In the fall, MORE will be launching a petition campaign calling for the right for teachers to vote on the evaluation deal, and for escalating protests against the testing profiteers.If you like what you've read, please consider joining MORE.
Why we oppose the release of test-based teacher evaluationsby morecaucusnyc |
As students and teachers finish up the school year in sweltering
heat, legislators in Albany closed their legislative session by passing a
new law regarding the public release of teachers' performance
evaluations. In reaction to the horrific episode in February, where
teachers had erroneous ratings based on flawed data splashed across the
pages of the New York City press, legislators extended a protection
given to some other civil servants that would prevent work evaluations
from being released under the Freedom of Information Act.
Widely heralded as a victory for teachers both by the teacher union
leadership and the antiunion press, this legislative move actually
helps to usher in a new destructive era of standardized testing for our
public school students. First of all, the legislation mandates that
school districts must provide "conspicuous notice" to
advise parents of their right to know their children's teachers'
evaluation results. While the UFT claims that parents have always had
this right, it was a very rare administrator that ever released teacher'
performance information to parents. Now, Mayor Bloomberg has vowed to call every parent in New York City to make them aware that they can access this information.
This will create a poisonous environment within schools, creating
suspicion and dividing parents and teachers who are natural allies in
the struggle for better schools for our students.
No More Standardized Testing!
Furthermore,
the publicity surrounding the deal ignores the overall framework in
which it is occurring, where teacher evaluations will soon be based in
part on scores students receive on standardized tests. In a year where
students have endured hours of expanded "field testing," error-filled
exams, and nonsense questions about talking pineapples, we are now
moving to an era where teachers livelihoods will be determined by growth
and value-added models based on tests, which are unstable metrics that have been shown to vary wildly.
Fortunately,
there is a new voice in opposition to the politics of collusion on the
part of union leaders that has brought us to this point. The recently
formed Movement of Rank and File Educators (morecaucusnyc.org) in New York City is the social justice caucus of the UFT and force advocating within the union opposing "any teacher evaluations based on standardized tests." MORE has supported the boycott of parents of the Pearson field tests and taken a strong position against the evaluation framework agreed to by our union leadership in February, and endorsed the national resolution against standardized testingwhich has been ratified by hundreds of organizations around the country (although not the UFT leadership).
In the fall, MORE will be launching a petition campaign calling for
the right for teachers to vote on the evaluation deal, and for
escalating protests against the testing profiteers.
If you like what you've read, please consider joining MORE.
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