A boycott of conscience

April 14, 2014

A group of New York City teachers is taking a stand against standardized testing--and asking the city's new chancellor of schools to do so as well. Jesse Hagopian, one of the teachers at Garfield High School in Seattle who organized a successful boycott of the MAP test last year and the current reform candidate for president of the Seattle Education Association, explains the issues involved at Earth School, in an article written for his I Am an Educator blog.

LAST SPRING, I was invited to the Earth School in the East Village of New York City to speak at a forum about the lessons of the MAP test boycott that I helped to organize in Seattle. Earth School fourth- and fifth-grade teacher Jia Lee, along with insurgent teacher union activists in the Movement of Rank-and-File Educators (MORE) and parents in Change the Stakes, helped organize the event, and a powerful conversation about organizing test resistance ensued.

Now, a year later, you can imagine my elation when I received an email from Jia announcing that three teachers at the Earth School declared to their administration and public schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña that they will not proctor Common Core state standardized tests this year--or ever. The teachers said in a letter that they "can no longer implement policies that seek to transform the broad promises of public education into a narrow obsession with the ranking and sorting of children."

They go on to write:

As an act of conscience, we are declining the role of test administrators for the 2014 New York State Common Core Tests. We are acting in solidarity with countless public school teachers who have paved their own paths of resistance and spoken truthfully about the decay of their profession under market-based reforms. These acts of conscience have been necessary because we are accountable to the children we teach and our pedagogy, both of which are dishonored daily by current policies.

Teachers at the Earth School in New York expressed their solidarity with the MAP boycott in Seattle
Teachers at the Earth School in New York expressed their solidarity with the MAP boycott in Seattle

They are joining a wave of boycotts and opting out of standardized tests from parents, students and teachers--including the teachers at Saucedo Scholastic Academy and Drummond Elementary School in Chicago, who are refusing to administer the Illinois Standards Achievement Test (ISAT).

Teachers at the Earth School have helped form the organization Teachers of Conscience, a group of public school teachers in New York City concerned about market-based reforms and the future of public education. Teachers of Conscience has authored a remarkable letter and position paper that powerfully unravels the lies behind the standardized testing craze, explains the authentic assessment alternative, and demonstrates exactly why educators should be the people consulted about education policy before billionaires.

Read the letter below. Sign the petition in support of these teachers. Then join the movement.


"The ongoing wars, the distortions of truth we have witnessed, the widening gaps between rich and poor disturb us more than we can say; but we have had so many reminders of powerlessness that we have retreated before the challenge of bringing such issues into our classrooms. At once, we cannot but realize that one of our primary obligations is to try to provide equal opportunities for the young. And we realize full that this cannot happen if our students are not equipped with what are thought to be survival skills, not to speak of a more or less equal range of literacies. And yet the tendency to describe the young as "human resources," with the implication that they are mainly grist for the mills of globalized business is offensive not merely to educators, but to anyone committed to resist dehumanization of any kind."
-- Maxine Greene, "In Search of a Pedagogy"

Dear Chancellor Carmen Fariña,

We are teachers of public education in the City of New York. We are writing to distance ourselves from a set of policies that have come to be known as market-based education reform. We recognize that there has been a persistent and troubling gulf between the vision of individuals in policymaking and the work of educators, but we see you as someone who has known both positions and might therefore be understanding of our position.

We find ourselves at a point in the progress of education reform in which clear acts of conscience will be necessary to preserve the integrity of public education. We can no longer implement policies that seek to transform the broad promises of public education into a narrow obsession with the ranking and sorting of children. We will not distort curriculum in order to encourage students to comply with bubble test thinking. We can no longer, in good conscience, push aside months of instruction to compete in a citywide ritual of meaningless and academically bankrupt test preparation. We have seen clearly how these reforms undermine teachers' love for their profession and undermine students' intrinsic love of learning.

As an act of conscience, we are declining the role of test administrators for the 2014 New York State Common Core Tests. We are acting in solidarity with countless public school teachers who have paved their own paths of resistance and spoken truthfully about the decay of their profession under market-based reforms. These acts of conscience have been necessary because we are accountable to the children we teach and our pedagogy, both of which are dishonored daily by current policies.

The policies of Common Core have been misguided, unworkable, and a serious failure of implementation. At no time in the history of education reform have we witnessed the ideological ambitions of policymakers result in such a profound disconnect with the experiences of parents, teachers, and children. There is a growing movement of dissatisfied parents who are refusing high-stakes Common Core testing for their children and we are acting in solidarity with those parents.

Reformers in the State Department of Education are now making gestures to slow down implementation and reform their reforms. Their efforts represent a failure of imagination--an inability to envision an education system based on human development and democratic ideals rather than an allegiance to standardization, ranking and sorting. State policies have placed haphazard and burdensome mandates on schools that are profoundly out of touch with what we know to be inspired teaching and learning.

Although the case against market-based education reform has been thoroughly written about, we feel obliged to outline our position at length to address critics who may see our choice of action as overstepping or unwarranted. You will find a position paper attached to this letter. We are urging you, Chancellor Fariña, to articulate your own position in this critical and defining moment in the history of public education. What will you stand for? What public school legacy will we forge together?

Sincerely,
Colin Schumacher, fourth/fifth grade teacher, P.S. 364, Earth School
Emmy Matias, fourth/fifth grade teacher, P.S. 364, Earth School
Jia Lee, fourth/fifth grade teacher, P.S. 364, Earth School

First published at I Am an Educator.

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