Involvement without Efficacy
By: Bruce Knecht
The PISA is the standardized test that is flogged by the major media (it’s conducted every three years), purportedly to show the sorry state of American schools. The actual results depicted by the graph Julie Sellers has shared are sharply at odds with the narrative that has been an accepted part of conventional wisdom for more than two decades, i.e., that American schools are failing. Rather, schools are serving as a convenient scapegoat for an array of social ills that schools neither created nor have the power to remedy. Elite-driven education reform is a strategy for creating the appearance that something is being done about these social failings, while, in reality, it’s a case of involvement without efficacy. By this diversion, elites are able to avoid any fundamental social change that would be required to ameliorate the actual problems. At the same time, it cracks open the half-a-trillion dollar market of K-12 education.
The cartoon below clearly illustrates the current reformist mind-set. The woman in this strip is ruling out every measure that might actually make a difference. Again, involvement without efficacy.
We recently received an email from our school district about
M-STEP (Michigan Student Test of Educational Progress) Testing dates--for those
not in Michigan, this is the new "required" state test for children
in grades 3-8 which replaces the MEAP.
For one of our boys, the M-STEP testing schedule was to span
6 different days and include tests on English Language and Mathematics. The
thought of our son missing class time for 6 days to sit for standardized
tests--the results of which couldn't possibly inform his learning or his
teachers' instructional practices, due to the tests being administered in the
Spring rather than in the Fall, with the results not being made available until
after the close of the school year--was bad enough. But to make matters worse,
this "summative" test was not intended to be a long-term solution to
the state's testing policies:
“Our challenge is that this is a one-year interim
assessment. I’m not sure how meaningful that will be for us because we can’t
compare results,” Grandville Public Schools Superintendent Ron Caniff said
about the M-STEP. “This will be a snapshot of how our students measure up to
other students (nationwide), but we won’t be able to measure it in terms of how
our students are learning and growing – that’s the downside.”
(http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2014/11/west_michigan_school_leaders_v.html)
The bottom line was that our child was being pulled out of
classes for 6 days, for tests that weren't intended to really measure student
learning or growth, or to provide any meaningful feedback for his teachers, and
these tests were not likely to be given again in subsequent years. The whole
thing seemed like a terrible, awful, really bad idea--but the kicker was the
following tag line on the district's email announcement:
"PLEASE DO NOT MAKE APPOINTMENTS FOR YOUR CHILD ON THE
DATES ATTACHED. If your child misses these dates, then they will do make up
testing and will be pulled from other academic classes. If your child is ill,
they should stay home, of course! We understand!"
Before going on, I want to be clear: My wife and I believe
that the school district that our children attend is terrific. They have
wonderful teachers, a fantastic school music program, excellent academics, and
a wide array of student services. The student body is diverse and motivated,
and the community is fully engaged in school activities and governance. Our
interactions with school personnel have always been great, and we have never
regretted our decision to purchase a home in this town--a decision we made
based largely on the quality of the school system.
So, the district's message didn't appear to ring true. In
private conversations with teachers and administrators within the school
system, I had sensed their agreement with our thinking about the explosion of
standardized testing and its negative impact on teacher evaluation, school
funding, and a host of other issues. These were intelligent, thoughtful, caring
persons. Each of them had treated my children as their own--with sensitivity,
compassion and care. I was certain that they had the children's learning as
their highest priority, but felt compelled to follow the state's (misguided)
directives regarding these tests.
After a great deal of thought, we decided to contact the
school to tell them we were opting our son out of the M-STEP tests, and asked
about the provisions for students who will not be taking these exams. After
hitting "send" I was apprehensive--I knew about the pressures the
folks at the school were under, and also didn't want to put my son in an
awkward position with his friends and teachers at school. Both my wife and I
are teachers, and have always approached our "job" as parents of
school-aged children with the goal of supporting our kids' teachers fully.
Making this request was not an easy decision for either of us.
Two days later we received the following response:
"I contacted the Assistant Superintendent and she told
me that we would honor your request for opting (your son) out of testing with a
note from you. (Your son) is already on
the testing rosters, but with your note, we will remove him.
Students are being tested during their academic hours with
their homeroom teachers. Per Assistant Superintendent, (your son) will be
offered this time to work on any homework he has or to read a book for the time
that his peers are testing. He may be given the option of going to the
library...
We are required to have 95% participation for testing and
any student opting out is a hit on that percentage. However, we understand your
request and will honor it with a note sent to the Guidance Office."
Having read and heard about much more hostile responses from
schools around the country to similar requests, we were both relieved and
encouraged by our school's reply. Not only was our request for our child to opt
out greeted with respect, but provisions for our son's attendance on those days
when the test was scheduled were provided without argument or hassle. The
approach was understanding, positive and student-centered--everything we have
come to expect from our school district.
I also believe that this response is an indication of a
tipping point of sorts when it comes to the issue of opting out and school
testing. More and more, teachers and administrators are understanding the
negative impact of these tests on students, teachers and schools, and are
joining the fight with parents and other groups advocating for a reduction in
the number and uses of these tests.
At the end of the day, I am left feeling optimistic and
enormously encouraged by this interaction, and energized to continue the fight
against the corporate reformers' obsession with data-mining and high-stakes
testing. I can sense the tide turning, and more teachers and school
administrators joining in the push back against these reforms. We have reached
a Tipping Point, and now is the time to redouble our efforts.