Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If our friends and neighbors with kids at Wilson can be believed, dozens of Wilson students didn't turn up for the 2016 PARCC at all. No consequences.
What do you PARCC enthusiasts get out of lambasting parents who view having states/DC force their public school children take standardized tests enriching for-profit entities as an infringement of their rights? OK, you disagree with their position. But why bother mocking them, and trying to frighten and shame them into compliance? Why not simply ignore them, and the hundreds of thousands of other American parents in their camp? Why not simply act on your beliefs and leave others to act on theirs?
FYI, the Murch principal leaves families opting out alone. No help, but no damaging attendance reports or other headaches either.
Grow up, you can do whatever you want but the histonics are not convincing anyone to join your cause. There has been some form of standardized test given for decades now. You aren'"t going to change that by opting out. If you want to change the testing requirements established by no child left beyond, protesting at the neighborhood level is going to accomplish nada.
Anonymous wrote:My DC @ Wilson didn't do the PARCC last year, I didn't keep DC out of school. I just instructed DC to go to class and AP review, instead of PARCC. I saw no point to having a kid miss review in order to take the PARCC geometry test when that class was done in middle school.
Wilson could instruct teachers to schedule review outside of the testing window, if it can't reason with DCPS...the AP schedule is not a surprise.
If the test results really count this year, is it fair that the stats teacher or calculus teacher is impacted by material taught in middle school?
DCPS sucks, in this regard
Anonymous wrote:If our friends and neighbors with kids at Wilson can be believed, dozens of Wilson students didn't turn up for the 2016 PARCC at all. No consequences.
What do you PARCC enthusiasts get out of lambasting parents who view having states/DC force their public school children take standardized tests enriching for-profit entities as an infringement of their rights? OK, you disagree with their position. But why bother mocking them, and trying to frighten and shame them into compliance? Why not simply ignore them, and the hundreds of thousands of other American parents in their camp? Why not simply act on your beliefs and leave others to act on theirs?
FYI, the Murch principal leaves families opting out alone. No help, but no damaging attendance reports or other headaches either.
Anonymous wrote:If our friends and neighbors with kids at Wilson can be believed, dozens of Wilson students didn't turn up for the 2016 PARCC at all. No consequences.
What do you PARCC enthusiasts get out of lambasting parents who view having states/DC force their public school children take standardized tests enriching for-profit entities as an infringement of their rights? OK, you disagree with their position. But why bother mocking them, and trying to frighten and shame them into compliance? Why not simply ignore them, and the hundreds of thousands of other American parents in their camp? Why not simply act on your beliefs and leave others to act on theirs?
FYI, the Murch principal leaves families opting out alone. No help, but no damaging attendance reports or other headaches either.
Anonymous wrote: The Wilson students went to the testing room and randomly clicked on answers. Sonthey tanked the test on purpose. They didn't opt out.
No consequences for the students. This spring, if it were to happen again, there could be consequences for their teachers. This year student PARCC performance are supposed be a factor in teacher evaluations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't sound like OP's talking about disturbing a class. You sign in at the elementary school's front desk, go to the child's classroom door, quietly beckon for him or her to come out, escort the child out of the building and return them to their class an hour or two later. I do this all the time for medical appointments and have never had an issue. In a free country, opting out of the standardized tests should be an excused absence.
Are you for real????? Do you not understand testing conditions, which is completely different from a regular day. Keep your kid at home for the day, ask for the testing calendar in advance and keep your kid home for the morning or afternoon, tell your kid to put their head down and don't test, or tell them to do the best they can and don't sweat it!!! Stop making a stressful day for the school re. logistics even more difficult. IT really is not that difficult![]()
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Get a life. You bring the kid in to be marked present first thing, so the DCPS attendance Nazis won't come at you, then take them home. Remember the case of the piano prodigy DCPS hassled so much over attendance that the parents withdrew her from Deal, and the mom who went to Mongolia on the adoption trip who got hit with a charge of criminal child neglect in the Superior Court, er, 18 months later? No stress for the school if the kid is marked present.
sorry, a child has to attend 80% of the day to be marked present. If you are going to engage in civil disobedience you have to be prepared to accept the consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't sound like OP's talking about disturbing a class. You sign in at the elementary school's front desk, go to the child's classroom door, quietly beckon for him or her to come out, escort the child out of the building and return them to their class an hour or two later. I do this all the time for medical appointments and have never had an issue. In a free country, opting out of the standardized tests should be an excused absence.
Are you for real????? Do you not understand testing conditions, which is completely different from a regular day. Keep your kid at home for the day, ask for the testing calendar in advance and keep your kid home for the morning or afternoon, tell your kid to put their head down and don't test, or tell them to do the best they can and don't sweat it!!! Stop making a stressful day for the school re. logistics even more difficult. IT really is not that difficult![]()
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Get a life. You bring the kid in to be marked present first thing, so the DCPS attendance Nazis won't come at you, then take them home. Remember the case of the piano prodigy DCPS hassled so much over attendance that the parents withdrew her from Deal, and the mom who went to Mongolia on the adoption trip who got hit with a charge of criminal child neglect in the Superior Court, er, 18 months later? No stress for the school if the kid is marked present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is just a weird freak.
We ALL know the type. Carry on people, carry on.
You sound like a school system employee.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, the PARCC is no big deal folks. Chill. Barely a blip on my kids' radars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't sound like OP's talking about disturbing a class. You sign in at the elementary school's front desk, go to the child's classroom door, quietly beckon for him or her to come out, escort the child out of the building and return them to their class an hour or two later. I do this all the time for medical appointments and have never had an issue. In a free country, opting out of the standardized tests should be an excused absence.
Are you for real????? Do you not understand testing conditions, which is completely different from a regular day. Keep your kid at home for the day, ask for the testing calendar in advance and keep your kid home for the morning or afternoon, tell your kid to put their head down and don't test, or tell them to do the best they can and don't sweat it!!! Stop making a stressful day for the school re. logistics even more difficult. IT really is not that difficult![]()
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