Sunday, July 26, 2015

High Stakes Testing

I don't know about you but, testing in my eyes is a waste of time. Time that could be spent working in the classroom teaching kids real life skills and content that will help them shine in their future. Growing up, I only remember classroom tests and spelling tests. It wasn't until high school that Regent's exams come to mind. And, yes, the teachers prepared us for them by teaching us content not test taking skills.



Education has been reinvented over and over by people who apparently need to fix unbroken things. I have been witness to this. What I hear now being called "old school" worked. I learned the "old school" way. And, I was an English Language learner. This is probably the reason why when I started in 1987, I taught the "old school" way. They were all Ells and speds. My students passed and went on to their higher studies. They didn't have a test hanging over their heads to worry about, just plain ol' learning. Teaching them was fun!



This whole climate of test taking is simply out of control. Never mind the fact that these tests are for money making purposes, they are not evaluating kids and what they know. And, I won't get into the impact these tests have on the sped kids or the ells. Just regular ed kids. I don't think they evaluate what kids know because they are being taught test taking strategies, not content.

It has taken several years but, the focus is not on learning geography or math, history or literature. The focus is on how can you do better on the multiple choice of the Global Regents? Or, how do you make sure you cover every element of question 26 in the English Regents to get full points?

Instead, why don't you let us focus on literature and its elements? Why instead of working on multiple choice strategies or succeeding in the DBQ's, let us teach them about the Incas, the Silk Road, or the Japanese feudal system? Not only will they learn information that in the future will distinguish them as educated, in the present, they will pass the regents.



I am in this situation right now. I am teaching an English Regent's Prep and all I'm doing is teaching them strategies. How about if I worked on some short stories and poetry and actually taught them how to learn to read them and analyze them? No, because they want me to show them what  the secrets are to passing.

As if,,,

This is probably why I am so frustrated being a teacher in this present climate. Now you might argue, there has always been classes to prep for regent's exams and you would be correct. I have taught them. But, as I remember them, I was actually able to continue teaching literature not just prep for a test.

So, when I read the article in The Post about the principal who committed suicide, I blamed it on the test taking culture and what it has done to education on every level. Of course we don't know this woman nor do we know her circumstances, but if in fact this was part of the reason she did it, even a tiny, tiny part, it should be a lesson to the city, the state, and the federal government that education is not being fixed; it is being destroyed by those would- be educators who create these exams. These policy makers who don't know the slightest thing about teaching and what it requires. They don't know why teachers become teachers: that innate need and desire to have children learn and excel. Because, we do know that they are our future: our future bankers, technicians, nurses, mechanics...

You get my point.

These pundits that go on every possible media outlet to tell the world how much they know about education... (Campbell Brown)

How they can fix this broken system... (Andrew Cuomo)

How they have all the answers and teachers are the problem... (ummm, anybody who's anybody)

Go back to the values of yesteryears and you will find the solution. Our society has put emphasis on the wrong thing. Let's put aside the fact that teaching is no longer perceived as a profession and paid as such. The system is broken but not by any fault of teachers.

Let's just bring back the values and the core commitments that made this country great.

Let's put the emphasis on the 123's and abc's and seeing our students as real learners and not just numbers.

Let's find a way to reach the parents and give them the rights they had when I was a little girl.

But, this last one would mean giving back a voice to the parent....

Hmmm, I think I'll leave that one for a future post.



Thursday, July 2, 2015

She  finally did it! The principal rated me ineffective in her part of the evaluation. I am beside myself and wonder what this will do to my final evaluation.

Last year, not really being familiar with the numbers, she rated me developing. At the end it turned into effective and highly effective.

This year, in her own words, she understood the way the numbers weighed and their impact. So, she had to rate me down to make sure I don't receive effective again. I'm not stupid. I read right through her statement.

I have spoken to the union, and continue research on my options (if any). I am gathering all of my papers and creating a timeline to file harassment.  I have 4 years worth of papers to go through! Thank God it's summer!!!

I am still awaiting the determination of EEOC. Although 3 teachers claimed they would also file discrimination charges against her, I am only certain of one who did the same and he too is awaiting the result.

I hate waiting! Not a good trait to possess!

Anyway, she again "excessed" me from the school. This I don't get, because she tried this 2 years ago and when she did this, it was overturned by the superintendent. I have 27 years going on 28. Which superintendent will okay this excess? I have the most experience but she had left her options open by never appointing me in the High School certificate!!! 

She is cunning! That I have to give her. But, she is transparent! Too transparent. Maybe she wants me to know that she does what she does. That's a special kind of evil, one I had never experienced until I came to this school. And, finally, I don't care.

I work at XXX Academy! Tune in later...