This is a big week for pushing the opt-out movement. Michael Elliot released a video (The Other PARCC - Parents Advocating Refusal on High-Stakes Testing) on refusing the PARCC yesterday in New Jersey, where the tests were to begin today but may have been delayed by the snow.
MORE's partner in many endeavors, Change the Stakes, created NYC-specific refusal letters this year. Attached are Word versions in English and Spanish. Here are the links:
https://changethestakes.
https://changethestakes.
And on Weds there is a forum at PS 261K where MORE's Marissa Torres is chapter leader and MORE's Sam Coleman and Brian Jones are on the panel. (I can't resist - where are the other so-called UFT caucuses in terms of organizing, agitating, etc other than being key-board warriors? - By the way -- 45 teachers and parents showed up to the MORE meeting on Saturday.)
Janine Sopp posted this link: NYS Testing info presentation 2_3_2015.pdf (This power point presentation is worth viewing and sharing. It helps explain the flawed and invalid nature of high stakes testing. Please share with you community and arm yourself with the answers to those who believe these tests do something worth the time, energy, chaos and money we are forces to endure.)
Next time your UFT rep or Mulgrew comes around telling you how important testing is, refer to this.
And finally - for now -- NYSAPE's versions of above for the state.
Hi All,
Attached
is NYSAPE’s factsheet and sample refusal letter. We are also finishing
up a Fact vs. Myth document (longer than the factsheet) that I will
share soon. Below is information on Assemblyman James Tedisco’s bill on
requiring schools to inform parents their right to refuse the 3-8 CC
tests.
Tedisco: New “Common Core Parental Refusal Act” to Inform Parents of Their Rights
POSTED BY JIM TEDISCO 20PC ON FEBRUARY 25, 2015 · FLAG
Assemblyman
introduces legislation to ensure schools notify parents they can refuse
to have their children in grades 3-8 participate in controversial
Common Core state standardized tests
Assemblyman
Jim Tedisco (R,C,I-Glenville), who was the top vote getter in the
Assembly on the Stop Common Core ballot line in 2014, today announced
new legislation he is introducing, the “Common Core Parental Refusal
Act” to require that school districts notify parents of their rights to
refuse to have their children in grades 3-8 participate in the Common
Core standardized tests.
Both
parents and teachers have expressed concern over the over-testing of
children in New York in regards to how the new Common Core standards are
being applied along with the high stakes associated with the results of
such tests. Chief among those complaints is that teachers are being
forced to spend an inordinate amount of class time “teaching to the
test” instead of engaging students in true learning.
In 2014 alone, parents of 60,000 students refused New York State Common Core tests.
Tedisco’s
bill provides a notification for schools to send to parents informing
them of their right to refuse to have their children take the Common
Core tests along with a response form that parents can complete and
return to the schools. These notices can be sent via email, letter or
home with children in their school bags.
The
legislation protects school districts and individual schools from
having state aid withheld or any other punitive measures by the state.
The bill protects teachers from being penalized due to a lack of student
participation or performance on the exams. It also ensures that
students are not punished or rewarded for their participation or lack
thereof in the exams and would set-aside alternate study activities for
those who refuse the tests so they are not forced to “sit and stare” in
the same room as their peers who are taking the tests.
“We need to bring common sense to Common Core because New York is
wasting a lot of time and money counting things that don’t count. Too
much time and effort is being spent needlessly stressing children out to
prepare for these Common Core standardized tests which are of
questionable value instead of focusing on supporting teachers so they
can do their job and teach children the truly important essentials. ”
said Tedisco, a former public school special education teacher and
guidance counselor.
“Perhaps the best kept secret in state government is that parents have a
right to refuse to have their children take the Common Core
standardized tests if they desire without fear of reprisal against their
kids, teachers or schools. It’s long past time, that those who should
have had a say in the implementation of Common Core at the onset in this
representative democracy have their say now in defense of their
parental rights as it relates to their children’s educational best
interests,” said Tedisco.
Link to the bill: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ gq73m70d5k1216v/Assemblyman% 20Jim%20Tedisco%20-%20Common% 20Core%20Parental%20Refusal% 20Act.pdf?dl=0
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