Wednesday, February 13, 2013

More than a Test Score

Below is a slightly longer version of "More than a Test Score," which appears in March's East Side Monthly. The online version is here, paper versions at coffeeshops near you (if you're near me).

I wrote this a few weeks ago, and then read Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman's New York Times Magazine "worriers and warriors" piece, "Why Can Some Kids Handle Pressure While Others Fall Apart?" which looks at genetic and neurological reasons for our varied reactions to stressful situations, with a particular emphasis on the stress trigger that is a high-stakes standardized test. Had it been in print when I wrote "More than a Test Score," I would have cited it; as it is, I post-datedly cite it in conjunction.

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Illustration by Jessica Pollak
More than a Test Score

“The more things change, the more they stay the same.” There’s some truth there, but I recommend that we not apply that adage to most aspects of formal education. Generally speaking, schools have changed a great deal. Following my own advice, I try to ignore my own experiences as a student when I think about the learning experiences of young people today (there is no way to write that sentence without feeling old). Of course, I am comparatively old, more than a generation removed from today’s high school students. During the intervening decades, the structures, practices, and environments in schools themselves have changed significantly.

However, even with the plus ça change caveat, when I think about the experiences of today’s high school students, I’m glad that I remember how it feels to get wound up about high-stakes standardized tests--not exams and other assessments associated with coursework. I’m talking about fill-in-the-bubble tests that compare you with nameless multitudes similarly confronted with a number two pencil and a test booklet. Back in the day, for many of us such tests often meant college entrance tests such as the SATs. I distinctly remember my internal monologue just before I took the SATs. “It’s one test, a couple of hours on a Saturday morning. Colleges are going to care more about how I am doing in school, day in and day out, year after year. This doesn’t matter in the long run.” Even though I was anxious, I knew that that the test in and of itself would not keep me from my life’s goals and thus was able to get through the SAT mostly unencumbered by panic.

I’m glad I remember how that felt, and suggest that if you graduated from high school more than ten years ago, you should do the same. During the past decade, federal and state policies have dramatically expanded the significance of high-stakes standardized tests, not just for students preparing for four-year colleges but for all students as they head toward high school graduation. Here in Rhode Island, high school graduation will soon depend on in part on partially proficiency (or better) on the New England Common Assessment Program (NECAP) mathematics and reading tests. Current Rhode Island Department of Education plans stipulate that this will concern the class of 2014 and beyond, meaning that this year’s 11th graders will be the first class affected by the implementation of the graduation requirements that include NECAP proficiency.

According to the Rhode Island American Civil Liberties Union, which opposes the new graduation requirements, this will have a deleterious effect on the number of graduates statewide, putting over 40 percent at risk of not receiving a high school diploma. In Providence, over two-thirds of students in Providence may not graduate. Students of color, English Language Learners, and special education students face even worse odds. Many of these students struggle with the NECAPs while demonstrating proficiency in their coursework. These are successful students who will be barred from high school graduation. What good does this serve?

The latest data indicate that 66 percent of Providence’s public high school students graduate within four years. What will happen when we add an arbitrary restriction such as the NECAPs other than complicating an already difficult situation? The effect on our economy as a whole, as well of the welfare of thousands of individual students, will be disastrous.

Students should graduate from high school when they have demonstrated that they have met high standards. The argument for incorporating the NECAP into the Rhode Island high school graduation requirements--which include successful completion of class requirements, comprehensive course assessments, and a Senior Exhibition project--is that NECAP proficiency indicates minimum levels of literacy and numeracy. Indeed, high school graduation should be meaningful. But it should get that meaning from what matters: classes, course, assessments, and rigorous projects. There’s no evidence that the addition of the NECAP requirement adds meaning to a high school education.

The current dominance of high-stakes standardized tests is having a chilling effect on students’ ability to pursue knowledge in any real depth. Approaches such as interdisciplinary project-based learning, which we know effectively prepares students for success as lifelong learners, are limited or nonexistent. Excessive focus on the tests has caused the curriculum to narrow, inquiry to be stilted, and opportunities for struggling students to gain proficiency in the skills they will need throughout their lives to be squandered. While systemic, lasting school improvement demands much more than reducing the emphasis on high-stakes standardized tests, we’re unlikely to get to where we need to go unless we commit to stop limiting the future of our young people, who are so much more than a test score.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

No Education, No Life - Zombie March against the NECAP('s use in high school graduation), 2/13 @ 4pm

I am delighted to be associated, however tangentially, with the Providence Student Union (am on their advisory board) and to share info about their Zombie March tomorrow, as follows:
Rhode Island's NECAP graduation requirement is taking away students' futures and chances at a good life. And our obsession with standardized testing is turning us into brainless zombies! 
So grab your fake blood and ripped pants and join the Providence Student Union on Wednesday, Feb. 13th to show the Department of Education what this policy will do to us. Meet at 4pm at Burnside Park (by Kennedy Plaza), and we will zombie-walk to RIDE by 4:30. It's ZOMBIE TIME!
To clarify, in case it's necessary, PSU is organizing to protest the use of the high-stakes standardized NECAP test as a factor for graduation for Rhode Island high school students - this is slated to start for the class of 2014. Bad idea - misuse of the NECAP and unfair way to measure meaningful learning and achievement. Hit me up here tomorrow for more about why the using NECAPs as a way to determine readiness for high school graduation is a deeply flawed prospect for our young people.

Full details and discussion on the Zombie March are here on Facebook. Spread the word and join if you can. You'll be in good company (Diane Ravitch!) and if you are able to attend tomorrow, that is great. Join the zombie ranks so students in the future don't have to.

So what's happening today? Nemo, NECAP, Arne, Randi

So what's happening out there?

  • There is a metric sludgeload of snow and ice, melting and still intact, out there. PPSD schools are back in session after days off on Friday and yesterday due to the storm known as Nemo. I know that people all over the city are still digging out, and that the streets are now hazardous not only for cars but also for the many people, kids included, who have to walk in them to get places due to unshoveled sidewalks. I am glad school is back in business today and hope that everyone on the roads is extra careful as the city continues to clean up.
  • NECAP scores came out on Friday, 2/8. I don't want to dwell on them because I don't want to give them undue attention, but it's worth noting. Overall, the state as a whole went up, and Providence as a district did not. If this were being used purely as a diagnostic measure to tune up teaching and learning, I'd be more inclined to spend time and attention analyzing. As it is, feel free to do so yourself: http://www.ride.ri.gov/Assessment/NECAP.aspx
  • United States Education Secretary Arne Duncan didn't come to Providence last night to discuss school safety.
  • He didn't come here today either to participate in the kick-off event for United Providence (which I believe is supposed to be United Providence! with a ! I note that, but decline to reproduce it).  American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten did, though. UP (and please, can we just call it that? Without its decorative exclamation point?) is collaboration between the Providence Teachers Union and the district that is managing some of Providence's persistently low-performing schools.
Other happenings I'll get to in near-future posts (until work and life overtake me again, at least).

Yeah, yeah, it's been a while

Been a while since I posted here, not for lack of happenings in and around the Providence education scene but for lack of my time for and attention to writing about them here. Onward.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

There is school in Providence on Friday 1/11

In order to help get the word out, I'm posting here that school is in session on Friday, 1/11 in Providence. The PPSD calendar originally listed Friday as a day off, but that was scrapped so the school could make up time missed during Hurricane Sandy.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

PPSD Registration and Enrollment, 2013-2014

I want to point you directly to Kidoinfo for an excellent rundown of registration and enrollment at PPSD this year: http://kidoinfo.com/ri/providence-public-schools-kindergarten-registration-for-2013-january-10-march-1-2013/#comments

This post was written by Kira Greene and Kristen Murphy, two PPSD parents who are donating considerable time and expertise to work with the district to improve school registration. They know the system incredibly well and I am grateful that they've shared their expertise.

Please read their post, and here are the basics for follow up.

  • Kindergarten and first grade enrollment starts this week (visit http://www.providenceschools.org/media/251160/registration%20calendar%202013.pdf to find out when you should enroll your child. The link also shares what documentation you need for registration.
  • For the first time, PPSD is offering registration workshops for prospective families - info online at http://www.providenceschools.org/media/251157/enrollment%20seminars%202013.pdf. The workshops take place as follows:
    • Monday, January 7, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Carnevale Elementary, 50 Springfield Street
    • Tuesday, January 8, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Young-Woods Elementary, 674 Prairie Avenue
    • Wednesday, January 9, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Kennedy Elementary, 195 Nelson Street
    • Thursday, January 10, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Bailey Elementary, 65 Gordon Street
    • Tuesday, January 22, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at King Elementary School, 35 Camp Street
    • Wednesday, January 23, 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Messer Elementary, 1655 Westminster Street
    • Saturday, January 26, 10 to 11:30 a.m. at West End Community Center, 109 Bucklin Street
  • Take a few minutes to check out the PowerPoint presentation that the district put together for the registration workshops. It's here: http://www.providenceschools.org/media/251434/eng%20k%20reg%20seminar%20010713.pdf. The presentation includes a load of data about seats that are likely to be available at various schools, which schools filled up last year, the actual registration form, and strategies for making first, second, third, and fourth choices. I appreciate that the district has chosen to share this info widely. Very, very useful.
  • Finally, again, visit Kidoinfo for additional advice and strategies about how navigate "reg," increase the likelihood that your child will be assigned the school of your choice, and minimize bureaucratic frustration. Go here: http://kidoinfo.com/ri/providence-public-schools-kindergarten-registration-for-2013-january-10-march-1-2013/#comments

Friday, December 14, 2012

Newtown CT school shooting

Sporadic posting here is a consequence of my workload, which has been intense. However, I am now totally distracted and upset by the school shooting that happened today in Newtown, CT. My immediate and wild worries were on behalf of my sister, who teaches at Newtown High School. That this horrible event happened at an elementary school and not the high school made me worry less about my sister (though I cannot even imagine what her students and fellow teachers are going through) but it's still terrible--not even sure how terrible. I am listening to live feed from Hartford's NBC station and the situation is still unclear, other than us knowing that someone came into Sandy Hook Elementary School and opened fire at 9:30 this morning.

My thoughts are mostly still with families and teachers in Newtown. Perhaps I feel this more acutely than reports of other school shootings through the years because of my sister, and because I am from Brookfield, one of the towns that borders Newtown. But I am also feeling it because at 9:30 this morning, I was at my own kids' elementary school to give a tour to prospective parents. I sat in the lobby and watched people come in and out, most of them buzzed in by the watchful office staff, but not all. I was thinking then that it's so easy to come in and out of the building; just follow someone else who is entering. At that time of day, adults are coming in to schools at a rapid clip, and not all are known to school staff, however watchful they may be. I had no idea how relevant my idle school safety thoughts would be when I got back into my car at 10:45 and heard a report about this horrible tragedy on the radio.

And the aftermath...I would guess that all districts have some sort of emergency management plan to deal with this. But as a parent, I am not sure what ours is. I cannot even really get my head around something like this happening at my kids' school. I can't go there. But when I think about what would happen afterward, the idea that you cannot immediately get to your kids and make sure they're okay is terrifying. I hope that one good thing that comes out of this is an increased awareness of what we, as parents, should do if God forbid something happened.

My heart goes out to everyone affected by this. And even as I write, I just heard the news that 27 people died. 18 kids. I can't even go on.

Please, if this upsets you, if you want the violence that guns cause to end, donate to the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. Thank you.