Anonymous wrote:I want to know what the formal "opt out" process is for DCPS. I am very much against PARCC/corporate testing and its effect on the curriculum. However, I don't want my child penalized for not taking the exam and I don't want him to sit in a room twiddling his thumbs all day. Ideas?
Anonymous wrote:But when the child is exempted from sex-ed, the school doesn't have any obligations to provide other activities, correct? the child goes to sit in the library or in the back of another class...I don't see an issue with opting out, just think it takes chutzpah to demand that the child not be left 'twiddling his thumbs' during the down time HIS PARENTS createdAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you think its right to pick and choose the parts of public school you want and don't want. What if I don't think my child should be taught art - should I just pull them out for that period every week in protest? I don't necessarily like the PARCC testing but pulling your child out for just those days seems like a childish response that will only penalize the school, the teacher, and potentially your child.
I think it's sort of the moral equivalent of a conservative religious family not wanting their child being in a sex ed class and requesting that their child be exempt from that class, actually. One might ask why that family sends their child to a school that provides sex ed at all, which makes the school nothing more than a sex ed vehicle and ignores the fact that they also teach math and English. It sounds like what you're saying is "So what if you object to this thing? Your child should do that thing anyway, because it's in everyone's best interest that they do." People register their concern about and objection to things all the time. The OP was just asking if there is a formal mechanism for doing that in this situation.
But when the child is exempted from sex-ed, the school doesn't have any obligations to provide other activities, correct? the child goes to sit in the library or in the back of another class...I don't see an issue with opting out, just think it takes chutzpah to demand that the child not be left 'twiddling his thumbs' during the down time HIS PARENTS createdAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you think its right to pick and choose the parts of public school you want and don't want. What if I don't think my child should be taught art - should I just pull them out for that period every week in protest? I don't necessarily like the PARCC testing but pulling your child out for just those days seems like a childish response that will only penalize the school, the teacher, and potentially your child.
I think it's sort of the moral equivalent of a conservative religious family not wanting their child being in a sex ed class and requesting that their child be exempt from that class, actually. One might ask why that family sends their child to a school that provides sex ed at all, which makes the school nothing more than a sex ed vehicle and ignores the fact that they also teach math and English. It sounds like what you're saying is "So what if you object to this thing? Your child should do that thing anyway, because it's in everyone's best interest that they do." People register their concern about and objection to things all the time. The OP was just asking if there is a formal mechanism for doing that in this situation.
Anonymous wrote:So you think its right to pick and choose the parts of public school you want and don't want. What if I don't think my child should be taught art - should I just pull them out for that period every week in protest? I don't necessarily like the PARCC testing but pulling your child out for just those days seems like a childish response that will only penalize the school, the teacher, and potentially your child.
keep him home. The school isn't obligated to provide entertainment or instruction for your child while he is opting out of participating in the school-wide activity. Testing requires extra hands on deck(volunteer proctors) even without the conscientious objectors underfootAnonymous wrote:I want to know what the formal "opt out" process is for DCPS. I am very much against PARCC/corporate testing and its effect on the curriculum. However, I don't want my child penalized for not taking the exam and I don't want him to sit in a room twiddling his thumbs all day. Ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Just curious - if you are so opposed to testing why do you send your child to public schools? Its not just about the couple days spent taking the test but the fact that the curriculum is designed around the test. If you are so opposed to the test that you would consider not sending your child to school those days why would you send them at all.
Anonymous wrote:There is no formal opt out (confirmed at a recent meeting with DCPS PARCC officials). So your options are medical reasons or truancy, neither of which - to me! - seem wroth the trouble of potentially harming your child's records.