Secretary of Education Arne Duncan appears displeased with the national Opt Out movement. In an interview with New York Times reporter Motoko Rich at the Education Writers Association national seminar in Chicago this week, Secretary Duncan stated that the federal Department of Education might have to “step in” if states do not make sure districts have enough students who take the federally mandated annual tests. States are required to have at least 95% of students in all schools be tested in each year from grades 3 to 8 and once in high school under the current provisions of No Child Left Behind, and in most states those tests are currently being aligned with the Common Core State Standards whose adoption was encouraged by Secretary Duncan’s DOE via the Race to the Top grant competition and the offer of federal waivers from the most punishing provisions of NCLB. Secretary Duncan gave some acknowledgement that some students may be over tested, but he also went on to say:
…the tests are “just not a traumatic event” for his children, who attend public school in Virginia.
“It’s just part of most kids’ education growing up,” he said. “Sometimes the adults make a big deal and that creates some trauma for the kids.”
Where to start?
Peter Greene of the Curmudgucation blog took on the broader set of Secretary Duncan’s comments earlier this week, and coined the term “Duncanswer” whereby the Secretary gives a response to a question that is entirely canned and skillfully uses ideas from the question itself to cover that he has no real understanding of the issue. I’d like to offer an additional feature of a “Duncanswer”: utter refusal to accept responsibility for any negative outcome of your choices.
The Secretary of Education essentially told the parents of nearly 200,000 students in New York state alone that if any children are traumatized by the Common Core aligned testing it is their own damn fault. His statement indicates that he views annual testing, particularly THIS annual testing, as simply an aspect of childhood, perhaps inconvenient, but not really a big deal. But the important thing to remember is that if children leave the testing crying or sick to their stomachs, then it is their parents’ and teachers’ fault for being so dramatic.
Perhaps a review of recent history is necessary. While Bill Gates may have been central to funding the development of the Common Core State Standards, we simply would not see them in classrooms across the country with standardized testing rolled out already and teachers’ evaluations connected to those tests without Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and his signature initiatives. In the midst of the financial crisis, the federal DOE enticed states with promises of funding via the Race to the Top grant competition. Even states who did not get grants were encouraged to adopt signature reforms with the offer of waivers from the most punitive provisions of NCLB. States seeking grants or waivers agreed to adopt common standards to prepare students for “college and careers” and to use accountability systems based on “student growth.” It was, of course, just a coincidence that “college and career readiness” is the catchphrase of the Common Core State Standards which were less than a year old in 2011, but which had already been adopted, often sight unseen, by dozens of states climbing over each other for grants or waivers. Since states would soon need new standardized tests aligned to the CCSS standards for use in teacher evaluations, it must have been a coincidence that Secretary Duncan had already awarded over $300 million to the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) and Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) in 2010 to develop shared assessments for the standards that had been completed in June of that year.
So from an idea among some ambitious people with no actual experience in teaching and no expertise in child development and learning in 2008 to the development of completed and copyrighted K-12 standards in both English and mathematics in 2010 to adoption by dozens of states before the standards were finished to full scale roll out of aligned examinations with connection to teacher assessments in 2015, the entire system that we have today is fully the responsibility of Secretary Duncan and the Obama administration. Others may have provided monetary support, may have glad handed various stake holders, and may have taken on the development process themselves, but none of that work would be guiding education in 43 states and the District of Columbia without Arne Duncan’s efforts.
And let’s be perfectly clear: nothing in education does or should move this quickly. As Diane Ravitch of New York University notes, following “due process” guidelines for the development of standards of this scale and nature is important to ensure they are developed thoughtfully and that they are developed in a manner that is responsive to the numerous stakeholders in the policy. In the time spent writing the standards, a more legitimate process would have possibly begun to compile the research base on content and learning necessary to begin the drafting process, but the backers of the standards, including Secretary Duncan, had a priority to move quickly before input could bog down the process. If Secretary Duncan is irritated that so many people are now opposing the standards and the accompanying testing, he might want to learn that, in general, people do not like turning around and finding out that the entire basis upon which they thought their children’s education rests has been changed without public discussion.
And if the dissatisfaction is growing, it is because although parents did not know about the Common Core standards (as 55% did not in a 2013 survey), they have little chance to avoid learning about the examinations now. While many parents are not well informed about them, that will certainly change over time as PARCC and SBAC exams continue in subsequent years. Parental discontent in New York has grown since the Pearson designed Common Core exams debuted here in 2013, and parents’ reasons are not baseless or simple whims. Multiple sources document known reading passages in the New York exams that are substantially above grade level and requiring students to answers questions on a standardized exam that objectively have multiple correct answers. Elementary school students are sitting for examinations that take longer overall to complete than the bar exam. With high stakes testing already having narrowed school curricula nationwide, parents would be correct to worry that teachers, faced with evaluations based on statistically invalid measures of their effectiveness from those tests, will face more pressure to devote time to test preparation.
Secretary Duncan, is it ” just part of most kids’ education” for kids to sit in tests that are longer than the bar exam, with reading passages years above their grade in complexity and interest level, ever single year?
Or is it the result of a set of choices that you helped set in motion? One has to wonder what Secretary Duncan recalls about being a child if he thinks this system is “just part of most kids’ education” and not a rather extraordinary set of circumstances that is reaping some very sour fruit. These exams are not magic. By most reports they are not even all that good. And they are far more disruptive than a basic accountability system needs to be. But, boy howdy, the Secretary of Education is making them high stakes. Just consider what Secretary Duncan did to Washington State when they had the nerve to allow districts to choose between state and local assessment in evaluating teachers.
But what can we make of the Secretary’s threat that the federal government may have to “step in” if parents opting children out of exams continues to grow? Parental refusal to allow a child to take the exam is not a state policy violating an agreement between the USDOE and the state government. States are not orchestrating opt outs, and in many cases, parents are given dubious information about the legality of their choice. Can Secretary Duncan threaten states where opt out numbers mean many schools are not reaching the 95% testing threshold?
Dr. Christopher Tienken of Seton Hall University and Dr. Julia Sass Rubin of Rutgers University say the matter is hardly cut and dry. First, the federal mandate for 95% testing exists so that schools cannot deliberately hide subgroups of students from accountability. There is nothing in the law or in the intent of the law that prevents parents from refusing a child’s participation, and it is not the schools that are organizing test refusal. Further, they note that the waiver agreement between states and the USDOE can override that testing requirement; in New Jersey, for example, only 250 schools are actually held to the 95% testing requirement and if they do not make it, up to 30% of their Title I money can be used by the state for specific interventions. That doesn’t take money away, however; it allows the NJDOE control over money that it technically has control over anyway.
Drs. Tienken and Sass Rubin additionally note that if the USDOE has to sanction districts and schools for missing the 95% testing target they have missed the boat already. In New Jersey alone, 175 schools missed the 95% target in 2014 without penalty, and, in fact, no school has ever been treated punitively by the USDOE for not having 95% of its students tested. Can Secretary Duncan suddenly drop his agency on states and districts not for any actions taken by those governments but because their parents have gotten unruly? How does he propose those communities seek compliance when his entrance into the matter can only make more people angry at the direction of educational policy?
For that matter, does he think he can long maintain his ability to coerce the states if the re-authorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act makes it out of Congress in its current form?
However this plays out, we can likely guarantee one thing: Arne Duncan will accept responsibility for absolutely none of it. Maybe he just never stopped being a child.
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
So, what’s Arne going to do, send in armed federal marshals to make sure that parents and kids cooperate with the testing?
Oy! I love it when people who have absolutely no experience in or knowledge about education or child development come up with these schemes. 😦
And how are the schools and the districts supposed to make sure that they get 95% compliance? Send in the local cops or the state police?
Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads.
Reblogged on https://poodyheads.wordpress.com
Sorry for the double post.
Isn’t there something seriously wrong when top-down federal education policy for this entire democratic nation has to be first coerced onto states, then held in place through threats? All the while, our federal Secretary of Education makes ludicrous statements and can’t even answer basic questions from Congressmen.
Who said it was a democratic nation? Doesn’t look like one to me.
Leslie
As a high school English teacher who is trying to get CCSS to work properly (kind of like starting up a cranky law mower), I do like that CCSS promotes critical thinking skills. What I don’t like are the tests. It’s ridiculously long to the point where it bogs down the learning process and students stop caring. Why not use the established ACT or SAT as the standard of measurement?