As this common core and high stakes testing war comes to a
head I am watching lots of folks trying to mediate and ask folks to be
reasonable. They want to talk about all the harm that could come to our schools
should we refuse these tests or refuse test prep common core curriculum. When I
hear this my hair stands on end. Number one. Don't flipping tell me to be
reasonable. Don't insult me - as a professional - my first job is to do NO
HARM. THAT IS REASONABLE. Two. Speaking of harm - what harm do you think is
going to come to our communities? Our children? Let's see, they've stripped our
schools of all funding for small class size, librarians, nurses, counselors,
art, music programs, sports programs, REAL teachers, books, building repairs,
classroom supplies and more. They've stripped our schools of democracy. They've
stripped our schools of trust, and respect and safety - there is NOTHING safe
for children in a high stakes environment. Countless communities have been
destroyed and children no longer can go to their neighborhood schools. THEY
REFUSE TO ACKNOWLEDGE POVERTY AND FEED OUR CHILDREN TESTS INSTEAD. So tell me
again - hurt our schools? How?? Be careful around these reasonable folks who
want you to adhere to mandates in order to avoid "hurting" your
schools - they have something personal to gain or they are simply sheeple. Our
schools and our children are already hurt. We are attempting to educate in war
tents with damaged communities, children, teachers and buildings. Quite
honestly, the way many folks act now in the public schools is the way folks who
have been mentally or physically abused act. Folks have been so beaten down
that they are hanging on by a thread. So - you - out there - who have the
audacity to tell us to stop our acts of civil disobedience in order to stop
"hurting" our schools - we know your game and we know where you
stand. On the wrong side of history. Get out of our way.
A blog about the truth. Today, it's important for all of us to find our own way to share the truth. Mainstream media and the billionaires will not silence our voices.
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Parents, I Cannot Protect Your Children
I will do my best. But my best isn't good enough - and I
think that is the point I really want to make here.
Across the nation
teachers are fighting back hard. Across the nation - actually across the world - teachers will shut their doors
and do their best to protect children from high stakes testing, test prep,
nonstop district and state mandated testing and more. But - the truth is this, our best
is not good enough, because in order to attempt to do our best we are jumping
through hoops, shutting our door to secretly do what is right for children, spending our own money on resources for our classrooms and on supplies for
children who have none, and we are spending hours and hours gaming our way
through "teach to the test" curriculum and massive amounts of mandated corporate formative
and summative assessment - in order to attempt to "do
our best."
So, I'm going to be blunt here. I cannot do my best under these
conditions. I can attempt to do my best, but my best under these conditions is
not good enough. And my attempts to play the game and resist where I can will not be enough to protect your
children from what is happening.
Also - I want to make it clear that by shutting our doors and
attempting to do our best, we are able to protect your children a bit more, but
shutting our doors and keeping quiet about the harmful practices that have
infiltrated our schools is only adding to our problems - if we think long term.
Short term, yes - it helps us do what is right for children. Long term, it only
promotes a false reality that allows parents to think, it isn't really that
bad. Long term, it assists in the dismantling of public education and our profession. Finally,
shutting the door doesn't allow teachers to hide from the databases which
demand us to enter your child's data on all these assessments. The data mining
has begun full force.
So, yes, I'll do my best. I have even refused to administer
the common core PARCC assessment this year - I can do that to protect children.
But let's be clear on this - even though I have refused to administer the PARCC
test, there will be someone there to take my place.
And I cannot protect children from certain non-negotiables
within common core curriculum and on-going assessment. We cannot protect the children from the common
core professional development which takes us away from our buildings and leaves
children with substitute teachers. As a
literacy coach, I do what I can to
rephrase and rid my school of corporate reform language such as rigor, grit, calibrate,
accountability, no excuses and college and career ready. I can even replace these words with language
that represents inquiry, heart, relationships, community, equity, creativity
and more. But ultimately, all of my attempts are simply band aids.
Even though I have done my best to make writing "on-demand"
prompts developmentally appropriate for kindergarten (let's face facts -there
is NO such thing), it is still an "on-demand" writing prompt for kindergarten. Even though I
will do everything in my power to support children in their inquiries about
bugs, outer space, poetry, sports, cooking, their favorite authors, music, art, history and more; I cannot stop the testing train which makes stops in every classroom
every week in some shape or form. The classroom is no longer driven by the
rhythm of learning, it is driven by the testing schedule which continually
interrupts our children's talk and exploration of their interests - the testing
schedule extinguishes the passion for learning.
It makes all of us tired with the constant stop. start. stop start. as we try
to regroup and get back on track with the real learning that is occurring in
the classrooms. I can't tell you how
many "ah ha" moments have been lost for children as they had to break
away from their projects, their thinking, their conversation, in order to
hunker down over an assessment as they labor for the corporations.
And in the midst of all this testing, we are
surrounded by new common core curriculum that is embedded with test prep,
scripted lessons and more - and this is what we are doing - we are trying
to read through all this curriculum while asking ourselves, "How can we use this curriculum and still do what is best for children? How can we make the best of this? How can we pull out the good stuff and leave the rest? How can we look like we are being good
little soldiers and still do what is right for children?"
Now - as teachers swim through this new common core
curriculum, because we are expected to do so, understand that this takes
immense amounts of time away from what we should be focusing on - the
children. It takes time to figure out which parts of the curriculum will be non-negotiable and which parts we can skip or
substitute what we know is best for children.
So, as I swim through mounds of new common core curriculum in order to
"do my best" I simply will not be doing my best because being
required to maneuver through such madness in order to TRY to do my best - let's
face facts - is simply not good enough
for your children. They deserve better. Our attention should be on the children - not the demands of the common core curriculum and high stakes testing.
I ask this - do you believe that the teachers at Sidwell
(school of President Obama's children) are asking these questions and jumping
through these hoops? Does anyone believe that Malia and Sasha are faced with
the stop. start. stop. start. of continual onslaughts of corporate testing throughout
the year?
Of course not.
Sidwell students have ample resources and no common core curriculum or
testing. Sidwell teachers are allowed to
do their best and focus on the children.
Now, some might say I exaggerate, but I promise, I don't. Test prep and common core curriculum come in many disguises. Publishers and those who write this curriculum are slick at embedding test prep into the curriculum. They are slick at trying to convince teachers and the public that this is good for children.
Now, some might say I exaggerate, but I promise, I don't. Test prep and common core curriculum come in many disguises. Publishers and those who write this curriculum are slick at embedding test prep into the curriculum. They are slick at trying to convince teachers and the public that this is good for children.
Sadly, there are many teachers who do not realize what is happening to their
profession or to our public schools. Some
still say, "This too shall pass." They think it's just one more new thing that will eventually move along like every new mandate. Some laugh at me and think I am
extreme. Heck, my own state and national
union supports the common core, while I sit here and watch it dumb down my
own school and my son's school every week.
I watch it take autonomy from teachers and turn creative thinking into
carefully disguised skill/drill.
The depth of this reform is not always visible to the naked
eye - intentionally so. But for those teachers watching keenly, we have eagle eye vision for these
changes - as this is OUR profession - our turf. If I was doing my best, I'd tell every parent every thing I know about these reforms. But if I did that, I'd get fired.
You see, we are not supposed
to share with you the developmentally inappropriateness of kindergarten classrooms in our buildings. We also sign agreements that prohibit us from telling you about the
child that cried through the entire high stakes test or the child who bit his finger nails to the quick during the test. We are not supposed to tell you that the report cards are a joke and mean nothing. We are not supposed to tell you that your children don't even have to take these tests and that these tests are culturally and racially biased. We are not supposed to tell you that the
children are bouncing off the walls because they only get one fifteen
minute recess a day. We aren't supposed to tell you that the new "big thing" is brain breaks in order to help your children cope with the fact that they aren't allowed to have more recess.
We are supposed to make the best of it. We are not supposed to explain
that the new curriculum and new chrome books are really here for one reason -
to increase performance on the common core tests. We are not supposed to tell
you that every year your child is spending more time laboring for the
corporations as new tests and test prep get added. There are lots of bells and
whistles that disguise the truth of this common core curriculum and testing
regime surrounding your children - and we are supposed to do our best and ring
those bells and smile when you are around.
If you want to protect your children, you must begin by
refusing all the tests. Even as I, a teacher, refuse to administer the PARCC,
it will not stop the PARCC from moving forward. My union is not behind me ready to organize and
back all the teachers if they were to refuse to administer the PARCC, so I stand alone. And even
if my union did organize the teachers to refuse to administer the PARCC test, my union still supports common core - so I still can't
protect children and I still can't "do my best" because common core
and high stakes testing cannot be decoupled. Believe me - I'll keep working hard at the grassroots level to shift our union, but it won't happen over night. In the meantime, your children are suffering.
Some days I
feel like a nurse inside a war tent with wounded soldiers. And no matter how brave I am, no matter how
much I stand up to these reforms, it is not enough - they have taken away so
much of my power, and my ability to make professional decisions in order to protect children and do what is right for all children.
I teach at a school with 73% free/reduced lunch. Over 40 languages are spoken within my school. I know what our children need - they need wrap around services for poverty, books, librarians, small class size, health care, nurses, counselors, recess, quality food, and the opportunity to express their interests as they talk, read, write, play, sing, dance, create and smile. But you see, that doesn't create corporate profit. Poverty must be ignored in order to keep corporate profit churning.
I teach at a school with 73% free/reduced lunch. Over 40 languages are spoken within my school. I know what our children need - they need wrap around services for poverty, books, librarians, small class size, health care, nurses, counselors, recess, quality food, and the opportunity to express their interests as they talk, read, write, play, sing, dance, create and smile. But you see, that doesn't create corporate profit. Poverty must be ignored in order to keep corporate profit churning.
Parents, I cannot protect your children. I must be honest in telling you that
the war is alive and well in our classrooms, and children are being harmed
every day. What is happening is evil, cruel and abusive. Refuse the tests and deny the corporations the profit, deny the district, state and federal government your child's data (which they can share with corporations), deny the publishing companies the opportunity to create more common core
products. Without the data, the profit ends and we have an opportunity to reclaim our public schools, our profession. We have an opportunity to do what is right for all children. I am done smiling and saying, I am doing my
best. I'm not.
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