Posted: 7:00 a.m. Friday,
Feb. 13, 2015
IN OUR SCHOOLS
Some parents opting kids out of state tests
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/jeremy-p-kelley/" rel="nofollow - - Eric Schwartzberg
Staff Writer
With Ohio’s
new, harder state tests just days away, parents and schools are weighing a
relatively new phenomenon — families refusing to have their students take the
annual state exams.
The Ohio Department of Education advised
schools last week that they are required to test all students in specified
grades and subjects, and that there may be consequences “for the child, the
child’s teacher, and the school and district” if students refuse.
Nevertheless, the Operation Opt-Out Ohio
Facebook page has hundreds of comments from parents statewide — some from Hamilton, Fairfield,
West Chester Twp. and Liberty Twp. — who say their children will not take state
tests. Their reasons range from anger at overtesting, the use of test scores to
evaluate teachers, arguments that the tests are not developmentally appropriate
based on students’ grade level, and more.
Amie Hartman of Liberty Twp. said she
downloaded a “safe harbor” form, or opt-out form, from Operation Opt Out Ohio
to submit to Lakota’s VanGorden
Elementary School.
Hartman said she won’t have her third and fourth graders take the test because,
as one example, fourth-graders’ testing schedule shows 15 testing days out of a
44-day period of school.
“Over one-third of their days have some
form of testing in them,” Hartman said. “I think it’s very disheartening for
9-year-olds and also for their teachers, who would much rather be using that as
instructional time. On top of that, they have to dedicate time to practice
tests, to practicing instruction time to show them how to correctly take the
test.”
Shannon Friend of Monroe echoed Hartman’s concerns. Friend has
children in third, fourth and sixth grade in Monroe Local
School District and has
opted all of them out of next week’s testing.
“It’s not as much this particular testing,
as it’s the one I can take a stand in, just saying how overtested our children
are without major repercussions for my kids,” Friend said. “More so than
anything, I’ve been hearing for years from friends who are teachers how all
they’re doing is teaching to a test, and for them, they deem it as criminal to
not arm the kids with that education for the test, but they also are well aware
that that’s not where the kids should be going.”
ODE officials say state testing is critical
for measuring student learning and holding schools accountable to parents and
taxpayers.
“It’s important for parents that every
year, their child is learning and progressing. That’s the promise we make to
parents as public schools,” said ODE spokesman John Charlton. “These tests are
one way to check the progress of these students.”
New testing system
Ohio is switching from the old paper Ohio
Achievement Assessments to a new set of tests this year that are longer, more
difficult and largely taken on computers. The English and math tests are tied
to the Common Core standards. Current high school sophomores and above are
still grandfathered into the old Ohio Graduation Test.
State officials have said new learning standards
and tests are important in measuring whether students can apply concepts and
solve problems rather than just memorize, an issue they say is crucial in
preparing students for a changing workforce. Local business groups such as the
Chamber of Commerce have supported that position.
State school board President Tom Gunlock,
of Centerville, said the minimum scores needed to be deemed proficient on past
Ohio tests ranged from 32 percent of questions correct to 57 percent, so higher
standards may be needed. Proficiency levels for the new tests have not yet been
set.
“I firmly believe that over time, kids are
going to rise to the occasion and do just as well on these tests as they did on
(the OAAs),” Gunlock said.
State school board member A.J. Wagner
disagreed, arguing that many students are not prepared for the harder tests, will fail, and
then give up.
“Some kids are very stressed about taking
tests, and there are a lot of parents who don’t see any value in tests,” said
Wagner, who represents the state Board of Education’s 3rd district, which
includes Butler County. “If they believe that it’s best
for their child, then that’s fine, don’t take the test. At the same time, we
have this federal mandate to require tests. … I’m in a position of trust on the school
board. I don’t want to say do it (opt-out), but I can understand anyone who
says they will.”
Wagner said the amount of time now devoted
to preparation and testing is one of the biggest complaints. In addition to
taking away from teaching time, he said it leaves school computers unavailable
for weeks, takes away counselors’ time during college application season and
requires extra staffing to prepare for and oversee testing.
The Ohio Department of Education identified
consequences for skipping tests – most third-graders would have to repeat the
grade if they didn’t earn a passing score on the reading test. Ninth-graders
could limit their graduation options if they skipped new end-of-course exams.
School districts could score worse on the state report card if numerous
students skipped state tests, or they could face federal spending restrictions
if test participation goes below 95 percent.
Senate Education Committee Chair Peggy
Lehner, R-Kettering, suggested another problem with opting out.
“This is a transition year to a new test,”
Lehner said. “We are trying to find out how our students will do, and what are
the problems with test questions, test administration, test technology. By
opting out, all they’re doing is skewing the results, and not giving us a clear-cut
picture of how well the test measures the things we’re trying to test.”
Meanwhile, there is significant anti-test
momentum. Ohio’s
state legislature has introduced bills to limit testing. State school
Superintendent Richard Ross recommended cuts to local and state testing hours
that were picked up in Gov. John Kasich’s budget proposal. And the
superintendents of Springboro, Little Miami and Mason schools all wrote letters
about testing problems this month.
“I liken the current approach to using an
MRI and CAT scan to diagnose a medical issue when a thermometer would do the
trick,” Mason Superintendent Gail Kist-Kline wrote.
Schools would like to see everyone take the
test, Orr said, not just because the district will be held accountable, but
because the tests provide crucial data to educators.
“It provides practice,” he said, for future
tests like the ACTs. “And it allows us to have baseline data to help students
improve.”
Butler
County school districts
told the Journal-News they provide parents who inquire about opting out an Ohio
Department Education link regarding state assessments and student
participation. District officials said they received that information from ODE
last week and were advised to use it to respond to questions.
Sam Ison, superintendent of Middletown City School District,
said students who opt out in his district will be given other work or
activities while they are not testing.
But before a parent allows their child to
get to that point, the district attempts to intercede.
“A school principal talks to them and
basically lets them know what the implications are,” Ison said. “We basically
talk about what the student has to do during that period of time and how that
will impact the school.”
Ison said more parents are likely to join
the “opt out” movement if testing levels are increased.
“Even with current testing, the more
awareness there is, obviously there probably will be more,” he said. “I
anticipate that.”
Lani Wildow, director of curriculum and
instruction for Fairfield
City School
District, said the tests are supposed to be
indicators of the students’ readiness for the next grade or next phase of life.
“Without the information we are concerned
that we will not have enough data to make quality instructional decisions for
these students for the next school year,” she said.
Fairfield City
School District will handle testing
itself no differently than with previous testing refusals, Wildow said.
“The student will be presented with the
test,” Wildow said. “If the student does not take the test, he or she will
receive a zero.”
Michelle Saylor of Fairfield said she is fine with that option
because the testing “does not affect my child’s grade in any way, shape or
form.”
“It is only reflective of the district and
the schools,” she said. “They get a certain amount of money from the state for
each kid who actually takes these test, so it’s beneficial for them for them to
push each and every kid to take the examination. They need 95 percent
attendance rate to get a certain grading. They get points for each and every
child that takes the test.”
Despite the district’s assertion that she’s
not allowed to opt out of the testing for her child, Saylor said she knows there is no legal
obligation for her child to be tested next week.
“It’s not law that every kid sit and take
the test,” she said. “The law is that the actual schools administer the test.”
If there really was a law about it,
districts like Lakota, Mason,
Lebanon and
others wouldn’t be allowing parents to opt out, Saylor said.
Fairfield
will follow the guidance of its legal counsel with regard to the testing, and
will not honor the opt out forms “because these are not forms created by or
distributed by the ODE,” according to spokeswoman Gina Gentry-Fletcher.
Saylor said she instead submitted two
letters of refusal to the district, one for each of her third-grade twins.
NEW STATE TESTS
Feb. 16 to March 20: Performance-based tests that include
short-answer questions, short essays and the need to show work on math
problems.
April 13 to May 15: End of course tests focusing more on
traditional multiple-choice questions.
Each
test could include multiple 60-90-minute sections.
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