Anonymous wrote:
These kids are being robbed of their childhoods in so many ways.
Not really. Again: Students do not have freedom of speech. Are we clear on that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I fail to see the problem with this. The kids should understand that what they post has consequences. It would be one thing if they hacked into private accounts or something, but if they're posting stuff publicly, they have to face the consequences. It's not like students have freedom or speech or anything.
My understanding is that the student did not post the question. That the DOE called his school is concerning.
Anonymous wrote:
Expel kids?
Remember, these are KIDS, not adults we are talking about. Maybe they could be counseled to opt out of the PARCC.
You have to believe that there is something inherently wrong with a test that has this high of stakes attached to it. If you have to sign a nondisclosure agreement with a profit seeking company when you are in public school at age 14, there's a problem.
Also, a test that is used that widely will never be secret.
Anonymous wrote:I fail to see the problem with this. The kids should understand that what they post has consequences. It would be one thing if they hacked into private accounts or something, but if they're posting stuff publicly, they have to face the consequences. It's not like students have freedom or speech or anything.
You have to believe that there is something inherently wrong with a test that has this high of stakes attached to it. If you have to sign a nondisclosure agreement with a profit seeking company when you are in public school at age 14, there's a problem.