ISBE to shove local schools off the testing ‘cliff’

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Perhaps the most distressing aspect of the transition from the ISAT to PARCC assessments and the increase in cut scores is the disregard how these changes will impact the children in our classrooms. Why are we subjecting thousands of children and teachers to the stress of ISAT administration for the next two years and the humiliation of a pre-determined course of failure on the ISAT? How do school staff and parents explain to a 9 year old their failure to meet state standards is to due to a statistical adjustment that will enable ISBE to avoid the public relations disaster of a dramatic drop in test scores with the new PARCC assessment? How do school administrators explain to their dedicated teachers that they are doing an outstanding job of working with children despite a dramatic downturn in test results?

Furthermore, we will continue to administer a test in the spring of 2013, called The Illinois Standards Achievement Test (ISAT), but this year it will contain 20 percent of the questions we will eventually see on the PARCC assessment, and 100 percent of the test questions in 2014 will be Common Core-type questions. So again, Illinois schools see a “double whammy,” this time in the form of assessment coupled with increased cuts in state funding. 

School districts across the state face historic cuts in state funding coupled with an overwhelming increase in state mandates, rules and regulations. The pace of these changes under the guise of “reforms,” has accelerated at the same time that schools face unprecedented budget deficits, due in part, to existing state mandates. This latest decision by ISBE illustrates the complete disconnect that has developed between the agency and the dedicated school administrators and teachers who work every day with the children in our school districts. It also represents a further erosion of the local control of duly elected school board members, who represent the very property tax owners who are paying an increasing percentage of the cost of education while the state abdicates its responsibility to fund our schools. Most importantly, it is not good for the children we serve.

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