Albuquerque Journal

Common Core opt-out movement grows across U.S.

Parents, pupils resist standardiz­ed tests

- BY CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY

ATLANTA — Thousands of students are opting out of new standardiz­ed tests aligned to the Common Core standards, defying the latest attempt by states to improve academic performanc­e.

This “opt-out” movement remains scattered, but is growing fast in some parts of the country. Some superinten­dents in New York are reporting that 60 percent or even 70 percent of their students are refusing to sit for the exams. Some lawmakers, sensing a tipping point, are backing the parents and teachers who complain about standardiz­ed testing.

Resistance could be costly: If fewer than 95 percent of a district’s students participat­e in tests aligned with Common Core standards, federal money could be withheld, although the U.S. Department of Education said that hasn’t happened.

“It is a theoretica­l club administra­tors have used to coerce participat­ion, but a club that is increasing­ly seen as a hollow threat,” said Bob Schaeffer with the National Center for Fair & Open Test- ing, which seeks to limit standardiz­ed testing.

And so the movement grows: This week in New York, tens of thousands of students sat out the first day of tests, with some districts reporting more than half of students opting out of the English test. Preliminar­y reports suggest an overall increase in opt-outs compared with last year, when about 49,000 students did not take English tests and about 67,000 skipped math tests, compared with about 1.1 million students who did take the tests in New York.

The pressure to improve results year after year can be demoralizi­ng and even criminaliz­ing, say critics who point to the Atlanta testcheati­ng scandal, which led to the indictment of 35 educators charged with altering exams to boost scores.

“It seems like overkill,” said Meredith Barber, a psychologi­st from the Philadelph­ia suburb of Penn Valley who excused her daughter from this year’s tests. Close to 200 of her schoolmate­s also opted out in the Lower Merion School District, up from a dozen last year.

“I’m sure we can figure out a way to assess schools rather than stressing out children and teachers, and really making it unpleasant for teachers to teach,” said Barber, whose 10-year-old daughter, Gabrielle, will be in the cafeteria researchin­g Edwardian history and the TV show “Downton Abbey” during the two weeks schools have set aside for the tests.

Considerab­le resistance also has been reported in Maine, New Mexico, Oregon and Pennsylvan­ia, and more is likely as many states administer the tests in public schools for the first time this spring.

The defiance dismays people who believe holding schools accountabl­e for all their students’ continuing improvemen­t is key to solving education problems.

Assessing every student each year “gives educators and parents an idea of how the student is doing and ensures that schools are paying attention to traditiona­lly underserve­d population­s,” U.S. Department of Education Spokeswoma­n Dorie Nolt said in an emailed statement.

Opposition runs across the political spectrum.

Some Republican­s and Tea Party activists focus on the Common Core standards themselves, calling them a federal intrusion by President Barack Obama, even though they were developed by the National Governors Associatio­n and each state’s education leaders to replace former President George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind program.

The Obama administra­tion has encouraged states to adopt Common Core standards through the federal grant program known as Race to the Top, and most have, but each state is free to develop its own tests.

In California, home to the nation’s largest public school system and Democratic political leaders who strongly endorse Common Core standards, there have been no reports of widespread protests to the exams — perhaps because state officials have decided not to hold schools accountabl­e for the first year’s results.

But in deep-blue New York, resistance has been encouraged by the unions in response to Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s efforts to make the test results count more in teacher evaluation­s.

In Rockville Centre on Long Island, Superinten­dent William H. Johnson said 60 percent of his district’s thirdthrou­gh-eighth-graders opted out. In the Buffalo suburb of West Seneca, nearly 70 percent didn’t take the state exam, Superinten­dent Mark Crawford said.

“That tells me parents are deeply concerned about the use of the standardiz­ed tests their children are taking,” Crawford said. “If the optouts are great enough, at what point does somebody say this is absurd?”

Nearly 15 percent of high school juniors in New Jersey opted out this year, while fewer than 5 percent of students in grades three through eight refused the tests, state education officials said. One reason: Juniors may be focusing instead on the SAT and AP tests that could determine their college futures.

Much of the criticism focuses on the sheer number of tests now being applied in public schools: From pre-kindergart­en through grade 12, students take an average of 113 standardiz­ed tests, according to a survey by the Council of the Great City Schools, which represents large urban districts.

Of these, only 17 are mandated by the federal government, but the backlash that began when No Child Left Behind started to hold teachers, schools and districts strictly accountabl­e for their students’ progress has only grown stronger since “Common Core” gave the criticism a common rallying cry.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Meredith Barber with her daughter, Gabrielle Schwager, 10, at their home in Penn Valley, Pa. on Thursday. Barber has decided Gabrielle will not take the state’s standardiz­ed tests.
MATT SLOCUM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Meredith Barber with her daughter, Gabrielle Schwager, 10, at their home in Penn Valley, Pa. on Thursday. Barber has decided Gabrielle will not take the state’s standardiz­ed tests.

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