The author of this blog posting is a public school teacher who will remain anonymous.
I will not reveal my district or my role due to the intense legal ramifications for exercising my Constitutional First Amendment rights in a public forum. I was compelled to sign a security form that stated I would not be “Revealing or discussing passages or test items with anyone, including students and school staff, through verbal exchange, email, social media, or any other form of communication” as this would be considered a “Security Breach.” In response to this demand, I can only ask—whom are we protecting?
There are layers of not-so-subtle issues that need to be aired as a result of national and state testing policies that are dominating children’s lives in America. As any well prepared educator knows, curriculum planning and teaching requires knowing how you will assess your students and planning backwards from that knowledge. If teachers are unable to examine and discuss the summative assessment for their students, how can they plan their instruction? Yet, that very question assumes that this test is something worth planning for. The fact is that schools that try to plan their curriculum exclusively to prepare students for this test are ignoring the body of educational research that tells us how children learn, and how to create developmentally appropriate activities to engage students in the act of learning. This article will attempt to provide evidence for these claims as a snapshot of what is happening as a result of current policies.
The PARCC test is developmentally inappropriate
In order to discuss the claim that the PARCC test is “developmentally inappropriate,” examine three of the most recent PARCC 4th grade items.
A book leveling system, designed by Fountas and Pinnell, was made “more rigorous” in order to match the Common Core State Standards. These newly updated benchmarks state that 4th Graders should be reading at a Level S by the end of the year in order to be considered reading “on grade level.” [Celia’s note: I do not endorse leveling books or readers, nor do I think it appropriate that all 9 year olds should be reading a Level S book to be thought of as making good progress.]
The PARCC, which is supposedly a test of the Common Core State Standards, appears to have taken liberties with regard to grade level texts. For example, on the Spring 2016 PARCC for 4th Graders, students were expected to read an excerpt from[deleted under legal threat by Parcc] According to Scholastic, this text is at an interest level for Grades 9-12, and at a 7th Grade reading level. The Lexile measure is 1020L, which is most often found in texts that are written for middle school, and according to Scholastic’s own conversion chart would be equivalent to a 6th grade benchmark around W, X, or Y (using the same Fountas and Pinnell scale).
Even by the reform movement’s own standards, according to MetaMetrics’ reference material on Text Complexity Grade Bands and Lexile Bands, the newly CCSS aligned “Stretch” lexile level of 1020 falls in the 6-8 grade range. This begs the question, what is the purpose of standardizing text complexity bands if testing companies do not have to adhere to them? Also, what is the purpose of a standardized test that surpasses agreed-upon lexile levels?
So, right out of the gate, 4th graders are being asked to read and respond to texts that are two grade levels above the recommended benchmark. After they struggle through difficult texts with advanced vocabulary and nuanced sentence structures, they then have to answer multiple choice questions that are, by design, intended to distract students with answers that appear to be correct except for some technicality.
Finally, students must synthesize two or three of these advanced texts and compose an original essay. The ELA portion of the PARCC takes three days, and each day includes a new essay prompt based on multiple texts. These are the prompts from the 2016 Spring PARCC exam for 4th Graders along with my analysis of why these prompts do not reflect the true intention of the Common Core State Standards.
ELA 4th Grade Prompt #1
[deleted under legal threat by Parcc]
The above prompt probably attempts to assess the Common Core standard RL.4.5: “Explain major differences between poems, drama, and prose, and refer to the structural elements of poems (e.g., verse, rhythm, meter) and drama (e.g., casts of characters, settings, descriptions, dialogue, stage directions) when writing or speaking about a text.”
However, the Common Core State Standards for writing do not require students to write essays comparing the text structures of different genres. The Grade 4 CCSS for writing about reading demand that students write about characters, settings, and events in literature, or that they write about how authors support their points in informational texts. Nowhere in the standards are students asked to write comparative essays on the structures of writing. The reading standards ask students to “explain” structural elements, but not in writing. There is a huge developmental leap between explaining something and writing an analytical essay about it. [Celia’s note: The entire enterprise of analyzing text structures in elementary school – a 1940’s and 50’s college English approach called “New Criticism” — is ridiculous for 9 year olds anyway.]
The PARCC does not assess what it attempts to assess
ELA 4th Grade Prompt #2
[deleted under legal threat by Parcc]
It would be a stretch to say that this question assesses CCSS W.4.9.B: “Explain how an author uses reasons and evidence to support particular points in a text.”
In fact, this prompt assesses a student’s ability to research a topic across sources and write a research-based essay that synthesizes facts from both articles. Even CCSS W.4.7, “Conduct research projects that build knowledge through investigation of different aspects of a topic,” does not demand that students compile information from different sources to create an essay. The closest the standards come to demanding this sort of work is in the reading standards; CCSS RI.4.9 says: “Integrate information from two texts on the same topic in order to write or speak about the subject knowledgeably.” Fine. One could argue that this PARCC prompt assesses CCSS RI.4.9.
However, the fact that the texts presented for students to “use” for the essay are at a middle school reading level automatically disqualifies this essay prompt from being able to assess what it attempts to assess. (It is like trying to assess children’s math computational skills by embedding them in a word problem with words that the child cannot read.)
ELA 4th Grade Prompt #3
[deleted under legal threat by Parcc]
Nowhere, and I mean nowhere in the Common Core State Standards is there a demand for students to read a narrative and then use the details from that text to write a new story based on a prompt. That is a new pseudo-genre called “Prose Constructed Response” by the PARCC creators, and it is 100% not aligned to the CCSS. Not to mention, why are 4th Graders being asked to write about trying out for the junior high track team? This demand defies their experiences and asks them to imagine a scenario that is well beyond their scope.
Clearly, these questions are poorly designed assessments of 4th graders CCSS learning. (We are setting aside the disagreements we have with those standards in the first place, and simply assessing the PARCC on its utility for measuring what it was intended to measure.)
Rather than debate the CCSS we instead want to expose the tragic reality of the countless public schools organizing their entire instruction around trying to raise students’ PARCC scores.
Without naming any names, I can tell you that schools are disregarding research-proven methods of literacy learning. The “wisdom” coming “down the pipeline” is that children need to be exposed to more complex texts because that is what PARCC demands of them. So children are being denied independent and guided reading time with texts of high interest and potential access and instead are handed texts that are much too hard (frustration level) all year long without ever being given the chance to grow as readers in their Zone of Proximal Development (pardon my reference to those pesky educational researchers like Vygotsky.)
So not only are students who are reading “on grade level” going to be frustrated by these so-called “complex texts,” but newcomers to the U.S. and English Language Learners and any student reading below the proficiency line will never learn the foundational skills they need, will never know the enjoyment of reading and writing from intrinsic motivation, and will, sadly, be denied the opportunity to become a critical reader and writer of media. Critical literacies are foundational for active participation in a democracy.
We can look carefully at one sample to examine the health of the entire system– such as testing a drop of water to assess the ocean. So too, we can use these three PARCC prompts to glimpse how the high stakes accountability system has deformed teaching and warped learning in many public schools across the United States.
In this sample, the system is pathetically failing a generation of children who deserve better, and when they are adults, they may not have the skills needed to engage as citizens and problem-solvers. So it is up to us, those of us who remember a better way and can imagine a way out, to make the case for stopping standardized tests like PARCC from corrupting the educational opportunities of so many of our children.
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“Farcical” is the only word that comes to mind.
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Thank you both! I read this on Diane’s blog. As a teacher and parent, I am frustrated by the ignorance and sheep mentality of the teachers and parents in my community. They have no idea about what’s going on. That’s why we need the enlightened voices of teachers like you!
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I hear your frustration but please give a little more thought to the “sheep” teachers you’re talking about in the classroom. I imagine you know that those without tenure can easily end up being fired. Those with tenure can end up WANTING to leave (management/admin knows how to make things uncomfortable) if they don’t at least be appearing to drink the Kool-Aid. And it’s no small thing to lose a job in today’s job market. Especially after having spent so much money on procuring the required certification, to begin with.
The teachers who would speak up are, imo, the very ones we can least afford to lose. They are the ones who want what’s best for the kids. They’re the ones who are aware of the problems and the potential solutions.
Regarding the parents: the public’s trust of public school teachers has been eroded from two plus decades of media propaganda. So their ignorance is no surprise. Frustrating? Absolutely. It drives me crazy. But it’s not surprising.
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Not a sheep. But they did exactly that — made me want to leave, even with a terrific salary, and 18 years. Almost lost my mind.
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Reblogged this on Equal Opportunities for All Students and commented:
This is fantastic.
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I will refuse the PARC test for my child he hasn’t started kindergarten yet…..When it is time I will refuse him to be all stressed out taking this test I will not put my child through it…As a parent I know I can refuse it….thank you for your impute …..
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As a teacher in Maryland Public Schools and past test coordinator, a parent in Maryland cannot refuse if they choose public education in Maryland.
The student would just be tested on the day they came back to school. PARCC takes place over 3-4 weeks. As a parent and grandparent and a teacher for 30+ yrs. it is so sad to see the culture of learning/teaching we are subjecting our current generation of learners. In our global society the US should be learning from countries who are academically greater than us, but they don’t and school systems just keep trying new ways and spending millions on new curriculum.
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I was not allowed to refuse the testing for my 8th grader (although she wanted me to)!! She said they were using the test to place them in the appropriate classes for high school next year. When she got to a portion of the math, it was work they are not taught until high school.. so she left it blank. How is that fair that she is graded on something she was never taught??? Not very fair!!
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CHollin, you are incorrect that Maryland families cannot refuse PARCC. My kids are in their second year of doing just that.
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Parents are told all kinds of things by their District. Our parents were told they could only opt-out if they came to the District office and filled out a special form that could only be handed to them by the Supt – who is notoriously hard to see. Teachers were severely warned that they could not accept any other form.
She then explained to each parent that our District would lose important funding if we had less than 95% participation.
I can’t find any such decree. Does anyone know if funding depends on test participation? Can a special form be mandated by each District?
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To my knowledge, NO school district has lost funding over lower-than-95%-participation. This is a perennial threat. Even in NY State where opt-out rates in some district are well over 50% this has not happened. The key word is “could,” as in “could” lose funding, not WILL lose.
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Stress isn’t the issue here. The test data mines information on your kid.
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Thanks for this. It has been my observation as well that even the sample materials for PARCC have similar problems (and you’d think those would be vetted even more than the “secret” test questions).
I would just note that it is hard to say how much confusion also comes from the fact that the PARCC that, say, 4th graders take is by design not specifically a test of the 4th grade standards. That is, the real purpose of the entire endeavor is to place kids on a single K-12 growth continuum, so the tests have to have some items above and below grade level. That’s why they really envision “adaptive” computer tests. So they can add harder or easier questions as needed.
Having said that, I *think* that the whole test is skewed toward being two difficult, even for the CCSS as written. But because of the secrecy, who knows?
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“The entire enterprise of analyzing text structures in elementary school – a 1940’s and 50’s college English approach called “New Criticism” — is ridiculous for 9 year olds,”
But what do you expect from an endeavor shaped from the get-go by David Coleman and friends who are really intent on making kids and their teachers failures. Thanks for the detailed and informed analysis.
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This sounds like the perfect set-up for Pearson to step in with a ready made curriculum for school boards to buy to “help” the students pass the PARCC
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This is so ironic because I was telling my friend about this and she said it sounded like a set up for someone to make money. You saying that this is a perfect set up for Pearson to come in with ready made curriculum sounds just like that to me.
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In reading this so called standardized testing that the PARCC proposes makes me extremely irritated. Every Child is molded differently. One could be extremely brilliant, but the heavy weight on the shoulders of these children trying to meet these expected test scores (that are two levels above forth grade standards) could give a child severe anxiety and fail. This devistation to a good student that works hard to learn and has the will and love of learning…never have the confidence again and fall below the true expectations of 4 grade standards; therefore cause a chain reaction to low statewide scores.
Then in turn blame it on the teachers for forcing a 4th grade students dropping of scores because PARCC doesn’t no shit about grade level curriculum.
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This is my third year of giving PARCC, twice to third grade (the first time as a pilot), and once to fourth grade. I have not yet been provided any of the test results, although the parents have. I have no idea how my students performed. Helpful, isn’t it.
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To make kids readers we MUST first give them the LOVE of reading.. Sad sad sad. You can’t fall in love with words when you can’t understand the words.
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Thanks for this fantastic post. This whole issue hits very close to home as I have a 4th grader. But you left out one very important element. What does it mean for a 9 year old to “write” an “essay”? I have never been able to get an answer to this question from my son’s teacher, principal, or district official about the expectations for him to use a keyboard to type an “essay” – of what length? – for the PARCC test
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That’s because we, the teachers, don’t know the expectation either!
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Obviously, these questions are way too hard. They are high school level at least.
I have a question: what does Common Core say about the elements of a play that is written in verse?
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It’s a sad world we live in if those are *high school* level questions (*at least*). They’re definitely too advanced for 4th graders, but come on–junior high or middle school? God, I hope so. The average 13 year old should be able to compare the structural elements of two poems, assuming they’ve studied poetry at even a rudimentary level. I’d certainly done that by 8th grade in the 1990s. Ditto for writing a simple narrative and synthesizing material from two texts to describe something. Granted, they might not be the most sophisticated essays or compositions ever written, but they should be able to write them.
Mind you, I’m not an apologist for the standardized testing craze–especially as a former teacher. Make no mistake, my kids will be going to private schools that don’t subscribe to that method (which pains me, because I received such a wonderful public school education). But let’s not act like a 4th grade standardized test is actually appropriate for high schoolers, because that’s just absurd. And if we, as a country, truly believe that only high schoolers could adequately answer those questions, then we have far bigger problems than standardized testing overload.
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I’m sad thinking about how my children feel about themselves and their abilities when faced with the PARCC scenario described in this article – what might be the impact of days of developmentally inappropriate and curriculum-inappropriate testing on their love for learning, self-confidence and growth they think they’ve achieved throughout the school year?
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I have twins in 3rd grade. They love school, in general. But since PARCC, one of them has been not enjoying himself. He says that after the PARCC testing ‘everyone is grumpy’ and that rudeness and bickering has increased. Nice work…
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It’s really quite simple. The Communist Core Curriculum and the CCRAP test? Kill them with fire. Throw anything to do with that Charlotte Danielson horse pucky on top of it. Politicians “swayed” by $200 million (and later, billions) from Bill Gates, and the Plunge to the Bottom bribery by our POTUS, have transformed our curious, interested students into bored-out-of-their-minds drones.
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Are you being pressured to remove the “copyrighted” material from your blog? Diane Ravitch pulled it from her site.
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Reblogged this on Like a scream but sort of silent.
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This is a typed response by 4th graders who do not have typing classes like we did in HS. Correct?
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Yes, that is correct. My students in my class have had less than 10 hours of typing in their lifetime. Yet 50 percent of my evaluation comes from their scores
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Celia – it looks to me like you would be covered by fair use. Maybe you should look into that.
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In Massachusetts, PPARC has followed the MCAS test into our public schools. A proficient score on MCAS was changed each year by modifying the “cut score” or the cut off point for proficient status. This score was not determined until all tests were scored allowing for the state and test company to control how many children would score in the proficient category. When “cut scores” went up each year, the proficient target was always moving. The fact that it was not determined until AFTER all tests were scored guaranteed a sufficient amount of failure to maintain all of MCAS prep and support programs that popped up in Mass. Is this the case with PARCC also? Are we guaranteeing failure (as if developmentally appropriate content isn’t enough of a guarrantee)?
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Maybe someone with direct knowledge about this could chime in…?
As is, it would seem to be choice material for, “If it walks, swims, and quacks like a duck…”.
But sometimes there’s more to it than meets the eye.
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The logics of “excellence” and competition require a large amount of failure. Nominally, MCAS was a criterion referenced test, not norm referenced–meaning that, in principle, everyone could be “proficient.” (Such an inspiring goal in itself!) But that would certainly not be acceptable in this society.
Bravo Celia for this important posting, and thanks to Karen from Massachusetts.
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I’m no lawyer, but I’m of the opinion that your reproduction of the questions accompanied by critique would be an appropriate fair use as a derivative work. You might be depriving Pearson of revenue by eroding the value of their marketable product, but that would seem to be in support of a legitimate purpose in protecting the public interest. Certainly, you are not using the content as a business competitor. Beyond that, contractually you are not under any obligation with regard to non-disclosure, similar to any reporter.
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The secrecy alone should raise warning flags. Parcc disrupts learning for over a month. Our schedules change drastically. We can’t teach with anything online. Kids are exhausted after taking each section.
Only politicians could come up with something as ridiculous.
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Many of us are slipping some subversity into our daily practice. But it does not mitigate the outcome.
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Celia did you see this? Unbelievable: https://dianeravitch.net/2016/05/14/this-post-about-the-test-was-deleted-overnight-by/
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Get a job in private school. I don’t like standardized testing and other public school issues so my kids are in private school. If you work for a corporation where you don’t like the ideology or practices you get another job. Or get creative. Plenty of teachers have figured out how to get through testing and still have a successful, effective school year.
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Some of us have…. changed districts, schools, staff, etc. Those tests are not culturally relevant nor does any test really test what the tests are seeking to evaluate. Figuring out how to get through testing is not the issue, it is that the tests are not made for all students and all federal requirements, state needs, districts, and admin in each school are forced to look at the small picture, how it affects THEM.
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Abandoning the public schools ships plays into the reformers hands. Less experienced/expensive/knowledgeable teachers is what they want.
There are creative ways to get beyond the tests depending on how far your immediate administration is willing to back you.
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The public money of everyone is used to do this. Put your kids in a life raft of a private school if you want, but when the big ship sinks, it will drag all the little craft down with it. Public education is a public good.
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Well I don’t believe I was “let go” because of testing. Actions across the educational realm appear to WANT students to FAIL; apply this thought to all educational requirements of teachers. As a good proctor, I would walk around while testing like required and occaisonally, see the questions. And then, required to sit on the essay question panel to decided if they met the requirements. EVERY school, panel, agreed that this was not addressing the questions though we were required to decide the essay when students were only required to think. WhAt? And then add the discrepancy to young teachers only trying to get tenure in the district (who are trying to pay back loans) and add the students who have so many obstacles they educationally disengage! If you read this far, sorry, I’m preaching to the choir [quire].
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What are the “repercussions” of a “failing score” for a district which does not use the test for any purpose. A number of very bright 7th graders in Chicago have been told that the PAARC test is being used for NO purpose of any kind and that the score has no impact on them. So, apparently this year they decided to have their own contest to see if any of them could answer all of the questions wrong. Would this type of protest, assuming that it had no repercussions on the students, have an impact? if so, I’ll gladly pay my three kids if they can get zeros on the test.
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Following this story closely. reposted on notjustaparent.com
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I want readers to know that not all the remaining teachers are “change agents”, but loyal teachers who truly want the best for our children. Parents, about the only way we are going to fix this monster of education is by getting rid of the elected’s at the voting poll’s who got us here, by getting them in their wallets and home school your children. At the very least keep them home on test days.Education has become a racket proved by the money pouring into the wallets of legislators from education lobbyist’s, manufacturer’s and most importantly Charter School Management Companies.
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Reblogged this on TRUTH ABOUT EDUCATION.
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