This summer at the SOS March & National Call to Action, I was pleased to see some young and enthusiastic, but independent-minded and healthily skeptical teachers. Among them was DCPS elementary school teacher, Olivia Chapman (on twitter: @sedcteacher). Olivia dual-majored in special and general education at The College of Saint Rose in her native upstate New York and then worked for a year as a substitute teacher in Albany, New York, before accepting her current position. I was so impressed with Olivia (plus I'm always looking to feature the voices of teachers and education professionals who are on the ground) that I solicited a guest post from her. If she is symbolic of the young, smart, dedicated, and energetic teachers that neo-liberal reformers so often talk of attracting and keeping in the teaching profession, from Olivia's account below, they're not doing a very good job. Who, especially with all those qualities, lasts long in a stifling and absurd environment such as Olivia describes? For our nation's sake, I pray that Olivia and so many of the discouraged newer teachers I've talked to in recent years stick it out. We need you! As one of my children's teachers told me as we talked about the limitations of standardization and high-stakes testing were doing, "The pendulum is always swinging; I'm just waiting for it to swing in the other direction." In too many schools and systems, teaching rich, meaningful, and varied content and leading our children to embrace the beauty of the life of the mind has become an act of defiance when it should be an ethos. Here is Olivia's piece:
A Lesson on Failing
We hear a great deal these days from the media and education
reformers about our “broken” public school system and about “failing” public
schools. While I certainly haven’t been to all public schools and seen them for
myself, I see and read about success in public schools often enough to know
that not all public schools are
“failing.” Unfortunately, though, I
happen to work at a school that is failing and I used to be part of the reason
for that failure.
Just to be clear, I'm not referring to a label of “failure”
often placed on schools due to their failure to meet No Child Left Behind's lofty and unattainable AYP (Adequate Yearly
Progress) requirements. My school is failing because of what NCLB’s mandates
have done to the students, teachers, and to the community. My school is failing
because morality, honesty, compassion, and values have been replaced by an
obsession with data, accountability, standardized testing, and evaluations.
Authentic, creative, and innovational learning experiences
have been replaced by practice tests, overwhelming amounts of interim
assessments, multiple choice drill and practice sheets, and an inundation of
mandated programs and paper work that have little impact on real student
learning. I have seen genuinely good,
veteran teachers lose touch with their morals out of fear. I have seen children
bow their heads in shame upon the revelation that their test scores labeled
them below basic in reading or math. I have had parents refer solely to their
children’s test scores to describe their abilities, telling me that their
children are good at math, but bad at reading and vice versa. I have witnessed
cheating and lying to save careers. I have witnessed the stealing of materials
and resources because budget cuts have allowed for very little funding for what
our students really need. This is the harsh reality and this is failing. We are
failing ourselves and we are failing our students. We are neglecting to truly
educate our students because teachers aren’t allowed to be innovative and
creative. Instead, we are overwhelmed by the task of producing robotic
test-takers rather than thoughtful, lifelong learners.
When I was hired at DC Public Schools I was told that if I
couldn’t get the students' test scores up, I was dispensable. Teachers who have
students with high test scores are put on pedestals and those without are
stigmatized, humiliated, and downright disrespected by the administration. This
was the culture that I was thrown into as a first year teacher. At first, I was
determined to succeed at attaining this highly esteemed respect from my
colleagues and my principal.
I spent my first year teaching relentlessly chasing this
prize. I drilled, I practiced, I taught test-taking strategies. I made the
students want to stay in for recess to practice testing by rewarding them with
dollar store surprises and animal crackers. I begged and pleaded for parents to
get their kids to school early and stay after for more standardized test
review. I thought that if my students had awesome test scores, I would earn the
veneration I had yearned for. More importantly, I thought that this would prove
that I was a good teacher. In reality, I lost sight of who I was and why I had
become a teacher. Oh, and my students test scores turned out to be pretty low,
despite my sixty-hour work weeks and endless nights spent grading bubble
sheets. In addition, at the end of the school year I was rated "minimally
effective" due to my students’ low test scores.
I spent the summer after my first year reflecting on why I had
become a teacher and thought about quitting and traveling the world. But I soon
realized that it wasn't teaching that was the problem, it was the environment I
was teaching in (not to mention I didn’t have enough money saved to even travel
locally)--the high-stress intensity of the testing atmosphere, the
"walking on eggshells" feeling that you get when you know something
bad is going to happen despite any precautions you may have taken. I decided to
scrap the entire test prep regimen that I thought, and was told, was crucial to
student success. I figured I had one more year to improve my rating before being
terminated, so why not teach the way that I thought would be most effective,
most compelling, and most beneficial to my students? Why not teach my students
the way that my best teachers had taught me?
Last year, for my students' sake as well as for my own, I
took the focus off of testing. I told my students that standardized testing was
something that we had to do in order to prove to the city and to the nation
that they have good teachers and that they are learning at school, and my
head-strong group of fourth graders was determined to prove themselves. I
reassured them regularly that I would not refer to them by a label determined
by their test scores and that they were so smart and had so much knowledge that
they did not need to worry about taking the silly old test. I treated the test
as if it were just another thing on our fourth grade “to do” list. This
constant reassurance gave them confidence to take on the test, but it also took
the emphasis off of the end-all-be-all aspect of high-stakes standardized
testing.
With this weight off of our shoulders, I moved my students on to
more authentic learning. Genuine, meaningful learning cannot prosper when the
burden of bubble sheets, arbitrary teacher firings and terms like “below basic”
are clouding our brains. For the most part, I replaced weekly multiple-choice
assessments with projects that met the standards as well as met the students'
interests. We read materials that sparked intellectual curiosity, debates, and
critical thinking. I stopped using the
“preferred” textbooks and found ways to fund class sets of books and magazines
that were engaging and appropriate for my demographic. In the end, their test
scores were fine. No, I didn’t produce any miraculous increase in proficiency
levels, but these kids now know how to think, they gained content knowledge,
they know a few things about the world around them, and they genuinely care
about learning more.
Critics of my anti-teaching-to-the-test approach often ask,
“Well, how do you know that the students actually learned without looking at
data from their test scores?” I look at tons of data! I listen for conversation skills, I review projects, I read reports, I observe debates and discussions,
and I use rubrics to assess skits and videos. Sure, I throw in some
multiple-choice style tests when appropriate and yes, I look at that data too.
More importantly, I know that these students learned because they left my class
with authentic means to express and apply their knowledge. These students still
stop by my room to tell me what they are learning and doing in school. They
value what I taught them because they see the importance of each lesson in
their everyday lives. Furthermore, they look to deepen their understanding of
topics of interest. They still ask me for help selecting books that will interest
them and help them expand their knowledge. Some of my former students still
check our class facebook page for extra learning activities to do at home. They
ask me questions like, “Ms. Chapman, do you have any friends who are
doctors/lawyers/engineers/authors that I could write to about how they got
their careers?” Their fifth grade teacher informed me that during the
earthquake, my previous students climbed under their desks because they had
learned what to do during natural disasters by becoming “meteorologists” and
writing live weather reports in class last year.
I read somewhere that teachers whose students do not excel
on high-stakes standardized tests are probably the best teachers. I don’t necessarily agree with that. However,
I do believe that teaching to the test makes children dislike school and makes
teachers loathe teaching. I have realized in my first three years of teaching that the
aspects of public education that are “failing” are our current education
policies, reforms, and those who are pushing them, those who think
that spending large sums of money on testing and teacher evaluations will make
children smarter. Then administrators continue the “failing” by pushing these
policies onto teachers, and in turn, so do the teachers who reluctantly choose
to go along with them.
My school did not make AYP again this year. We now have a
new principal who never ceases to express his endless devotion to getting an
80% pass rate on this year’s tests. I'm sure that my defiance of his test-prep
regime, of his mandated ten multiple-choice question bi-weekly formative
assessments, and of his failure to see the students he is supposed to educate as
anything more than test scores will cause great controversy. I have been warned
that I walk on thin ice because of the test scores that are tied heavily to my
evaluation. In spite of this, what I fear most is not a poor rating based on a
single test. What I fear most is failing my students and their community again
by believing that my students' success and my own is based on teaching to that single
test.