This is a guest post by a DCPS teacher who wishes to remain anonymous due to fears of reprisal by administrators.
"Ssshhhh! Testing in Progress"
These signs hang on every classroom
door and throughout the hallways of the elementary school where I teach. Bulletin boards
throughout the building are plastered with test-taking tips, countdown to testing
days, and even testing-themed poetry. Teachers are feverishly reviewing the
pages and pages of rules, regulations, and routines that will serve as a
survival guide for the next two weeks. Administrators walk around inquiring
about the happenings in each classroom, wanting to know how each lesson will
contribute to the students' achievement on the upcoming standardized tests.
Flyers are sent home describing the stress that will ensue in the following
weeks and how we will cover up this anguish with a makeshift “spirit week.”
Pajama day, crazy sock day, class color day. I momentarily found myself
reminiscing about the days of high school homecoming, but this is no
homecoming. Our school has become a den of
bubble-sheet masters, nervous teachers, and strangers with clipboards, taking
notes on every move made and the potential breaches of test security.
I’m not sure what's worse, the
testing itself or the preparation and anxiety built up beforehand. As I sat
through a DC-CAS pep rally, the magnitude of this testing madness hit me like a
freight train. This is what children
are getting pumped up for? This is
what teachers have been “working towards all year”? This is the “pinnacle” of our teaching? I felt like I was in some
creepy twilight zone as I watched other teachers and administrators chant and
watched the confused students cheer. To see the students get excited about their
potential success on the test was not the point of contention for me. The fact
that the students are subject to poorly-conceived, low-quality tests and used
as pawns to determine educational funding, as well as the fate of their
teachers, is not something worth cheering about.
Other than the pep rally, teachers
spent the week prior to the testing in meetings being lectured on the
importance of test security, the protocols that would be our bible for the next
two weeks, and on just exactly what would happen to us if these rules were not
followed. The plans outlined what would happen from the moment the students
entered the classroom until the last test was signed back into our testing
coordinator. We were instructed to go over the plans, ask any questions we had
and be prepared in the weeks to come. Due to the fact that our school was under
scrutiny for previous allegations of cheating, we were warned that any
negligence in conforming our classrooms and ourselves to these guidelines would
result in an investigation and strict consequences.
I planned lessons
throughout the meetings and graded papers in the background, only contributing
my thoughts in areas which I found to be egregiously unreasonable or unjust. For
example, lined paper for scrap paper, smiling at students (this is what they
say is “coaching”), and allowing students to stand and stretch during testing
would absolutely not be tolerated. As
I listened to these rules, I pictured my bubbly bunch of eight year olds' faces.
Then, the real bomb was dropped: Absolutely no bathroom breaks during testing unless the child was showing
physical signs of distress. In addition, we also needed to prevent multiple
bathroom trips by determining how badly each child had to use the restroom.
Well, any teacher knows that once one student has “an emergency,” they all have
emergencies. How am I to be the judge of the content of each child's bladder? To
this I was told it would be easier to deal with angry parents of a child who
had wet themselves, than to have to explain the situation to the monitors from
central offices.
I decided that I'd be escorted out
by authorities before I let nervous
eight year old test-takers wet themselves on my watch. Are we that afraid of
losing our jobs that we relinquish our humanity? Are we that desperate to prove
that we are not cheating on these McTests
that we deny children their basic needs? This
is the “pinnacle” of insanity. This
is the “pinnacle” of what an era of high-stakes testing is doing to our children
and to our educators.
As testing was underway I became
more and more irritated with not only the rules, but the fact that teachers’
discretion was being undermined by outsiders claiming to be experts on data,
but not on children. Who are these people moving chairs from place to place around
my room to see my test administration from multiple angles? Why are these
strangers writing pages of notes on the condition of my classroom and my
position in the room? The thought crossed my mind of just throwing the pile of
test booklets in the air and screaming of its insanity, but what good would
that do? I wouldn’t be allowed to finish the year with my students who had to
put their science projects on the back burner for the two-week testing period.
I would never get to see how they turned out if I was punished for breaching
test security. I had already been scolded for allowing children to read books
after they finished the test, as well as for allowing them to go to the
bathroom. I decided to not push any further.
After being stalked throughout the
building for two weeks in order to ensure that I would not change any test
answers and spied on from just beyond my classroom door, my anxiety and disgust
became overwhelming. After being witness to little children crying with anxiety
and acting out in resistance and being
forced to sit for hours completing endless assessments that they would most
likely never see the results of, my faith in public education was diminishing.
Why are teachers subject to this level of disrespect and distrust? Why are
students subject to this much of a loss of real learning time?
Every day, more and more evidence
comes out that challenges the reliability and validity of test results and demonstrates
the unfairness of using these results to evaluate teachers. But I will comply
with the rules and regulations--if for nothing else than to see my students'
science projects and to see how much more they will accomplish this year; I am
committed to my students and their learning even as I am opposed to the insane
high-stakes testing regime that has been imposed on them. I will not, however,
allow my students or myself to be de-humanized in the process.
How much longer can we allow our
schools to feed the high-stakes testing machine rather than feed students’
imperative to learn? How much longer can we let testing replace teaching and
learning? And how much longer can we remain silent throughout it all?
I feel exactly the same way - it's truly madness and sometimes I feel like I am watching and crime by committed and doing nothing.
ReplyDeleteIt's incredibly sad that this is what "education" has come to. I keep wondering how long I can hang in there. I love teaching. I love the students and parents that I work with each year, but the unrealistic expectations/results expected of the testing, just makes you numb. All I've heard for the past three weeks (and I have the pleasure of doing this three times a year) meet your goal...make sure your kids make their expected growth and shoot for proficiency. The admin only sees and thinks numbers, numbers, numbers. If we are to acknowledge Gardners theory of "multiple inteligences" how does all of this reflect that theory?
ReplyDeleteJust when I thought it couldn't get any worse. To begin with, I'm not surprised that the obsession to measure led administrators to measure the wrong thing. Nor am I surprised that creating absurd expectations led to cheating. And unfortunately, I'm also not surprised that the tenacious insistence on a clean measure of irrelevant data has turned into this sad spectacle of militaristic policing dressed up as education. Thank you for describing this. Bubble testing was a hassle when I was a kid in DC public schools, but nothing this traumatic. And yes, we did get to read if we finished early.
ReplyDeleteAs a mother of a 3rd grader, the SOL testing process is not one of my favorite things. I think most parents and most teachers do not like this system. Since when are our children mini-robots filling in bubbles? They are 9 years old, c'mon...there is plenty of time for placement tests in their future. Why can't we allow our teachers to teach freely??? Am I wrong to want my child to be driven to excellence by someone who can think outside of this mandated box???
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