in the Race to the Top program.

“The whip hand in all of this is held by the feds because they have given Georgia about $450 million,” said Tim Callahan, spokesman for the Professional Association of Georgia Educators, the state’s largest teacher organization.

One of the biggest selling features of Georgia Milestones could be termed “truth in assessments.” As a result, most observers expect that the public will be stunned by a sharp drop in achievement scores.

Consider the most recent results from the CRCT in which 93 percent of fourth-graders met or exceeded reading requirements while the National Assessment of Educational Progress said only 34 percent met or exceeded them. It was the same story with math scores, eighth grade science and reading scores, whether compared to NEAP, the SAT or ACT tests.

“We need to know that students are being prepared not at a minimum-competency level, but with rigorous, relevant education to enter college, the workforce or the military at a level that makes them competitive with students from other states,” Barge said last month.

A departure from the “bubble test,” as the CRCT was known for its computerized answer form, Georgia Milestones will not rely solely on multiple-choice answers. Instead, students will have to show their math figuring, submit essays and solve open-ended questions.

The scores will count for 20 percent of a student’s course grade and be required for promotion to the next grade level.

All math, English, social studies and science courses will be tested. Students taking electives must take exams devised by their local school district.

Teachers’ jobs will also depend partly on these tests, in addition to observations by principals and reviews of lesson plans.

“I think that’s what has a lot of folks concerned, certainly within my organization, because we are going to be using these tests in ways that they were not designed for,” PAGE’s Callahan said.

So, how well will it all work?

District officials, like Clarke County Superintendent Philip Lanoue, say they’re ready.

“While this new system is a substantive change for many teachers in the state of Georgia, I believe that our district is far ahead in how we assess our performance, given our work over the last three years in revamping our district evaluation system,” he said. “In my opinion, the expectations we hold for our performance far exceed those minimally required in the new system.”

Dana Rickman, policy director for the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education, is a supporter of Common Core and the concept of the Georgia Milestones, but she isn’t sure it will all come together in time, especially since the contract for the testing company was only signed in May.

“I do agree that this seems to be a very quick turnaround time to go statewide with a brand new test,” she said.

She likes that students will be challenged to use reasoning and not just memorization and that teachers should get feedback on how pupils are doing in time to address deficiencies. 

“It should not come as a surprise at the end year what how they are doing,” she said.

Jerry Eads, a professor of education at Georgia Gwinnett College, has confidence in the testing company, McGraw-Hill, and notes that it will be able to draw from its long experience conducting tests in other states over the years. And he concludes the state Department of Education has done a good job coordinating what students need to know for their next grade level and to compete with cohorts from other states, thanks to Common Core.

“The Common Core work has apparently, at least in language arts, been of enormous help to the DOE in providing sensible scope and sequence within and across grades,” he said. 

“The skills necessary to develop such material, in my experience, has typically been far beyond the resources usually utilized by state departments of education in developing so-called ‘standards.’”

However, he opposes the aspect of Milestones that sets a minimum passing score, which he says fails to challenge bright students while penalizing those in struggling schools.

To expect that a single, ‘passing score’ for a student with an IQ of 150 means the same thing as that same score for a student with an IQ of 80 is patently silly and totally worthless to an educator,” he said. “This is why the research is so clear that minimum-competency testing limits education for the bright students, and makes an impossible job for many educators in inner city or poor, rural schools.”

A more pessimistic skeptic is Nancy Jester, a former school board member in DeKalb County, which was one of the Race to the Top guinea pigs. In her unsuccessful bid for the GOP nomination for state superintendent, she campaigned against the test and Common Core as needlessly complicated and costly.

Only 20 of DeKalb’s 6,500 teachers were found to be ineffective when the evaluation system was tried there, she notes.

“This contrasts with the abysmal academic achievement in the district as measured by the CRCT and graduation rates,” she said. “You cannot simultaneously understand the student-performance metrics and believe that there are only about 20 ‘ineffective’ teachers.”

Though there is wide divergence on philosophy, everyone does seem to agree that things will be different in the coming school year.

Follow Walter Jones on Twitter @MorrisNews and Facebook or contact him at walter.jones@morris.com.