Are you paid to sit around and bully parents who are taking a stand against a pernicious trend in PUBLIC education? Or do you do it for fun? |
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To give an idea how normalized the process of opting out can become, here is a link to Fairport NY school district where the SUPERINTENDENT notifies parents how to do it and what their rights are. It is shameful that DCPS doesn't provide a similar clear communication to tax payers
http://www.fairport.org/news.cfm?story=869 |
The pernicious trend is the watering down of education, and the un-evenness of educational experience. Without testing, how will we know that Child A can't do division, and isn't ready for preAlgebra? |
| ^^^ at least now we know the level of ignorance we are dealing with. Nobody is against testing. Read a bit more on the subject. |
maybe you should read, check the archives...there have been people protesting against testing since forever...doesn't matter if it was the CAS or the PIA or the predecessors... |
back at you. The "rest of what happens at school" -- recess, friends, kind teachers, lunch, aftercare, gym -- can be had at any not-public school. Even 'walkability' in the District of Columbia, which is the geographic location that we're talking about here (MoCO, Iowa and California readers stay silent now).
Curriculum is 80% of the game, my friend. And standardized testing drives the curriculum now. The rest can be replicated at St. Saint Name Here parochial school and/or Expensive Academy Day School independent school. |
I'm not that poster, but it's a great question. There are many alternatives available to a parent so passionate about avoiding standardized tests. Or, same parent can sit around and gnash teeth. |
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here's an old testing whine from 2010...
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/113323.page#948220 |
| I sometimes wonder if there is a shill from the WTU who complains about all and any testing which could reveal holes in the schooling our kids are receiving... |
or just taking a couple of days off as for a family vacation or emergency. Don't worry about "harming your child's records" - this is just a fear tactic. |
no need to be so mean about it. OP is just asking a simple question -- and more and more people are opting out of these types of tests across the country. I'm surprised this hasn't come up more in DC |
ask their teachers |
And the practice days. |
Why would it be from the WTU, more like from administrators? WTU doesn't run the schools, write the curriculum, hire the teachers, or write the tests. But keep blaming the teachers and the union if it makes you feel better. While you're busy blaming WTU, get active in your local school and try to make it better : ) |
I wonder about a shill from central office -- terrified that opting out might catch on among the kids who can be counted on to score well on the tests. That's what DCPS likes most about your kids -- that they make the adults looks good, so you can bet they will try to shame you into having your kids take the test and threaten you with damage to their records. Sometimes I think the reason some high SES parents go along with the tests is because of their own academic competitiveness. I wish more would become anti- NCLB standardized testing activists like so many other public school parents across the country. |