Old UFT/AFT buddy Mary Ellen Elia under attack. Anti-Opt- out is a UFT signature- and a vote for Unity is a vote for supporting Elia and high stakes testing.
It's Monday, April 1st and  it is no April fool’s joke of what’s going on around the state. Please  share widely, here’s the link to share all over social media:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 1, 2019
NYS Education Commissioner Mary Ellen Elia Creates a Culture of Fear, Intimidation, and Misinformation in our Schools
The  Every Student Succeeds Act (the federal law known as ESSA) gives states  authority to design their own unique accountability plan regarding the  state tests. Unfortunately, Commissioner Elia has used that authority to  misinterpret ESSA, and has used ESSA as an opportunity to impose a  culture of fear on our administrators and teachers, and our children.   Under Commissioner Elia’s direction, the State Education Department  (SED) at best turns a blind eye to, and at worst encourages, school  districts to bribe, coerce, manipulate, and threaten students and  parents into complying with a broken assessment system.
As we head into the first round of 2019 grades 3-8 state testing, NYSAPE is receiving an unprecedented number of reports  from parents statewide about morally objectionable, educationally  unsound, and in some cases, illegal policies and tactics that local  schools and districts are using in attempts to suppress test refusal.  Parents are reporting bribery with prizes, parties, and exemptions from  district course finals. Students are threatened with removal from or  ineligibility for honors programs, retention, and summer school; schools  are threatened with closure.
Misinformation and scare tactics are coming from school districts, administrators, and even SED itself (see NYSUT’s rebuttal to the Commissioner),  and range from claims that refusal students will be scored a ‘1’ and  that the tests were created by teachers to statements that the  assessments are “vital” and more. The New York City Department of  Education even sent out letters--which they later had to  retract--informing parents they could transfer out of their schools.  Whether the city acted on its own or at the behest of SED is unknown,  but SED’s endorsement of “public school choice” for the NY ESSA plan,  along with its reductive test-based criteria for identifying these  schools as in need of “Comprehensive Support and Improvement” (CSI)  certainly paved the way for this debacle. The panic and humiliation  caused by identifying schools as CSI was not limited to the city, but  was felt in districts all over the state.
Most  concerning is the resurgence of purely punitive policies like “sit and  stare” (a cruel practice where test refusers as young as 8 must sit in  the room with the testers with not so much as a book or a pencil to  divert themselves with) and forcing elementary refusers to do old state  assessments throughout the testing administration hours. Outraged  parents have questioned these abusive actions, and the response many  have received from their districts is that these tactics were suggested  and encouraged, incredibly, by Commissioner Elia of the New York State  Education Department.
A letter  from the principal of the Oswego Middle School to her students  perfectly illustrates that the NYS grades 3-8 testing system has gone  completely off the rails. The sole purpose of the letter was to convince  children “why you should say yes to the test.” Given out during the  school day, for students to sign while still in school, the letter  indicated they should “feel free to share with your parents.” It invoked  a warped child psychology, attempting to manipulate students with  phrases such as, “you love OMS, and we LOVE YOU! So, you WANT TO HELP!”   “If you take the NYS ELA Assessment...you can be exempt from the  English Final Exam in June!,” and “Daily Drawings for FABULOUS prizes  for all ‘YES’ slips.”  And, finally, as a way to single out any child  whose parents had decided they wouldn’t be participating, “...a  school-wide event if we can hit 100%! Something like a Spring Pep  Rally….your favorite teachers will do something FUNNY ‘like’ KISS A  PIG.”
Any  policy that singles out, discriminates against, rewards, or punishes  school children for the decisions of their parents is cause for deep  concern. It’s appalling and disconcerting that Commissioner Elia/SED is  encouraging these unacceptable policies. SED must immediately admonish  these policies, and address the many flaws, complaints, educational  issues, and legal questions raised by this deeply flawed testing  program—for years the most highly boycotted state testing system in the  nation.
NYSAPE  calls on the NYS Legislature to pass legislation, before session ends,  that reinforces a parent’s right to opt out, protects students from  punishment, requires districts to notify parents at the beginning of the  school year about those rights, and forbids SED and school  administrators to bribe, punish, lie, and manipulate as a way to  increase test participation. Neither students, administrators, schools,  nor districts should suffer retaliation or negative consequences as the  result of parents exercising their right to refuse the state tests.
NYSAPE and parents statewide will continue to monitor the policies and tactics  encouraged by SED and implemented by school districts who have chosen  to comply with misguided directives rather than advocate for the  students in their care. We believe the time has come for the Board of  Regents to bring in a Commissioner who values a whole-child education,  respects parental rights, and places our children’s best interests at  the forefront.
If NYSUT and the UFT would push the legislature to get us back S/U, the culture of fear would disappear overnight. Could someone please explain why there is no push for this?
ReplyDeleteHey Norm, how may teachers and NYC parents have opted out of tests the past few years?
ReplyDeleteIs this something the rank and file support?
Should the union leadership/unity support opt-out when rank and file did not?
how do you know the rank and file wouldn't support it if they weren't threatened? Your miopia about your school being the rank and file is misguided.
ReplyDeleteDo you all support the current regents process?
How about NYSUT - don't they seem to support it?
What about Long Island?
And what we are calling for is for teachers to be allowed to inform parents of their rites.
I bet the rank and file might support a lot of things if properly involved and informed.