Standardized Tests – Your Rights, Opting Out, and the Impact on Your Child

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After I read What Happened to Recess and Why Are our Children Struggling in Kindergarten? by Susan Ohanian, I knew I wanted her to share with you exactly what you as a parent need to know about the national obsession with standardized tests. Here’s my (devil’s advocate) interview with Susan Ohanian, an experienced teacher, education advocate against NCLB and high stakes testing, and a prolific writer of books and articles.

Standardized Tests - Your Rights, How to Opt-Out, and the Impact on Your Child

Melissa: Say I’m just an ordinary parent (or my child isn’t even school-aged,) why should I care about the standardized tests he/she will take at school?

Susan O on Standardized TestingOhanian: The standardized tests are taking over more and more of every child’s day. Some districts have pre-K screening–so parents can know if their children are “on track” for the rigors of the kindergarten curriculum. Kindergarten, which means “children’s garden,” was intended as a place for children to engage in creative play, learning important social  and developmental skills, a place where they learn to care about one another and help one another. Now it is a place of worksheets, homework, and curriculum rigor. Look that word up in the dictionary and ask yourself if you want that for your child at any age.

Research shows that test scores are a much better measure of family income than of student ability. Family matters. A family’s ability to provide many cultural experiences, including books in the home, matters enormously.

Melissa: In Colorado, the school gets a grade based on the tests in my state – that’s good, right? Aren’t tests the best way for us to see if the school is teaching what they’re supposed to teach?

Ohanian: We don’t need grades based on standardized tests to determine how schools are doing on those standardized tests.  We can look at the zip codes of the students and predict  the rating by the poverty index of the community. Research has shown again and again that children of affluence score higher on standardized test than children of poverty. It’s not hard to see why. When families suffer from economic woes, that suffering is reflected in students’ school performance. Several years ago, a 12-year-old  homeless boy in Prince George’s County died of complications from an abscessed tooth. It is hard to imagine the agony he suffered in school. Research shows that about 1/3 of the nation’s school children suffer dental caries at any given moment. Can the school be held responsible for the resulting inattention?

In an effort to boost test scores, teachers often feel pressured to devote more time to test prep, thus narrowing the curriculum.  When curriculum is reduced to subjects that are tested,  children are deprived of the varied experiences that allow them to find new interests and talents. The most important thing a parent can ask about her child’s school is not its test score ratings but “Is this a place filled with joy?

Yes, ask for evidence of joy.

Melissa: Why did / do policy makers believe that testing ensures that all children got/get a quality, equal-opportunity education? Or was that not the goal?

Ohanian: Education policy is no longer made at the local level.  Starting in the late 1980ies, members of the Business Roundtable met with governors, pushing their agenda for changing education.  Standardized testing and  a national curriculum were high on their list. The result today is the Common Core Curriculum, which was financed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the accompanying standardized tests that promise continual testing of our children. Of interest:  The PTA received a grant of one million dollars from the Gates Foundation to promote this Common Core Curriculum.

Melissa: Does more testing mean schools improve every year?

Ohanian: More testing means more testing. It means that a child’s opportunity to experience a rich and varied school experience is reduced to the narrow range of items that can be tested. Even worse, when a child is coached for a test, he is being coached in a bizarre way of reading. This is a critical consideration for parents. Every day a child spends in test prep reinforces a wrongheaded notion of what reading is all about.

Research shows that the way to improve student test scores is to increase the amount of  time spent on free reading of their own choosing. Libraries staffed by professional librarians are critical in making a wide variety of books available to children.

Melissa: Should parents advocate against their children taking the tests? Won’t this penalize the school and teacher instead of getting the lawmakers attention?

Ohanian: When no child shows up to take the test, then lawmakers will pay close attention, very close attention. Parents should consider this: The federal government, which has forced all this testing on the schools, pays only about 8% of the total school bill. It is long past time for parents to take back their schools, the schools  that they are paying for.

Melissa: I think everyone should read What Happened to Recess, but in case they haven’t yet, can you talk about the money and secrecy just a bit?

Ohanian: One thing parents need to realize is that the attack on public schools is part of the larger squashing of the middle class. The Business Roundtable, assorted state governors, member of Congress, and newspaper editorialists across America seem to think that their repeated denunciation of teachers will distract the public from noticing where the real culprits of our economic troubles sit. Hiding behind a smokescreen of “preparing workers for tomorrow’s global economy,” these so-called education reformers treat children as commodities and teachers as mere functionaries in an accounting system.   Rather than serve up our children to corporate interests that have bankrupted the middle class, we need  to remember that a child is only eight (or nine or ten. . . ) years old once.  Youth passes all too quickly. We  need to protect our children,  and this means asking for schools that nurture curiosity, imagination, independence, laughter, joy.

Instead of looking at what corporate leaders and newspaper editorialists say about the schools, parents should ask their children, “Did you enjoy school today?” Longtime New York teacher and Pulitzer Prize winner Frank McCourt said that only once in his 18 years of teaching at a renown city school did a parent ever ask him, “Is my child enjoying school?” McCourt answered in the affirmative. The parent said,  “Thank you,” and left. That’s all she wanted to know.

It’s definitely a question we need to ask more often.

Melissa: Thank you so much, Susan. You’re opening up eyes with your advocacy work.

Readers, to opt out of testing, go to the Opt-Out website to get information on your state.

* top photo is of a Colorado billboard.

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45 Comments

  1. Sorry, but I can’t second-guess the local tests administered by an individual school. As a teacher, I know that some tests are useful, and I want to caution about setting up an adversarial relationship with the school. I know this isn’t what you have in mind, but these are such hot issues. School people get defensive but please don’t consider them enemies. That said, of course you want to look out for the best interests of your child.

    Maybe ask for examples of the benefits this test provides.

  2. So here is my issue. Maybe you have advice before I go in flipping out on people. I sent an opt out letter to my child’s school. They sent back a letter saying that they still want her to take their test , not the state one, which to me is still a standardized test and possibly a way for them to profit of f my child’s scores. They also claim that they have no other way to gauge her work. I am thinking of getting a lawyer though that seems like a ridiculous expense to preserve my child’s sanity and my rights as a parent. We are in California. The info I have is as follows. ”
    The reference is Title 5 of the CA
    Code of Regulations, Division 1, Chapter 2, Subchapter 3.75
    “Standardized Testing and Reporting Program”, Section 852, (a).
    Its under “more about STAR” on the SED website.

    “A parent or guardian may submit to the school a written request to
    excuse his or her child from any or all parts of any test provided
    pursuant to Ed Code Section 60640 [a STAR is born}. The parent or
    guardian must initiate the request and the school district and its
    employees shall not solicit or encourage any written request on
    behalf of any child.”

    California Education Code Section 60615. “Notwithstanding any
    provision of law, a parent’s or guardian’s written request to school
    officials to excuse his or her child from any or all parts of the
    assessments administered pursuant to this chapter shall be granted.””

  3. I am noticing that my elementary 4th grader is being taught for the MCAS test in a very rote way, particularly with regard to reading response writing. It’s very formulaic writing which is not to say that it’s a bad method, but it was a turn off to my older child who is more creative and decided that she hated writing in 4th grade.

    What is strange is that my oldest, now in 6th grade, is still being relentlessly tested as do all public school kids in Massachusetts, but her English teacher (or most of her teachers) are not teaching to a test. This was very apparent in the writing curriculum. I’m not sure why 6th grade writing is not requiring a rote method but I am glad about it. Now my oldest loves writing and is considered a great writer, but she struggled with:

    Topic Sentence with 2 -3 supports (paragraph 1)
    Ditto for paragraph 2

    etc. type of “open response” writing required for MCAS for both English comprehension AND math.

    Teaching to the test is messed up on so many levels just as No Child Left Behind is a complete fiasco. I’m not sure if things are changing enough though.

    I think all we can do as parents is to instill a love for learning in our kids. If they are lifelong learners, then this testing stuff is just like taking medicine. It’s helpful because life is full of standardized tests and learning how to perform well on them is both an acquired skill and a useful one, but it should not be the focus or it stifles a passion to learn and natural curiosity.

    My fourth grader now seems perfectly fine doing these rote exercises but she’s much more of the personality to write in this very structured style. Each child is different, I guess, as to how much teaching to the test bores them.

    1. HA – that last line cracked me up, Mia! Well, yes – the topic sentence + 3 sentences with specific transition words essay is a very good example of how we can dumb down teaching and learning to the least common denominator. It’s a fine way to start thinking about organizing writing but really is such awful, boring writing that it drives me crazy when I see my peers teaching this one way to write. I mean who reads? Have you ever read anything in print so blah and boring? No. So, why are we teaching and testing this kind of writing. Leave it in first grade. Formulas maybe have a place for a starting point but for the love of Shakespeare, ditch the formulas for some real writing!

      Sorry.
      Ranting.
      It happens.

      xo