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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "Teachers helping kids on SOL tests "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Let it go - all these tests mean so little in real life!!!![/quote] My thought as well. Some people just need sonething to be outraged about. And I'll never understand this new culture of "Let's get someone fired". In the grand scheme of things, no one wins or loses a thing because of the SOL. It's not attached to money, promotion, or hell even a grade. Sheeze![/quote] Do you work for FCPS or another county? Do you not have a professional code of ethics? Teachers who cheat on SOLs are teaching students it's ok to cheat. If the tests don't matter, why would teachers be cheating on them? They do matter. For some parents, failing SOL scores mean the difference between getting their child help or letting their child slip through the cracks. If teachers inflate the scores, there is deception and falsifying of a student's academic Achievement or capability. It's happening all over Fairfax County. It's a numbers game and principals and regions need to look good and show they've reached their annual goals. These numbers are posted on the fcps website. Each school posts stats. It's easy to see which school inflates their numbers. Don't you want to trust what teachers and schools report your child is achieving? One could argue all tests mean little in real life. If they ok with reporting inflated sol scores you should be skeptical of all grades reported by fcps. OP was not out to get anyone fired. That was not the point of the original post. Rethink your ethics. [/quote] Ah, the ethics argument in defense of the "hair's on fire" hysteria some want to create and justify. No parent worth her salt would be putting any real weight on SOL as far as it relates to hwe child's ability. I'd argue there's nothing unethical about prompting a child to go back and reconsider an answer. In the end, it is the child figuring out the correct response. And no one's sure this wasn't just a practice test anyone. Most SOLs are pro tired by someone other than the classroom teacher.[/quote] *proctored* by someone other than the classroom teacher. [b]And what parent would discount a child's entire school year worth of work and grades....in favor of one standardized test as a way of deciding whether or not to get the child help? Who does that????[[/b]/quote] [b]I don't know about parents but I can tell you that the IEP committee does that. My DC failed a couple of SOLs by a couple of points (basically, one question) last year in spite of an A- and B final grade in those classes and was placed in special ed this year.[/b] [/quote] You can't be placed in special ed based on SOL scores. Ever.[/quote]
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