On Friday, March 3rd, Jewell Elementary parents received a
letter regarding PARCC incentives. Yes - it's THAT time of year. Many Colorado schools refer to PARCC as CMAS.
To catch new readers up to speed before I launch into the
information about PARCC incentives, let me give you a quick recap. I taught at
Jewell Elementary for four years. The first three years were absolutely
amazing. We were working hard to become an inquiry-based democratic school. All
of our hard work came crashing down in the 2015-2016 school year when we became
a Relay Leadership School. All of our work, our beliefs, our identity, were
erased, and we were mandated to follow the new mantra via Relay. My position at Jewell was eliminated last
year.
Needless to say, this year, 2016-2017, things have grown
worse. Relay policies play a large role in the instruction at Jewell
Elementary. Teachers have minimal time
to plan - most planning time is dictated. Children must now come in earlier to eat
breakfast, and therefore teachers lose planning time in the morning. And of course, testing is everything. And now
it is PARCC season.
The letter Jewell Elementary parents received Friday
discusses two "recognition systems" that will be used during PARCC
testing. One recognition system is a raffle. Students will receive tickets for
attendance during testing days and tickets for putting forth their best effort
on the PARCC test. At the end of PARCC, the children's tickets will be used
to raffle off baskets of goodies. Parents have been asked to donate items for
the baskets, although the letter states that donations are not required. The
letter specifically states that only "new" items can be donated for
the basket - and that items should be five dollars or less.
The second recognition is an "Attendance and Effort
Party" which will take place in April, when PARCC is finally done. Only
students who have attended all testing days AND have put forth their best
effort will be allowed to attend the party. The party will include games,
treats, music and a bouncy castle.
I could write a complete thesis on why this is so wrong on
so many levels - I'm sure many of my readers could do so as well. However,
today I'm simply going to share the Colorado law, House Bill 15-1323 , signed
by the governor on May 20th, 2015.
This law specifically states:
(b) IF A PARENT EXCUSES HIS OR HER STUDENT FROM
PARTICIPATING IN A STATE ASSESSMENT, A LOCAL EDUCATION PROVIDER SHALL NOT
IMPOSE NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES, INCLUDING PROHIBITING SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, IMPOSING
AN UNEXCUSED ABSENCE, OR PROHIBITING PARTICIPATION IN EXTRACURRICULAR
ACTIVITIES, ON THE STUDENT OR ON THE PARENT.
Therefore.....
Students whose parents opt them out must be allowed to attend school.
Opt out students cannot
be listed as unexcused.
Students who opt out
CANNOT be prohibited from participating in extracurricular activities - such as
raffles and little parties with bouncy castles.
Furthermore, as
I reported last year, districts must have in place a policy to allow
parents to opt their children out of tests. Aurora's policy last year was
almost impossible to find.
HB 15-1323 states:
(8) (a) EACH LOCAL EDUCATION PROVIDER SHALL ADOPT AND
IMPLEMENT A WRITTEN POLICY AND PROCEDURE BY WHICH A STUDENT'S PARENT MAY EXCUSE
THE STUDENT FROM PARTICIPATING IN ONE OR MORE OF THE STATE ASSESSMENTS
ADMINISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 22-7-1006.3.
The law has a lot more information as well, including how
parents should be informed of what tests are being taken and so on - see pages 14-16.
I am told that other schools in the Aurora Public School
District are also offering incentives for PARCC.
My heart goes out to the students and teachers who are being
forced to adhere to these mandates which destroy true learning while filling
the pockets of the corporations. I hope that parents will refuse to allow their
children to participate in PARCC (and all other corporate testing) so that the
teachers at Jewell can be allowed to teach. Parents, Jewell teachers are quite
capable of telling you about your child's strengths and next steps without
these corporate tests.
And bouncy castles and raffles? Please, don't insult the
children and don't insult the teachers. Sadly the mantra in the public schools
now is compliance to the corporate testing machine.
I was lucky enough to teach before NCLB, I remember what teaching
and learning truly can be. If you are
interested in seeing where the testing machine is headed, I recommend reading
this post I wrote last year - The Opt Out
Irony. Next, I recommend keeping a close eye on the blog Wrench in the Gears.
Jewell teachers, wishing you well. I miss you and the
children. Let's hope Jewell leadership
quickly drops these ridiculous PARCC incentives. You deserve better. Parents -
please opt your children out of these tests.
No comments:
Post a Comment