The Re-Education of Merryl Tisch
By: Marla Kilfoyle
Merryl Tisch is the
Chancellor of the Board of Regents in New York State. The Board of Regents “ are responsible for the
general supervision of all educational activities within the State, presiding
over The University and the New York State Education Department”
Chancellor Tisch has been on the Board of Regents since 1996 and was selected to lead the Board
of Regents in 2009. She has sat on the Board of Regents for close to 20 Years. “From 1977 to 1984
Chancellor Tisch taught first-graders at New York City’s Ramaz School and the
B’nai Jeshurun School. She received a B.A. from Barnard College, an M.A. in
Education from New York University, and an Ed.D. from Teachers College,
Columbia University.”
On April 15th Chancellor Tisch
agreed to debate Dr. Diane Ravitch on All in With Chris to respond to the
historic, and massive, parental test refusal movement that was going in in New
York.
The statements made by Chancellor Tisch during that debate
were, for lack of a better word, quite perplexing. Let’s examine a few
Tisch claimed
“The intent of the
test is to give a snapshot of performance and allow parents to know where their
children are at any given point in their educational career as compared to
their peers.”
“It is natural for
parents to want to know how their kids are doing. And as for the diagnostic
nature of these tests and the amount of information that is gleaned from them,
school districts report to us all the time that they design curriculum around
the results of these tests.”
Parents want a detailed report of how their children
did. One NY parent, who has a child with
disabilities, agreed to share their son’s ELA score report with me. Their child
received a score of 1 on this test. Here
is what was sent to their home in mid-October (6 months AFTER he took the test)
.
“Students performing
at this level are well below proficient in standards for their grade. They demonstrate limited knowledge, skills,
and practices embodied by the New York State P-12 Common Core Learning
Standards for English Language Arts/Literacy that are considered insufficient
for the expectations at this grade.”
Let’s return back to Tisch’s statements and words –
“the amount of information that is gleaned from them”
“diagnostic nature”
Here is what the test
report statement told these parents
about their child: He is below
proficient, he has limited knowledge, skills, and practices. When the mother looked at the report she said - In what is he
limited? Where are his limits in
ELA? Are his limits in writing, reading,
or comprehension? Does our child have
poor spelling or grammar?
Let’s compare the results of the NYS ELA test to one that
does give great information and is diagnostic.
Their child is given an exam called the WIAT-III. It is a clinical report of his yearly progress. Here is a sample of his subset breakdown for
the WIAT-III in January of 2015 ( his scores are covered to protect his
privacy but do show what is reported in terms of information) . An important fact to note is that the test was administered on 12/17/14
and the results were given to the
parents on 1/5/15.
The information was given back to the parent and teacher in
19 days! This assessment is teacher administered and teacher
scored. It gives grade level reports in
the following areas:
Listening Comprehension
Reading Comprehension
Math Problem Solving
Sentence Composition
Word Reading
Essay Composition
Pseudo-word Decoding
Numerical Operations
Oral Expression
Oral Reading Fluency
Spelling
Math Fluency – Addition
Math Fluency – Subtraction
Math Fluency – Multiplication
What the parents and teacher
were able to do with the early results of this testing was to get him remediation in areas that he was appearing to struggle. They were able to line up additional speech
therapy and extra math support. Do we
see a distinct difference in a test that does have diagnostic value and one
that does NOT?
Tisch’s statement that the test reports give parents and
district great information to help kids and build curriculum is wrong. If in fact Tisch thought these tests were so
wonderful, why is she suggesting that the top performing districts in
New York State be exempt from a teacher evaluation system that uses these same
tests to evaluate their teachers?
Let’s move on to more of her statements in that debate. Tisch further stated
“Well, I would say
that the tests are really a diagnostic tool that is used to inform instruction
and curriculum development throughout the state.”
“But the ability to
glean information from these tests and use them in very direct ways to inform
instruction and curriculum in classrooms is actually really important.”
For the purpose of
this writing 50 NYS elementary teachers were asked if they use the NYS ELA Exam results to inform their instruction
or develop curriculum. Here is what a
sampling of them said:
1. Of course not, we
don’t get the results back until after the children have left and moved onto
the next grade. All we get is a
number. We do not get a detailed report
for each child or even an overall report for our class.
2. I have never used
the state test scores to inform my instruction or to develop curriculum. All we get is a number. How do you use just a number to help inform
instruction? Where are the kids
weak? Where are the kids strong?
3. The only thing I
have seen my school use the test scores for is to determine Academic
Intervention Services. That is only
based on the number. We do not get a
detailed report back as to how the children did to even create a plan for them
in AIS.
4. We get a list of
kids who were and were not proficient.
Often times that report is flawed because it will say a child is
proficient but they got a 1. We do not
get a detailed report .
Tisch further states in the debate:
“New York State spends
$54 billion a year on educating 3.2 million schoolchildren. For $54 billion a
year I think New Yorkers deserve a snapshot of how our kids are doing, how our schools
are doing, how our systems are doing.”
NYS taxpayers should be enraged. NYS gave Pearson close to $32 million to create tests and materials for New York
State Schools. This would be the same tests in which parents
do not get a detailed report such as outlined above and in which teachers report they do not get a detailed report to
help the students they have. Tests that
in fact have been failing miserably in many parts of the nation this year.
In fact, as noted in the attached
article, Pearson wins these contracts because it is cheaper not because they
are better. NYS does not want to create
exams in-house because it costs more money to pay real educators the wage rate
to write them. So, instead we waste our
taxpayer dollars on contracting out for a shoddy product that really doesn’t
diagnose how children are doing and is not used by educators to help them.
Tisch ends the interview with perhaps the greatest
insult. Let’s go back a bit and examine where
she, and then New York Education Commissioner John King, dismissed enraged New York parents.
Tisch says in the final minutes of the debate:
“Actually, I would say
to our parents that our kids have got caught in the labor dispute between the
governor and the teacher’s union.”
Time for the re-education of Merryl Tisch.
Remember all those angry parents who met you at Town Hall
meetings last year? They are NOT a labor
dispute, they are parents who are angry that you still allow chaos and testing
abuse in their schools.
They are parents like
Jeanette Deutermann who began this fight in 2013 and who led the largest
testing boycott in the nation’s history.
She has lead this fight as a parent that became gravely concerned about
how these tests were affecting her son's attitude towards school in negative
ways, as she stated in her testimony before members of the New York State
Senate.
They are parents like Lisa Rudley who testified to the New York State Senate at 4:38:08
for the Autism Action Network and discussed concerns
she also had for student privacy, as well as concerns for students with
disabilities.
They are parents who you ignored and marginalized so
horrifically that they called for your resignation in May of last
year
So, to set the record straight, Chancellor Tisch, the
largest test refusal movement by PARENTS in the nation is NOT a labor
dispute. It happened under your
watch. When will you be accountable to the public? To set the record straight, the
tests you claim are gleaned for amazing information, are a diagnostic tool, and
are used to inform instruction in our schools and classrooms is blatant
misinformation.
Time to get educated Chancellor Tisch or
Resign!
Marla Kilfoyle has been a public school teacher in New York for 28 years. She is National Board Certified and the mother of a 12 year old boy who attends public school. She is the General Manager of The Badass Teachers Association and is on the steering committee for New York State Allies for Public Education (NYSAPE). You can follower her on twitter @marla_kilfoyle
As a side note, the WIAT-III is published by Pearson Education Inc.
ReplyDeleteThe WIAT-III is published by Pearson Education.
ReplyDeleteSo pearson IS capable of writing a diagnostic test. Why are they giving us "detailed" crap?
ReplyDelete