This post comes from guest blogger, Carolyn Browder, a masters degree candidate at Peabody College, Vanderbilt University:
The parents say they are not staging the boycott for a specific political purpose or targeting any administrators. Rather, they are trying to advocate for parent involvement in the local schools. Many of the parents participating in the Brooklyn boycott are considered low-income, and advocates say this is an excellent way for low-income parents to be more active decision makers in their children's education. Parents are observing the negative effect the testing environment can often have on a child, and they are seizing the opportunity to not only improve conditions for their children but for teachers as well.
Here's the problem: many school districts cannot send children into the next grade without standardized testing evidence supporting the child's academic proficiency at grade level. One parent quoted in the article recalls that when her son abstained from standardized testing, his teacher gave her endorsement to have the child moved into the next grade, but it was not until they received approval from the superintendent that the child was allowed to proceed in his education without test scores in his portfolio. It takes a brave parent to create these hurdles for their child in a system that is perpetually too bogged down to individually approve every student at the superintendent's level. What if, however, testing abstinence becomes a trend? If enough parents swamp the system with appeals for grade progression will the teacher's consent to allow the child to more forward become substantial approval?
I struggle to imagine myself placing my child in a situation where he or she could be disadvantaged on the day to day as a result of my own ideological pursuits, but it seems as though real change cannot be made until someone throws a wrench in the system. If these parents are correct in their assumption that more low-income parents in these areas combating standardized testing will take on greater responsibility as advocates against the system, perhaps adjustments will be made and students and teacher evaluation reform will result. Now advocates for evaluation reform must cross their fingers and hope more parents will be willing to take the risk.
1 comment:
Interesting post.
My parents were early objectors to standardized testing. They took some flak for this (especially because my Dad was a teacher at the school), but they pulled it off nonetheless.
Post a Comment