Jared Carman’s opt-out form for notifying the state on CAT’s and privacy

Jared Carman put together a great opt-out form you can print and send to the state notifying them that they may not compel your child to participate in computer adaptive testing and may not share your child’s personal information with AIR, the federal government, or any other 3rd party. If everyone would print one of these out for each of your children and mail to the state superintendent, it would certainly be helpful to show our officials that we want them to take this matter seriously.

Form: PARENTAL PERMISSION WITHHELD 2012 0429

Not sure if you want your child to take a computer adaptive test? Not sure what the harm is?

“We’ve been absolutely staggered by realizing that the computer has the capability to act as if it were ten of the top psychologists working with one student.You’ve seen the tip of the iceberg.Won’t it be wonderful when the child in the smallest county in the most distant area or in the most confused urban setting can have the equivalent of the finest school in the world on that terminal and no one can get between that child and that computer?”

Dustin H. Heuston, “Discussion-Developing the Potential of an Amazing Tool,” Schooling and Technology, Vol. 3, Planning for the Future: A Collaborative Model (Southeastern Regional Council for Educational Improvement), p. 8.

Dr. David Wright vs. USOE …(8-0 for Dr. Wright)

With permission, I am posting this letter that Dr. David Wright, math professor at BYU, and one of only a couple mathematicians that helped create the A- rated 2007 Utah math standards, wrote to legislators concerning the problems of Common Core implementation from the USOE. We have previously published several posts about significant problems with the USOE math texts.  You can read here about Dr. Jim Milgram’s statement on the low quality of Common Core math compared to high achieving states, and former Department of Education math expert Ze’ev Wurman commenting how Utah’s implementation plan outlined in our No Child Left Behind waiver application would actually hurt math in Utah. It matches up with exactly what Dr. Wright is saying in this letter. This letter is stunning because it also reveals a problem that may prove to be the dismissal of several USOE employees.

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Dear Senators Osmond and Weiler,

I see that Diana Suddreth sent a “Your Action is Needed” email to defend the Utah Math Common Core.  She is encouraging letters of support for the Utah Common Core and is concerned that the Common Core is under a “vicious attack.”  She is inviting her supporters to send letters to both of you.

As a mathematics professor and someone who is very aware of the details of the Common Core, I would like to comment on what I feel is the awful way the Common Core Math Standards have been implemented by the USOE.

1.  The Core was implemented before there were textbooks.  In fact, some of those who favor the Utah Core do not even feel that textbooks are important.  When I hear Suddreth say,  “And teachers are empowered by creating units of study for students that go beyond anything their textbooks ever provided”  I know something is seriously wrong.

2.  The Core was implemented before there were assessments in place.

3.  The standards do not dictate any particular teaching method, but rather set goals for student understanding.  However, the USOE has used the implementation of the new Core to push a particular teaching method; i.e., the “Investigations” type teaching that was so controversial in Alpine School District.

4.  Evidence of the type of teaching promoted by USOE comes from the textbook used for the secondary academy, 5 Practices for Orchestrating Productive Mathematics Discussions (Margaret S. Smith and Mary Kay Stein) as one of the primary resources.  The book is about the kind of group learning envisioned by Investigations and Connected Math (the sequel to Investigations).

5.  The Mathematics Vision Project was created in partnership with the USOE.  It has developed  integrated secondary math material for the Utah Core. They openly admit that their “teaching cycle” is similar to the model of the Connected Mathematics Project.  Here is a statement about their teaching method:

As students’ ideas emerge, take form, and are shared, the teacher orchestrates the student discussions and explorations towards a focused mathematical goal. As conjectures are made and explored, they evolve into mathematical concepts that the community of learners begins to embrace as effective strategies for analyzing and solving problems. These strategies eventually solidify into a body of practices that belong to the students because they were developed by the students as an outcome of their own creative and logical thinking. This is how students learn mathematics. They learn by doing mathematics. They learn by needing mathematics. They learn by verbalizing the way they see the mathematical ideas connect and by listening to how their peers perceived the problem. Students then own the mathematics because it is a collective body of knowledge that they have developed over time through guided exploration. This process describes the Learning Cycle and it informs how teaching should be conducted within the classroom.

6.  The USOE does hold students back.  This is not the intent of the Common Core, but it is Utah’s implementation.  I regularly judge the state Sterling Scholar competition.  Almost all of the bright kids take AP calculus as a junior or even earlier because they were taking Algebra 1 by seventh grade.  Now it will be difficult to get that far ahead.  The National Math Panel made it clear that there was no problem with skipping prepared kids ahead.  The Common Core has a way for getting eighth graders into Algebra 1 which the USOE has ignored.

7.  The USOE chose the “uncommon” core when they picked secondary integrated math.  Hardly anyone else is doing this program.  So there are no integrated textbooks except the one that the USOE is developing.  I have been told that this is the “Asian” model, but I am very familiar with the textbooks in Hong Kong and Singapore.  The Mathematics Vision Project Material does not look like Asian material, it looks like Investigations/Connected Math.

8.  There is substantial information that Diana Suddreth, Syd Dickson, Brenda Hales, and Michael Rigby of the USOE participated in unethical behavior in the awarding of the Math Materials Improvement Grant.  The USOE chose reviewers (including Suddreth and Dickson) who were conflicted.  Suddreth helped the University of Utah choose a principal investigator who was her own co-principal investigator on a $125 K  grant .  According to the USOE internal email messages, the required sample lesson of the winning proposal contained “plagiarized material.” The sample lesson had “no text” instead it contained 79 pages of “sample materials” (some of which was plagiarized) for a teacher study guide including problems for discussion and homework.  The adaptive performance assessment program for the winning proposal was non-existent.  The principal investigators redefined “adaptive assessment” to be something that was never intended.

Regards,

David G. Wright

I am a Professor of Math at BYU, but this letter is written as an educator, parent, and concerned citizen and does not represent an official opinion from BYU.

Brigham Young University has a policy of academic freedom that supports the pursuit and dissemination of knowledge and ideas. The university does not endorse assertions made by individual faculty.

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This comment from Michele Alder was recently made and ties right into this: “My kids are in a charter school that teaches an advanced curriculum, and the school is being pressured to change their methods and curriculum which would be a big step back.  My neighbors from France have their kids go to the same school as my kids and they found this advanced curriculum a year behind where they were in France.  This means that the (Utah Core) Public School Math is now two or more years behind Europe, a fact that the presenters to this SAGE/AIR meeting contended saying, ‘these new standards will help us keep catch up with Europe.'”

Setting the record straight – a rebuttal to Joel Coleman’s post

[Quick note by Oak Norton: Before presenting Lisa Cummin’s rebuttal to State School Board Member Joel Coleman’s article, I wanted to comment that Joel and I have known each other for some time. He’s well aware of my efforts with others in 2007 to raise Utah’s math standards and the success we had going from D rated standards to an A- (according to the Fordham Foundation ratings). For Joel to publish that opponents of Common Core are “people who don’t want any standards at all” is a shocking misrepresentation. I cannot understand how he could possibly make this statement when he knows we have always been for stronger statements and considered the Common Core standards mediocre. He knows better and should immediately apologize for this clear misrepresentation. Please read Lisa Cummin’s excellent response below.]

Originally posted at: http://pcandg.com/setting-the-record-straight-a-rebuttal-to-joel-colemans-post/

Yesterday, Utah State School Board member, Joel Coleman, wrote a blog post about the Common Core Standards and where he thinks the mis-understandings lie.

In his opening paragraph he says: “it has become increasingly apparent to me that some of the strongest opponents of Utah’s core standards are people who don’t want any standards at all. Some of them have children that don’t even attend public schools, and therefore are not subject to the standards we are required to implement, anyway.”

Joel, allow me to correct you. We do want standards. We have standards, both in the religious aspects of our lives as well as in our homes with our children. It’s how we know we are progressing towards our goals. In the 1828 Noah Webster’s dictionary definition #3 for “standard” states: “That which is established as a rule or model, by the authority of public opinion, or by respectable opinions, or by custom or general consent; as writings which are admitted to be the standard of style and taste. Homer’s Illiad is the standard of heroic poetry. Demosthenes and Cicero are standards of oratory. Of modern eloquence, we have an excellent stand in the speeches of Lord Chatham. Addison’s writings furnish a good standard of pure, chaste and elegant English style. It is not an easy thing to erect a standard of taste.”

Standards define a moral and chaste people; of course we want standards. Do not attempt to belittle us to the public on this.

It is true that some of us have pulled our children out of public and charter schools. That is our right, as parents to do so and should not be looked down upon. But there are two other points that Joel neglects to mention. Speaking for myself, I pulled my children out of public school because of Common Core, as a whole, not just the standards. I am not a standards expert. However, I have been taught that you don’t phase out the classics as you get older, you must encourage others to read them more! I also know that introducing classics as abridged or in parts, is not teaching the classics, it’s taking out the most important details that builds the emotion or passion of the story. Both points which David Coleman, noted author of the ELA standards and current President of the College Board, absolutely abhors and find unnecessary for learning. Dr. Sandra Stotsky (a standards expert) would not sign off on the English Language Standards because they do not meet college and university level required reading. Phasing them out to 30%, in 12th grade is horrible to the development of children, even through their teen years!

The second note is that we as homeschoolers will be subject to the “standards” as homeschool publishing companies are aligning their curriculum with the standards (including Saxon and Singapore Math, Excellence in Writing and others), as well as the college entrance exams will most likely provide low scores from our children’s testing. So again, please don’t belittle the effect it will have on homeschooling.

In Joel’s comments, he stated that the Common Core Standards were required by law to be adopted which, is simply not true. In fact you can hear the audio of the Board, on August 6th 2010, saying that they are the ones adopting the Common Core, not the State legislature. State legislatures were not involved with the Standards themselves and in fact didn’t become involved until they started passing laws regarding grading of schools, computer adaptive testing, data collecting, and anything else involving exchange of monies. Now No Child Left Behind is a law, but that is a Federal law, not a state.

Mr. Coleman mentions that the explanations in his post where sent to him; that he is not the original author, I’d like to know his sources, as these should be transparent.

Continuing from his post we find: “The purpose of Utah’s core standards is not to drive everyone to achieve the same specific goals for each student, or for them to achieve at the same pace. It is not designed to promote sameness.” Question: If the students don’t achieve the goal of the teacher, school district or State Board, who fails? According to current law, SB 271, it is the teacher and eventually the school.

In continuing my research, I found Senator Neiderhauser’s, current sitting President of the Senate, blog post on “The Senate Site” B 59 will change that definition so that a school’s grade is based on more tangible benchmarks.”

SB271 is the Amended portion to SB59.

It is based on tangible benchmarks or standards. It is a system of one size fits all, or the teachers and the schools will fail. They are tied together. Bad standards will lead to bad assessments. Bad assessments will drive bad curriculum. Bad curriculum will drive the students to test below college and university levels, which mean the teachers and the schools will receive an “F” or worse. This is not just about standards. The picture is much bigger than that, and the State knows it.

Mr. Colman shared his blog post on his Facebook page, and I found Senator Moss’s response rather interesting:

“Carol Spackman Moss: Thank you for the post, Joel. You are exactly right! The CCSS do not limit students, they set standards that allow students and teachers to have some idea what they should aiming for. It doesn’t set curriculum or teaching style. I’m frustrated with the fear mongering and the insistence by some that these standards will have deleterious effects on our students. Why are some folks fearful of more rigor? If we want our students to be able to compete with students all over the world, we need to raise the bar. Thanks for taking the time to educate and inform. (Your friend and high school English teacher).”

As I speak to various people about Common Core and describe the whole picture, I am amazed that our meetings are much calmer, than those that the State hosts. We lay out what we have found, including original sources. I asked in that same Facebook thread where the evidence that these standards are rigorous was. Where is their research? Post it! Who conducted the research? Who participated? My friends and I have yet to receive an answer to these questions. What we can show you is that they haven’t done the research. We can show you the timeline, and how it was time- sensitive and money driven.

These standards are nothing wonderful! Otherwise there wouldn’t be so much opposition to them nation wide!

World Socialists Web Site Shares Anti-Common Core Position

Destroying the notion that the anti-Common Core movement is some right-wing, tea party effort, someone pointed out the World Socialist Web Site has a couple of articles expressing big concerns with Common Core.

This first post is about what Common Core is, how it’s bankrolled by the Gates Foundation and other corporate interests, and major publishers like Pearson and McGraw-Hill stand to reap massive profits. Good for the socialists!

http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/04/11/core-a09.html

This second post is by a California kindergarten teacher sharing her concern that the standards are not age appropriate. This is exactly what happens when you implement standards that have never been tested. In Matthew Sander’s excellent article in the Deseret News last week, he points this out as well. We are using untested, unproven standards that have no track record of success. The CA teacher notes how ridiculous the content timetable is for kindergarteners and how they are supposed to be using 50/50 informational texts to narrative.

http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/04/11/kind-a11.html

The State Testing Opt-Out Form

Alisa Ellis is sharing this great letter she used to opt her children out of state testing. You can easily modify this to your needs and opt out your children as well. Happening right now in schools, it’s CRT tests. By next year it will probably be the AIR/SAGE adaptive tests unless we succeed in getting those thrown out. These tests are not only dangerous for behavioral tracking, but have other concerns as well as they are designed to have all children hit 50% scores by increasing or lowering the difficulty based on their performance on each question. Some students may only have a 15 question test, while others could be forced to answer 100 questions to complete the test.

I would add one word of caution. Some teachers may use the state test in some way for student grading. You may want to include a statement such as, “if you plan to use this test in my child’s grade for some reason, I ask that you make an exception and not factor this state test into their final class grade.”

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The opt out letter I sent my child’s teachers (I copied the Governor, state superintendent, local superintendent, and principal):

Ms. ________, Ms. ________, and Ms. _______,

________ thoroughly enjoys all of your classes. Thank you.

I’m guessing you know my name and the research I’ve been doing into the education reform taking place in the United States. If not, I’d be happy to share my research with you.

I am writing to let you know that ______ will not be taking the CRT’s this year. I recognize that there is nothing new about the testing taking place this year but feel that I must take a stand. This is nothing personal with you or your teaching. You are excellent and I appreciate your willingness to spend time educating children.

I have been studying the increasing push for data. While I recognize that data has great value, I don’t agree with the blatant disregard by the Federal Department of Ed of parental authority. Last year’s changes at the Federal level to privacy laws cause me great concern.

January of 2012, the FERPA (Federal Education Rights and Privacy Act – governing what student records schools can share) laws were changed due to a request by Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.

• Page 52 of the new FERPA document outlines 11 different ways Personally Identifiable Information (PII) can be shared by schools without parental or student consent.

In Utah we accepted $9.6 million in Stimulus Funds to develop our State Longitudinal Database System (SLDS).

SLDS FAQ sheet: http://www2.ed.gov/programs/slds/factsheet.pdf

We have been assured that no one wants to release our children’s information but the fact is the State of UT does not currently have the proper protections in place to prevent Personally Identifiable Data to be released. Someone’s word isn’t good enough when it comes to our children, we must have the proper protections in place. Until there is a remedy to this problem my children will not be participating in end of year testing. Terms like “de-identified data” and “dis-aggregate” data are not acceptable. There are so many data points being collected assigning a child a number does not protect their identity.

Utah may not currently be releasing student level data to private interest groups or the Federal Department of Ed but we have a system set up making that possible. Utah must shore up our student privacy laws and reject the data push currently stemming from the Department of Education.

I’ve heard many teachers upset about the more stringent teacher evaluations and placing blame on the legislators for these laws. The fact is, before the law was written the State office and Governor’s office accepted grants (see below) and waivers agreeing to such evaluations.

http://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/utah-receive-more-129-million-additional-recovery-funds

http://nces.ed.gov/programs/slds/pdf/Utah2009-ARRA.pdf

http://nces.ed.gov/programs/slds/state.asp?stateabbr=UT

http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/esea-flexibility/map/ut.html

As a teacher you should also be aware that the SLDS grant UT (according to the SLDS FAQ page) accepted also called for tracking individual teachers, by name and linking teachers to students they teach and then tracking the student’s performance. This is in order to “…help identify teachers who are succeeding…and find teachers who are struggling…” I do not agree with so much emphasis being put on high-stakes testing when evaluating teachers. I’ll explain why below.

I have 7 very different and all very bright children. They all test differently. A test can never measure home life, stress in a child’s life, parental support or lack thereof, or sheer determination on the part of a child. It just can’t. I don’t support the notion that schools and teachers should be graded on these high-stakes test scores. This narrows the curriculum as teachers are forced to teach to the test. The NCLB waiver did not solve this problem created from NCLB.

My _______ scores very well on these test (top 8% in the Nation) and also does decent in school but falls dead center in his class. He never passed the GATE tests but has consistently competed with those GATE students since the 2nd grade.

My _______ child score fairly well on these tests, but not in the very top; yet, she has been the #1 student in her class for several years running due to hard work and determination. A test simply can’t measure one’s ability to work hard. She is not taking easy classes either.

_______ has a very high amplitude. He does well on tests and in school. My point is each child is different. A test, no matter how great, cannot measure a child’s worth.

Just to be clear, I am not opposed to testing but I am opposed to high stakes testing especially when it is collecting so much data on our children and being so heavily used to determine the effectiveness of a teacher.

I thank you for honoring my wishes. Tomorrow I will not be in town when the CRTs are being administered. ______ can be sent to sit in the office or library during testing. I trust that you will not punish _______ in any way, shape or form for my taking this stand. Please advise if the CRT was to be used toward his class grade. If this is the case, I hope we can come up with a solution at the local level without involving high-stakes testing. _______ is very bright and scored in the top 5% of the Nation in all subjects of the IOWA test a few years ago but I don’t believe that can truly measure what he is capable of.

You may want to take some time looking through the 200 page document from the Data Warehouse in UT http://www.schools.utah.gov/warehouse/Specifications/Warehouse-Data-Dictionary.aspx.

The National Center for Educational Data has scrubbed their site tonight so I can’t send you to see the 500 data points they recommend. http://nedm.sifassociation.org/datamodel_review/eiebrowser/techview.aspx?instance=studentElementarySecondary

Thank you for your time,

Alisa Ellis

Getting Nothing for a Whole Lot of Something

A couple years ago, Investor’s Business Daily ran this graphic in a story entitled Education vs. Bureaucracy.

Getting Nothing for a Whole Lot of Something

Both graphs tell a different but parallel story. In our race to accommodate the cries of “we need more funding” and “we need smaller classes,” (which largely came from the unions), legislators and chief executives raced to show that they are pro-education by funneling more and more money into the bureaucracy. Employment rates skyrocketed. Federal spending shot up in our “Race to Do Something.” In the end, what benefit did we actually see? Nothing changed. In fact, in spite of massive increases in employment and spending, class sizes barely nudged downward. Most jobs have expanded the bureaucracy for educrats doing research into what doesn’t work, and then justifying their jobs by pushing that into the classrooms.

The more top heavy a structure is, the more prone it is to fraud and waste because it is removed from the people impacted by their decisions. I’m 100% more careful with my money, than the federal government cares about the few thousand dollars I “voluntarily” give them. The same is true within state spending. At the local level, when you have money given directly to a school, they are going to be far more careful with those funds, than if that money is administered at the district or state level. It’s just common sense. What if legislators restored true local control of education where dollars would actually be more wisely spent?

An idea that isn’t working well

In Utah, we have something called School Community Councils (SCC). It’s comprised of a few parents who are elected by other parents in the school. A note is sent home by the school announcing the running, and the parents whose children remember to hand it to them have the opportunity to run in the election. The school then sends home ballots, and if your child remembers to give it to you, you can vote for other parents in the school that you think would do a good job on the council. In addition, the principal and a couple of teachers serve on the SCC, but state law mandates there must be more parents on the committee.

The intent of SCC’s is to work on school improvement programs. In reality, that happens very little. In Utah, schools have land trust money that may be a few thousand dollars, reaching into the low 5 figures. If my recollection is right, when I was on the local SCC, we had about $30,000 a year to allocate toward improving the school. It was a joke. We met 4 times during the year to discuss some things and the main thing we did was to allocate these funds. It went like this:

Principal: “OK, here’s the report with this year’s funding amount. What we did last year was spent $x thousands on teacher supplies because the teachers don’t have enough money for classroom supplies. We spent $Y on this activity for the kids which is a tradition at the school, and we spent $Z on textbook replacements and supplements that aren’t covered by other funds. I really think these things are important. Do you want to change anything or do what we did last year?”

SCC: “Hmmm, well, OK, if that’s the case, lets do what we did last year.”

Do SCC’s do other stuff? Yes, they can work on improving schools, but their power is really diminished.

What if we tried real local control?

What if instead of these weak SCC’s, we actually had a local school board at each school that was elected in real elections. For example, Charter Schools in Utah act as their own school districts. Instead of having a district school board above them, parents are elected to those boards and make decisions for the school and set policy just as a school district board does for all the schools in a district. Charter schools still lack the ability for real local control, but they do have greater autonomy than a district school.

With local elections, instead of a board of 7 parents looking over 81 schools (like in Alpine School District…and other large districts), that same board of several parents now looks over 1 school. Now you’ll find a board member in your neighborhood, probably just down the street, who you can share your concerns and ideas with that have real impact for your child.

What if each school’s elected board hired the principal instead of the district? The principal would then be accountable to the parents in the local community, instead of playing politics for his/her job with district bureaucrats.

What if instead of the state funding the state office of education and passing dollars down to district offices to take their cut and then pay for things in the schools, it was reversed. Take all the funding for education in Utah, divide by the number of students, and send it directly to the local schools based on enrollment figures. Then let those school boards determine how to best use those dollars at their school based on their budget. They could then determine salaries, curriculum materials, and purchase services from the district and state offices of education as needed. If the district provides a valuable service that enhances the education taking place in the classroom, then the school board would be inclined to purchase that service. If the state office of education provided a valuable service for the school, such as a state test that the school wanted to participate in to see how their children compare to other schools, then the school could pay for that service. Local budgets would give far more freedom and creativity to solving local problems at the school. Teacher salaries could see an increase as bureaucracy bloat found ways to slim down and provide only the needed services for the schools. Economies of scale could still easily be maintained in the same way schools run book orders for students. There’s a deadline and everyone purchasing from a given publisher can get bulk pricing.

Local school boards at the school level would also have the freedom to try things that aren’t being done at other district schools.

They would be free to attract students from other neighborhoods who have an interest in something this particular school offers like a special language class or something.

They would be free to give latitude to teachers to teach to the student’s interests, instead of teaching to the high-stakes standardized tests.

They would be free to adopt higher standards than the minimums offered by the state and not worry about the consequences of standardized testing.

They would be free to alert parents to the fact that their program is higher than the state’s minimum standards, and perhaps because it’s not in the same exact sequence as the state standards, their children might not do as well on standardized tests as other children, but that in the end, their children would actually come out far ahead.

They would be able to more closely listen to parent’s concerns about curriculum, teachers, or the principal, and make local decisions regarding real issues impacting the school.

As it is now, nothing will ever change. Everyone who thinks pumping more money into the same model of education will solve problems is insane by definition. Real structural changes must happen or nothing will ever change. No parent ever demanded from legislators that their child be given high stakes adaptive testing in the classroom and put into a database so they can have their personal information tracked over time to tell them what job they should go into. But in an effort to show accountability for dollars spent, legislators have put the imposing structure into place. It’s time we tried freedom in education. It’s time we restored real local control.

Logan School District AIR/SAGE Meeting

This is an excellent comprehensive report by the Frazier’s who went to the Logan school district meeting on AIR/SAGE put on by the Utah State Office of Education. This is fairly representative of several meeting reports that have come in that illustrate how questions are not answered for the public.

SAGE MEETING REPORT – APRIL 22, 2013

BY AUDREY & JOSHUA FRAZIER

My husband and I went to the Logan SAGE regional meeting on Tuesday, April 16, 2013, which was put on by the Utah State Office of Education. SAGE stands for Student Assessment of Growth and Excellence and is the name of Utah’s new computer-adaptive testing system which will accompany the Common Core standards.  Researching the topic, preparing for the meeting and then attending it took up the entire day for us.   Although the meeting was officially from 4-6 pm, a good portion of people stayed at least 30 minutes past that.  My husband and I arrived at 3:55 pm and did not leave until 7:20 pm.   For us the meeting lasted nearly 3 ½ hours and was quite exhausting and unnerving.  It was intense, and all over the place with agendas, emotions and power struggles.

I have been reluctant to spend more time discussing the meeting because 1) there is too much to write and 2) the meeting was very emotional and confusing.  I knew it would take hours and days more of my time to do a good report of the meeting, if I were to do it justice.  Until now, I have not had the clarity of mind or frankly, the interest, to review and mentally process the experience.  I initially tried to “sum it all up” in a few simple, succinct statements, but found it impossible.  Following are 20 pages representing both my husband and me.  I am writing in black font color and will interject about 7 pages written by my husband in blue font color.  It has been very challenging for me to make an even-handed reporting of the meeting, but here is my perspective.

Judy Park was the presenter.  She is an Associate Superintendent of the Utah State Office of Education and is the main person in charge of the Data, Assessment, and Accountability Department.  She has a very leading position, one of only four employees who are second in command in the state.  She knew her material well and has no doubt been a significant decision-maker.  Her personality style was from my grandmother’s generation with polished social graces, an upbeat and positive attitude, even-temper, and diplomacy.  (Think of a smooth politician.)  The downside of this is passive-aggressive tendencies and the ability to be condescending with a smile, or redirect the conversation without actually answering the question.  Her voice was level and reassuring, but she seemed more like an actress on a stage than a genuine communicator.   She was well prepared for parental concerns and had pat answers for everything.  Therefore, I did not feel like she really listened to or digested any of the feelings that the parents were expressing.  I kept thinking her personality reminded me of a softer version of former Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi.  There was an extreme disconnect with anything negative or challenging to her way of thinking, yet she had the appearance of grace throughout the evening.  I felt very conflicted in her presence.

Dr. Marshal Garrett was the local person in charge.  He is the superintendent of the Logan School District.  He seemed to have an intense take-charge, type-A personality, domineering and very no-nonsense.  He was very upset and uncomfortable with any negative questions or comments.  He did not like anyone to question his authority or the decisions that have been made.  He struggled to stay in control of his emotions.  Even when he was calm and polite, his voice was strained.  I did not have to wonder what he was feeling; he did have emotional integrity in that sense, although his temper made me feel uncomfortable.

Right at 4:00 pm, Ms. Park started the meeting saying she was so happy and excited to introduce us to the wonderful and amazing new testing and data collection system which will be implemented next year in 2014.  She said she had been to many such meetings across the state and was on the home stretch of finishing these public presentations. With a smile, she said we were lucky to be getting the efficient and polished evolution of the meeting.  She said based on her past experiences she would structure the presentation as follows.  No questions during her presentation.  After it was over, she would open the floor and the questions would be answered in three groupings:  first, SAGE questions; second, data questions; third, any other questions.  She said without these rules, audience members seemed to get worked up among themselves and conversation steered off-topic.

A woman in the audience commented that the 4-6 pm time of these public meetings seemed to exclude husbands who were still at work.

Ms. Park asked that all comments/questions be saved to the end of her PowerPoint and assured the audience that she would stay until the last question was answered.  Her conversational style was very persuasive.  She was a salesperson with a job to do.

The PowerPoint was a presentation of WHAT IS ALREADY DECIDED AND IN PLACE.  It detailed the technicalities of the new assessment system connected to the new Common Core standards.  It was an introduction and overview training session of the SAGE system, which is the adaptive testing coming next year.

Here is some basic information on the history of SAGE:  In 2012, House Bill 15 provided money in ongoing funding for Adaptive Assessment.  A meeting was held with the State Board of Education where they appointed an RFP (Request for Proposal) committee.  The RFP committee consisted of administrators, educators, professionals and parents.    In connection with the new Utah Core Standards (Common Core), the RFP committee detailed what their goals were for a new assessment system and wrote those up in a report.  Bids were received from various assessment companies (13 or 14 different bids came in) to fulfill the committee’s goals (referred to as Utah’s goals).  There was a statewide review.  The State Board of Education appointed a separate committee to review, score and select an assessment provider from among the bids.  AIR is the company the FRP selection board chose unanimously as the best choice which offered the best package to fulfill Utah’s goals.  AIR stands for American Institutes for Research. AIR had the proven history and cutting edge technological abilities the committee was looking for.  It was a clear and easy choice.  The FRP board then submitted its choice back to the State Board of Education.  Ms. Park made references to Utah “stakeholders”, although I am not sure exactly who those people are.  When discussing the committees’ and board panel’s decisions, Ms. Park referred to them as “them”, but I do believe that she was in attendance and making powerful decisions at these meetings.  She did not use the more accurate pronoun “we” which would have acknowledged her role in these decisions.

I cannot adequately sum up her PowerPoint presentation, but she said the whole thing was available on the state’s website.  I wrote notes as to what stood out in my mind from her words.

  • SAGE will give us greater information, greater assessment and greater reporting with more data than we have ever had before. 
  • We have never really had a good reporting system. 
  • The test results will be immediate.
  • This has been implemented on a really quick timeline – almost scary quick.
  • This is something new which has not been done in Utah before.
  • Utah chose AIR out of about 14 other options.  AIR was chosen for what they are capable of doing.
  • There was consensus.  Everyone agreed.
  • I am really excited.  (Repeated often)

Ms. Park presented from 4:00 – 5:20-ish.  During that time she went over a lot of technicalities and details of the new system.   Some people did try to ask questions, right as the question would arise in their minds.  Sometimes the question was answered directly, sometimes it was avoided and sometimes the person asking the question was yelled at by the superintendent or crowd members, and the person told to wait until the end to ask any questions.  In general, simple questions/comments in support of the new assessments were answered directly, while questions/comments which questioned the assessments, or were asking details which made Ms. Park or Dr. Garrett uncomfortable were postponed until after the PowerPoint was over.  This unfortunately meant that some very important questions were never honestly acknowledged or answered.

As a note, for the first half of the meeting, Ms. Park presented alone.  At some point though, the meeting got heated enough that Dr. Garrett stood up and joined her up at the front for the remaining time.  Ms. Park had been to many such meetings and seemed prepared for it.  Dr. Garrett may have been apprised also, because he seemed on guard and quick to react.  I do not think the great concern being voiced by parents caught either of them off-guard in the slightest.

Interesting things worth noting about the SAGE system:

  • Children will no longer need an IEP for certain basic testing accommodations, such as the text being enlarged to a bigger font on the computer screen, taking breaks or extended time for tests.
  • The testing/data system will be available in Braille.
  • The adaptive testing technology itself is “smart.”  The test results are more accurate and paint a clearer picture of the strengths and weaknesses of the child.  The test gives a child the chance to “show off” all he knows, or have the test end quickly if he does not know many answers. (I think it would be like the ALEKS math program, but much more technologically advanced)
  • The SAGE system is compatible with iPads and tablets.
  • On any given test, a child will get about 50% of the test questions correct and 50% incorrect.  The computer presents questions until the child can’t answer them correctly.  Every test path will look different.  (Think of a flowchart or a Choose Your Own Adventure book.)  The test may be over after only 15 questions, or may last for 100 questions, for example.

The SAGE system has 3 parts:

Formative:  individual observations by the teacher

Summative:  state mandated end of year testing which will replace CRTs

Interim:  tests during the year, such as in fall at beginning of year, or at other times as deemed necessary by the districts

During the presentation, Utah’s SAGE demo was pulled up on the AIR website.  Some parents voiced concern over this and were assured that by the time it is up and running next year, Utah’s assessments will be hosted by Utah’s own computers, and that what was being shown was only a bid demo.

After the PowerPoint presentation was over, it was now time to officially hear the answers to all the questions which had built up.  However, even at this point, Ms. Park took charge and structured the question/answer period.  She said there would be three phases of questions based on the subject matter.  First, she would answer questions about the SAGE assessment system; second, she would answer questions about data; and finally she would answer any miscellaneous questions.

At some point, a parent expressed concern over the $32 million price tag for AIR’s services saying that that amount was simply not enough money to compensate the incalculable work load this would require AIR.  He wondered if AIR were benefitting in some other way which would have motivated them to accept the task of completely overhauling Utah’s testing and data collection for such a small compensation in proportion to the work involved.  As an IT person, he understood the technicalities of what this would require and said there was no company which could do what was proposed for such a little amount.  He thought that no other company even had a chance to come close to being competitive with the AIR bid.  Ms. Park was surprised at his comment and replied that, “Oh, no, the bid was not for 32 million dollars, Utah does not have that much money.  We only had 6.7 million dollars available.”

To which the parent expressed even more surprise and said something to the effect of, “Well that is even worse!  That makes even less sense!  Now I am more worried. Look at how much we are getting for not much money.”

Ms. Park laughingly chided, “Oh, wow, oh, I could’ve used you on the hill!”

He replied “No I’m serious, for them to provide what they are doing for that little money would be charity on their part.  What I’m worried about is general evidenced based social change, based upon data in the aggregate, and the way in which they use that data.”

Ms. Park said “No, they can’t use the data for any purpose at all.”

He replied, “Oh my, that is so naïve.”

Dr Garrett injected, “That’s the contract, folks, that’s the contract they have. I’m sorry but if the state office has broken contracts when there has been misuse, then that happens. The reality is that the data can only be flowed through, it cannot be utilized.”

The parent then asked, “Does anybody here really believe that is what will happen? Let’s be honest here”.

Dr Garrett said, “I’m sorry that that is how you feel.”

(At this point, I will use excerpts from my husband Joshua’s notes.  The good thing about both of us attending was that we each recorded different things and had our own perspectives.  This is actually a condensed, abridged version of the meeting, there are many more things that were said that I would like to include.  My husband focused on documenting the concerns which were brought up and the administrators’ responses.  This is my husband’s report in blue font color.)

A lady commented about her concerns with the program and said, “AIR is associated with George Soros, so why did Utah choose that company?”

Ms. Park replied “You know, it’s interesting, if you go on their website, there are probably 200 groups/companies associated with AIR.  They run the whole gamut.  So if you get on there you’ll see a little bit of everything.  So of those 200, I’m sure there might be 1 or 2 that might be concerning to folks, but you have to look at all of it.”

I stated, “I think she is talking about who primarily is funding and pushing it, not just some small, insignificant association which just happens to be on the list.”

To which Ms. Park and Dr. Garrett both explained that there was a FAQ section on the website and referred her to check out the website.  Ms. Park then said, “So that took care of your question, let’s move on to the next.”

A person asked a question about data, and Ms. Park said, “Ok, we are going to answer questions about data after we answer questions about assessment, so next question please.”

A person asked about the parent panel that will be put together to review the test questions, and asked how many parents would be on the panel and what the process will be to get on the panel. Ms. Park replied that the legislation requires 15 people to be on the panel. The group audibly gasped in shock that it was only 15. Many immediately asked how they could be one of the ones on the panel.  She replied, “If you are interested then go ahead and send me an email.”

A lady then suggested that they accommodate 15 parents from each school or at least each district, not just 15 total.  Ms. Park replied that they simply don’t have the resources for that. The lady replied “Well, I would suggest that you think about how to accommodate that because there are at least that many concerned parents in each school.”

Dr. Garrett then said, “Let me put this into perspective, we have been testing since 1986.  We’ve had end of level tests.  What we are trying to do now is no different than what we have ever done before.”

A lady in the audience said, “But it is the way you are approaching and implementing this what is now starting to scare us a bit.”

He replied, “There is nothing different in the approach now than what we have ever done before, and I’ve been an educator in this state for over 30 years. What we are doing is consistent with what has been done in the past.”

I said, “But it’s consistently getting worse, not better.”

Dr. Garrett replied, “Well, that’s an unfortunate perspective for you.”

Ms. Park said, “Let me give you another perspective, we have 2 assessment systems now required by law.  I have one that’s a computer adaptive test that is owned by Utah, controlled by Utah, written by Utah.  I’m Utah born and bred; I’m not an alien that was just transplanted. Everything is under Utah control.  Then we have another assessment system called the ACT. We have no control.  We don’t get to see the questions. We don’t know anything about it. It’s going to be administered to all our kids. I haven’t had one concern about ACT.  But the test that we are in total control over seems to be where all the angst is. So I just find that all kind of interesting.”

A parent in the audience said, “Actually there were a lot of concerns when the ACT came out, but no one listened then either and we’re just trying to avoid the same types of concerns now.”

One lady was concerned that the adaptive nature of the tests was designed to make all kids fail 50% of the questions no matter how good they were.  Ms Park said it was ok and noted that many kids already do not do well on tests and are used to it.  She said that the kids would be prepared and trained for what this new system would be like.

The lady restated that she was concerned with kids taking a test that didn’t end until the test adapted to outwit and fail them, stating “At which point does the test let up, once the child is vomiting?”

Dr. Garrett said that it was going to be fun and challenging for good students to be newly presented with things in the test which they had never seen before or been taught before.  He said that the kids will recognize when the test starts quizzing them on new, never before presented material, stating that they would feel empowered that they must be doing well on the test and that it would be a positive thing for them.

A parent stated that he was concerned about the group which put together the RFP (goals for the new assessment system).  His concern was that the group that put together the RFP was not the same group which would review or accept the proposals.  He stated that only one group should be doing it.

Ms. Park said, “Well, that’s not how we do it, you have to understand that we are a state agency.”

He replied, “That is insane, why would you have one group make it (the standards and goals) and a totally different group evaluating it and accept bids?  No company in world would ever do that.”

Ms. Park said, “The Board of Education wanted to make sure that there wasn’t any bias, that those writing the RFP were not targeting a particular company, vendor or test; so one group writes it, and another group reads it and gets to choose.”

She continued, “I mean, I can only say what the Board of Education did.”

A lady then commented that there was this big presentation and focus on the first group, stating that great efforts were taken to show how fairly the group had been selected (containing parents, teachers, etc…) But never any mention that the group which would actually be making the final decision would be a totally separate group of people.  If anything, this was fishy at best and introduces greater room for bias, not less.

Ms. Park and Dr. Garrett replied that the names in the groups were listed and could be looked up.

A man in the audience then said, “So then the 2nd part of my question is, can we see the contract that was put together?”

Ms. Park said, “Yes, it’s on the website.”

The man repeated, “It IS on the website?”

And she replied “Yes, I told you to go to State Office of Education, go to assessment, go to SAGE, everything is there.”

A lady said, “I have some concerns about the math curriculum.  Ivy league schools such as Harvard have come out and said that they are against this and that is going to destroy math and …”

But Dr. Garrett cut her off and said, “Ma’am, I’m sorry but we are trying to stay on topic and..”

A person in the audience interrupted and said “I would like to hear what she is saying; I’d like her to finish her question and hear your response.”

Dr. Garrett said, “That’s fine and you can, but only if your question is about SAGE then that’s what we’re here for and the 2nd set of questions will be on data.  Judy (Ms. Park) has said that she was more than happy to stay after for other questions.”

The lady asking the question kept trying to talk but Dr. Garrett repeatedly cut her off yelling loudly, “I’m sorry, ma’am, no, I’m sorry, but this is the process and this is how we are going to do it, and we will have plenty of time to get to your questions.”  Several people continued to try to get the question answered.

One person stated, “Some of us may have to leave earlier. This is a public meeting and we would like to hear your answer to that question.”

Dr. Garrett angrily cut off each person and insisted that the questions now had to be in relation to data and as soon as it’s all over Judy has committed to answer other questions.

Another lady said, “We want it to get answered now because we don’t think you are going to answer it later.”

Dr. Garrett said, “It doesn’t matter ma’am.  This is how we are going to do it.”  His voice was intense, thundering, and intimidating.

Ms. Park took a different approach to changing the topic. Instead of arguing, she simply began talking, stating “Let me give you some basic information about data, I know there’s been a lot of concern about privacy of student data and there should be concerns about that, about how they collect that data and how they use that data.   I mean I just go crazy when I go online and I see children who have their pictures on Facebook, and their names, and the names of their schools, and their birthdates and information on Facebook, that has absolutely no security on it.  I just cringe because we need to protect our kids. We need to protect information about them and we need to protect the data about them.  So let me tell you the process we have in our office and what we do with data.”  She kept talking about how they have been collecting and keeping data on students at the state office since the 70’s.  She assured that it was a secure system that their IT department keeps the data very secure.  She said that they use that data in order to make reports or answer question that people ask them.

So I said, “But the difference between that and Facebook is that I have a choice whether or not I have a Facebook account.  My children and I get to exercise our freedom to choose whether or not to post to Facebook, and we get to choose what we announce, when and how we do so. The difference is that you collect data without consent and make that choice for us.   You decide when and with whom you share that information.  That is the difference, and that choice is taken out of our hands.”

Ms. Park said, “Well, as a society we could choose not to have this data resource, but for now our society has chosen that we do want that information.”

Dr. Garrett once again pointed out that this is how things have been done for a long time and so why be concerned about it now?

Then Dr. Garrett asked, “Are there any other questions on SAGE before we move on to take questions on data?”

My wife then said, “I appreciate positive things like better assessments, especially when they are in private hands, not government hands. There are private assessment tools out there that parents can get for their children, on their own, independent from public school systems.  I like the equal accommodations and the brailed computers, tablets etc. Which is a given because of Bill Gates’ connection with AIR, so of course they will be leading that technology. However you stated an interesting question when you asked ‘Why are people all of a sudden upset now, and why is it suddenly a hot topic now, when for decades we have always done end of level testing and data collecting in the past?’ I guess I want to comment that the political climate is not even remotely what it was decades ago, and the dramatic and drastic changes that are happening nationally, and locally, are so significant that every huge overhaul of anything demands caution and scrutiny. When you have people who care deeply about their children, and they are scrutinizing this, I don’t think we should be pushed or persuaded to do anything.  So my question is, are you aware that it is no longer the 1980’s?  It is 2013, and it is a different thing.  So when you are introducing great change, this is of concern.”

Dr. Garrett replied, “The change we are making is consistent with the changes we have been making since 2002 when No Child Left Behind came in,” (to which the crowd grumbled) “so the reality for us as educators is that we are just ratcheting it up to where we have wanted to see it for a long time anyway.”

A lady asked “What if we want to opt out?”

Ms. Park replied that parents can opt out of lots of things at school, if they don’t want their child seeing a particular film or taking a particular test then they can elect to have their child stay home, just as long as it is not more than 10% of the school because state law requires that no more than 10% opt out because the school fails.  Since it is an accountability system, such requires at least 95% participation or the entire school is considered a failure or gets a zero score, and that is currently what is in state law.

Throughout the night, Ms. Park repeatedly mentioned how hard they were working.  She assured us that they were working hard and because contracts are in place, their hands are tied and have to do what they are doing.

I said, “I understand that legislation has already past. I understand that the contracts are already out there and that you say they have to be fulfilled and cannot be broken.   I understand that you are working hard.  I have no question, I have no doubt that you are working hard, all my questions lead back to this one; who are you working for? And the answer is that it is not for me, nor is it for these other parents here today.  It is a top-down mandate that is driving Common Core and I’m not being represented.”

To which she replied, “Thank you so much for acknowledging all our hard work!  Yes, we are working very hard.  I appreciate the fact that you recognize that I’m here doing a job.  That I’m fortunate that I have a fabulous job and I love my job.  But who do I work for?  I work for the State Board of Education.  I have to comply with state law; that’s an absolute mandate, I don’t have a choice to ignore state law.  I have to comply with federal law, so you’re absolutely right with that.  And the frustration is that, well, we didn’t get to chose state law, and you know what? Neither did I.  We didn’t get to chose, we are the firewall.  I know, dump it on me, it’s ok.  I so appreciate you pointing this out.  If we are unhappy with state law, if we’re unhappy with federal law…Gee, I don’t have that kind of power, …wouldn’t it be nice if I did, but I don’t have the power to change that.  But all I can do is come and try to help you understand, try to give you as honest questions as I can possibly give.  It doesn’t mean that I can make it better, that I can change it, that I can make anything go away, I just hopefully can make you understand what it is, kind of why it is, and what we’re trying to do to meet those requirements. That’s all I can do.”

Someone in the audience began explaining how this is about social change and taking control over children.

Ms. Park loudly cut her off mid-sentence said “Ok, let me ask this. Could I ask you a question now?”  The group quieted down and she said, “If I can be helpful, I’m happy to stay, but if you kind of want to talk amongst yourselves, I don’t know that you need me to stay for this, I’d just as soon be on the road.”

The questions then turned to the problems with the testing process and the new “fuzzy math.”  Dr. Garrett and Ms. Park had been referring to Utah Core all night long, as if it was something different, isolated and untouchable by Common Core.  If anyone referred to Common Core, Dr. Garrett would defensively correct the person, saying that there was no such thing as Common Core, only Utah Core, and that those were the standards they were accountable to uphold.

Finally the Harvard/Ivy League school question re-surfaced on how this Common Core program was going to destroy math and make it so that kids could not take calculus in high school.

Ms. Park said, “I know that part isn’t true because any student who wants to prepare and take calculus can. We haven’t lost calculus by any means. I know people struggle with math because it is now looking at math differently.” She explained that the new core combined everything all-in-one instead of separating classes into algebra or geometry.

A teacher in the room defended the math program saying how she loved it. The room seemed split on if they liked it or not.

Then, Dr. Garrett then apologized that he had to leave.  He said, “If you are from Logan and have further questions, I’m going to throw the ball to Dave Long, my director of technology and educational support services.  If you have any questions, he will make sure they get to me and we will work on some things on our district to help you understand both sides of the court.”  And he left.

Then I stated, “We are in a great age of technology, I’m sure there are some amazing tools that are being created and are a part of this new overhaul of the education system, but what is ideal for one child may be terrible for the next, so good systems should not be commonly enforced for all. I have no question that many programs within the system are good, positive, and exciting. It is not these particular items that I’m here to debate over. My problem is with the vehicle in which such tools are being delivered. I’m sure there are neat tools within Common Core.  It would be crazy if there wasn’t at least something redeeming, positive or luring about it.  However, it is the vehicle called Common Core or Utah Core, that we should be focusing on and rejecting.”

Once again completely changing the subject, Ms. Park stated, “The thing that is the most valuable is that education is really about the teacher and the student. And for the most part I think we have some great teachers and some great educators.  Keep in mind, curriculum is done at the classroom level. The standards are just the basic standards, they are not how it’s taught, they are not what is taught.  It’s a standard of what the students should know.  It’s the teachers that design and deliver the curriculum.

I replied, “That is not my understanding of how it works.”

The few people that were left disagreed and said that what is taught and how it is taught is exactly what is being mandated to the teachers, and that they do not have a say in what is to be taught or how to teach it.  They are being handed a very specific agenda of what is expected to be taught, and that is exactly what they have to teach.  Someone suggested that there are many teachers and educators on all levels who are afraid to speak up or stand up against it because it could mean their jobs.  It was stated that the standard is what creates the curriculum.

Ms. Park replied, “Well it does, but is not how its taught or what we teach.  There is a difference.”  She went on, “The teachers are happy with this, they love it!”

The group replied that they did not believe that was the case.

Several people stated that the particulars are not the point.  The point is where it comes from, how it is implemented, and who pushes for implementation.  All the neat programs and “free stuff” within Common Core is just the sugar coating on the rotten apple.

Ms. Park then announced that it was 6:30 and that she had a long drive. She asked for any last questions and said goodbye.

She then turned to me and said, “I just want to be clear that I stayed to answer any questions.”

I told her that I had heard echoed from others at other SAGE regional meetings that they felt that they could not get their questions properly answered.   Ms. Park said ,“If you’ve heard that about any of the meetings that I’ve been to then that is absolutely false because every meeting I’ve done exactly what I’ve done tonight and I’ve always stayed to answer every single question, so don’t believe everything you hear.”

I found it ironic for her to claim to have answered all of our questions and yet have those who remained still feel that she had not even begun to listen to or respond to their questions or concerns.

If, as Ms Park stated, this was exactly how she treated every other group that she has spoken to, then no wonder so many others claimed that she did not listen, that she cut off and avoided their questions, that she steered the meeting.  Ultimately, she, in fact, did not answer the questions because successfully getting a crowd to stop asking questions is not the same as actually answering questions.  My experience with Ms. Park or Dr. Garrett felt fruitless and was exhausting.

 

In addition to my husband’s record, I want to add a few more things.  Interspersed throughout the frequent parental concerns and questions were positive teacher comments.  There were multiple teachers who endorsed the new Common Core standards and curriculum at the meeting.  There were testimonials of how it is improving and aiding the teachers in new and exciting ways.  Different teachers explained in detail how the changes are helping them reach children they never have been able to reach before.  I could feel of the teachers’ genuine excitement and conviction as some of them talked.

The notable opposition being voiced by many was a surprise to at least one person in attendance. Near the end, a teacher stood up bewildered.  She said she was shocked at the opposition that was being voiced and asked, “Where is this coming from?  I just don’t understand where this is coming from?”  She made several statements about being so surprised and I sincerely believe she did not know there was such conflict surrounding all the new Utah Core (Common Core) standards until that evening.

To sum up, I am very glad I went to the meeting.  As uncomfortable as it was to be there, I needed to see and feel the dysfunction first hand.

I could clearly see 3 groups in attendance: (I hope I’m not oversimplifying.)

  • The administrators leading the meeting
  • Teachers, administrators and other paid employees in the audience
  • Parents in the audience

(In addition there was a member of the press, too.)

The administrators and teachers are all paid by the state.  Their income and livelihood depend on their ability to adapt and accept this new system.  What they personally feel, if in opposition to the status quo, was not welcome at this meeting.  Endorsements were.  There was no invitation, spoken or unspoken, for the teachers or administrators to have personal complaints or concerns.

The parents, on the other hand, were free to be upfront and honest.  There was no conflict of interest.  There was no boss in the room, no paycheck to consider.  Many parents openly expressed resistance.

Unfortunately, the voices of the parents were the least understood or valued.  To be at such a meeting, where concerns were blankly ignored, postponed or re-directed was a very demeaning and insulting experience.  It is ironic, because what parents stand to lose is supremely more precious than income, employment position or reputation.  The stewardship of parents over their own children is in the balance right now.  The future of our children’s education has taken a monumental jump away from anything “family friendly”.  Each child, precious and individual, must look to parents as the last line of defense now.

Ms. Judy Park is in a significant position of influence and decision-making power.  Yet her presentation of who made the state decisions was spoken almost all in second-person.  She did not own or take responsibility for the choices she has made or is making, and what exactly her part in this is.  For the majority of the time, she spoke of the Utah State Office of Education as “them” or “they”, instead of “we”.  I think if she predicted the statement to be well received, it was “we”, otherwise it was the distant pronoun, “they”.  The word that kept going through my mind for the whole presentation was p-l-a-c-a-t-e.  She went through the motions of a public informational meeting with a question and answer period; however there was no actual addressing, acknowledging or resolving of most of the real concerns from parents.

It was clear there were reputable teachers in attendance that genuinely supported the increased tools they have and will be given to reach their students.  Who can blame them?  They are in the trenches everyday and appreciate any helps they can get to “do their job.”  No doubt there are many intelligent and caring teachers who have their students’ best interest in mind and feel relieved to reach especially at-risk students better.

But do those teachers and administrators understand the conflict of interest inherent in their position?  Have they taken the time to research in documents and resources not endorsed or specifically provided by the Utah State Office of Education?  In other words, have they researched Race to the Top, Common Core, SAGE and AIR independently?  Do they know where and how these changes came to be?  Do they understand the greater political agenda which may be behind these changes?  Can they see how these decisions are undermining personal freedoms, personal life goals, and individuality, not to mention privacy?

I have had to ask myself some questions:  Do I really want the local school district, in compliance with the state’s new core standards (Common Core) and with the technological advances afforded by AIR, getting more information about my children?  (Information is power.)   Do the positives outweigh the negative?  Do I want to further embolden and empower the school district?  The State of Utah?  Do I trust their intentions?  Do I trust the Utah State Office of Education?  Do I trust the technology provider AIR with whom they have contracted? Is the best interest of my family and my child represented in any of these?

What does the U.S.O.E really know about AIR?  Do they understand the controversy surrounding that company?  Either they don’t know and have been negligent in their due diligence process, or they do know and are OK with it.  I am not sure which worries me more.  To not know would make them so very careless.  If they choose knowingly, then that may mean the U.S.O.E’s goals are compatible with AIR’s goals.  That is unacceptable to me.

All in all, I feel pretty discouraged.  As one concerned parent commented to me after everyone was finally filing out of the building, “We are always one step behind, aren’t we?”  My voice, as well as my husband’s and other parents, did seem small and ignored.  But attending the meeting was the right thing to do.  Voicing concern and intelligent counterarguments is a necessary and needed resistance to a growing situation I find very alarming.

We have a real problem on our hands and, and quite honestly, I am not sure what our available options are at this point.  The Utah State Office of Education has a mind of its own with a growing ring of power.  Their goals, values, and programs are not in alignment with many voices of concerned parents in Logan Valley.

 

 

Education is NOT the same as Schooling

“Perhaps the sentiments contained in the following pages, are not YET sufficiently fashionable to procure them general favour; a long habit of not thinking a thing WRONG, gives it a superficial appearance of being RIGHT, and raises at first a formidable outcry in defense of custom.” – Thomas Paine, Common Sense (italics mine)

If you can get past the tradition of thinking that public schools operate the way they do because they’ve always done so and it must always be so, you’ll understand why education and schooling are not the same thing. This 3 minute video will show you the animated history of where our modern public school system came from.

U.S.O.E. Informational Meetings on Common Core Tests: Clueless on the Big Issues

Did you watch the Deseret News live feed of the Davis District meeting tonight?

I had an “A-ha!” moment, as I again watched Judy Park of the Utah State Office of Education present information about the Common Core tests.

I realized that Judy Park just does not know the answers to the big, big questions that are being asked.  She isn’t actually being dishonest; she is simply clueless.  It’s tragic.  I feel almost sorry for her.

What makes me say this?

One example:  When parents asked about the data collection issue she seemed to be blissfully unaware that the Utah State Longitudinal Database System collects personally identifiable information on every student –without parental consent and without any opt-out alternative.

“There’s federal laws. There’s all the protection in the world,” she said, and added a little simile:

As banks can’t give away your money, databases can’t give away your personally identifiable information, she said.

Really?

– Does she not know that there’s a huge lawsuit going on right now because the Department of Education has loosened and ruined privacy regulations so entirely that parental consent has been reduced from a legal requirement to an optional ”best practice”??

– Does she not know that the State Longitudinal Database System is federally interoperable, and that that was one of the conditions of Utah receiving the grant money to build the SLDS in the first place?

– Does she not know that the SLDS is under a (totally unconstitutional) mandate to report to the federal government via the “portal” called the EdFacts Exchange?

– Has she not seen the hundreds of data points that the federal government is “inviting” states to collect and share on students at the National Data Collection Model?

– Has she never studied the Utah Data Alliance and the Data Quality Campaign?

– Is she unaware that the Federal Register (following the shady alterations by the Dept. of Ed to federal FERPA privacy regulations) now redefines key terms such as who is an authorized representative and what is an educational agency, so that without parental consent and without school consent, vendors and corporate researchers can access data collected by the SLDS (State Database)?

– Does she not know that state FERPA is protective and good, but federal FERPA is utterly worthless because of what the Dept. of Education has done?

Ms. Park said:

“FERPA [federal privacy law] doesn’t allow that,”   and:   “I don’t believe that,” and “Personally identifiable information is not even in our state database.”

Dear Ms. Park!   I wish I could believe you.

But last summer, at the Utah Senate Education Committee Meeting, we all heard (and Ms. Park was in the room) when Utah Technology Director John Brandt stood up and testified that “only” a handful of people from each of the agencies comprising the Utah Data Alliance (K-12, Postsecondary, Workforce, etc.) can access the personally identifiable information that the schools collect.  He said it to reassure us that barring dishonesty or hacking, the personally identifiable information was safe.  But he simultaneously revealed that the schools were indeed collecting that personal information.

Sigh.

Why don’t our leaders study this stuff?  Why, why?

Even Ms. Park’s secondary title, which is something about “federal accountability” is disturbing.  It’s an illegal concept to be federally accountable in the realm of state education.  Has nobody read the 10th Amendment to the Constitution at the State Office of Education?  Has no one read the federal law called the General Educational Provisions Act, which forbids —FORBIDS— the federal government from supervising, directing or controlling education or curriculum in ANY WAY.

I am not the only one flabbergasted at what I saw and heard on that live feed of the Davis District meeting today.

 

This portion is posted with permission from clinical psychologist Gary Thompson.

Gary Thompson:

I’m mortified at USOE.

I’m half tempted to shoot off (another) letter to the State Superintendent of Schools demanding that they stop all future “informational”meetings until they themselves either know the correct answers, or can be honest and simply state, “we are investigating these issues currently, and we will get back to you when we know the answers.”

Anything other than that is pure deception, and if they (Judy Park, etc) are deceiving tax paying parents, then they should be asked to resign from their positions of trust. If I hear one more meeting filled with deception and plausible deniability, I may take it upon myself to publicly ask for those resignations myself in a very public manner that will make the my Glenn Beck appearance look like minor league.

It is just common respect. THEY asked for my letter of assistance and clarification. Attorney Flint and myself spent an entire weekend drafting it for them and the parents in our community.

Their response over a week later?

Crickets.

Not even a thank you note…and then they have the gall to present a LIVE feed to the entire State filled with definitive answers to parents questions that not only could they not answer during our 2 hour in person meeting, but asked for our assistance to clarify the issues they did not understand.

How hard would it had been to simply say, “We do not know.” ???
Ms. Parks response to questions regarding adaptive testing to children with learning “quirks” (our new name for disabilities) was so devious and deceptive that I had to turn it off.

Alisa Olsen Ellis, don’t you ever stop this fight as long as you have life in you.

God bless you.

-Gary Thompson

Utah GOP Resolution on Common Core State Standards and Assessments

This document is a submitted resolution for the Utah GOP state delegates to adopt at the May 2013 state convention. It was being prepared prior to the time the RNC unanimously passed a national resolution against Common Core. Please share this with your friends and neighbors and especially your state GOP delegates. If there is a Democrat who would like to float a similar resolution at their convention, feel free to adopt this as a template. Common Core is not partisan when it comes to damaging our children. Those who have put the Common Core agenda together and stand to reap billions in profits are both Republicans and Democrats. If you are a GOP state delegate and would like to have your name appear as a co-signer, please email Cherilyn Eagar (the chief sponsor) your name and precinct number immediately if you want to co-sign. The deadline for additional co-signers is this week. Her email address is Cherilyn@CherilynEagar.com. You must be a GOP state delegate to co-sign. (Click here to download a pdf copy you can print off)

Resolution on Common Core State Standards and Assessments

WHEREAS, The Common Core State Standards Initiative (“Common Core”), also known as “Utah’s Core,” [1] is not a Utah state standards initiative, but rather a set of inferior nationally-based standards and tests developed through a collaboration between two NGO’s (non-governmental organizations) and unelected boards and consortia from outside the state of Utah;[2] and,

WHEREAS, Common Core was financed with private foundation funds,[3] replacing the influence of our votes with wealth and influence to bypass our state legislature and impose control over Utah’s education standards and tests;[4] and,

WHEREAS, Common Core binds us to an established copyright over standards, from which we cannot subtract, replace or add to – beyond an additional 15%;[5] and,

WHEREAS, the General Educational Provisions Act [6] prohibits federal authority over curriculum and testing, yet the U.S. Department of Education’s “Cooperative Agreements”[7] confirm[8] Common Core’s test-building [9] and data collection[10] is federally managed;[11] and,

WHEREAS, “student behavior indicators”[12] – which include testing[13] for mental health, social and cultural (i.e. religious) habits and attitudes[14] and family status – are now being used for Common Core tests and assessments; and,

WHEREAS, Common Core violates Utah[15] state and federal privacy laws[16] by requiring the storage and sharing[17] of private[18] student[19] and family data without consent;[20] using a pre- school through post-graduate (P-20) tracking system and a federally-funded State Longitudinal Database (SLDS), creating surveillance capability[21] between states[22] and federal agencies,[23] in accordance with funding mandates;[24] and,

WHEREAS, Common Core violates constitutional[25] and statutory prohibitions by pressuring states to adopt the standards with financial incentives tied to President Obama’s Race to the Top, and if not adopted,  penalties[26] including[27] loss of funds; and,

WHEREAS, the federal[28] government is imposing yet another unfunded mandate on our State[29] for unproven[30] Common Core instruction[31], training and testing platforms, without any pledge of financial support from federal, state or local governments; and,

WHEREAS, unproven experiments[32] on our children, lacking empirical data[33] to support them, are removing traditional math, replacing classic literature[34] with increased technical reading[35], and prohibiting teachers from reviewing the tests to know what they ought to be teaching; and,

WHEREAS, this top-down process and the principles behind Common Core[36] undermine the teacher’s role[37] and do not support American and Republican ideals of local control,[38] parental choice[39] in education, standards and testing; and,

WHEREAS, the Republican National Committee recently passed a resolution opposing Common Core State Standards;

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that we call on the Governor[40] and the Utah State School Board to withdraw from, and we ask the Utah State Legislature to discontinue funding programs[41] in association with, The Common Core State Standards Initiative/Utah’s Core and any other alliance[42] that promotes and tests for un-American[43] and inferior,[44] curricula,[45] standards[46] and assessments; and,

THEREFORE, BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that a copy of this resolution shall be delivered to the Governor and the State legislature for executive and legislative action.

Submitted by State Delegate Cherilyn Eagar, Salt Lake County
State Delegate Co-Sponsors:  Wasatch – Alisa Ellis, Norman Durtschi, Anissa Wardell, Patricia Deden, Suzanne Pollard Juab – Stella Lightfoot Washington – Mary Burkett Box Elder Jeff Hardy Weber –  Lance Adams, Dan Deuel, Bea Cardwell, Clark Roberts, Laura Warburton, Gregory Martin, Becky Gerritsen Iron – Blake Cozzens Davis – Rod Arquette, Mark Arrington, Dale Hulse, Stephanie Terry, Kris Kimball, Phill Wright, Mark Cook, Christopher Snell, Bruce Bolingbroke, Barbara Derricott, Stephen P. Cloward, James Oldham, Elizabeth Mumford Summit – Jacqueline Smith Salt Lake – JaKell Sullivan, Jennifer Jensen, Maryann Christensen, Laureen Simper, Larry Jensen, Lisa Cummins, John M. Knab, Scott Miller, Rhonda Hair, Phoenix Roberts, Eric Fowler, Tana Allen, Chelsea Woodruff, Jennifer Jensen, Janalee Tobias, Kendall Springer, Kathryn Gritton, Brian Gallagher, Brent Maxwell, Rebecca Akester, Kurt Jaussi, Joseph Darger Utah – Gayle Ruzicka, Kristen Chevrier; Rod Mann, Larry Cerenzie, Clark Parker, Nancy Jex, Marie Nuccitelli, Amelia Powers, Brandon Watters, Barbara H. Ward, William C. Lee, Heather Williamson, Darren Rollins, Peter Morkel, Lisa Baldwin, Don Carlos Davies, Todd Seager, Rhonda Wilkinson, Alyson Williams, Sherilyn Colby, Diana Ballard, Delvon Bouwhuis, Mike Bready, Richard Jaussi, Tamara Atkin, Jamie Towse, Julie Blaney, Kent Besaw, Kevin Braddy

School Board-Legislative Endorsers: Congressman Jason Chaffetz; State Representatives Jake Anderegg, Brian Greene, Keith Grover, Mike Kennedy, David Lifferth, Curt Oda, Marc Roberts; State Senators Margaret Dayton, Mark Madsen, Stuart Reid;  School Board Members Joyce Sudweeks, (Piute), Peter Cannon (Davis), Brian Halladay, Wendy Hart, Paula Hill (Alpine)

 

 


[1] http://www.corestandards.org/terms-of-use

[2] http://senatedist23.wordpress.com/2012/07/18/common-core-memo-from-judge-norman-h-jackson/

[3] http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases/2010/06/National-Governors-Association-and-State-Education-Chiefs-Launch-Common-State-Academic-Standards

[4] http://www.schools.utah.gov/arra/Uses/Utah-Race-to-the-Top-Application.aspx

[5] A State may supplement the common standards with additional standards, provided that the additional standards do not exceed 15 percent of the State’s total standards for that content area – http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/executive-summary.pdf

[6] “No provision of any applicable program shall be construed to authorize any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over the curriculum, program of instruction, administration, or personnel of any educational institution, school, or school system, or over the selection of library resources, textbooks, or other printed or published instructional materials by any educational institution or school system…” – General Educational Provisions Act

[7] http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop-assessment/sbac-cooperative-agreement.pdf

[8] http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop-assessment/performance.html

[9] http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop-assessment/performance.html

[10] http://nces.ed.gov/forum/datamodel/information/aboutThe.aspx

[11] http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/09/23/remarks-president-no-child-left-behind-flexibility

[12] http://le.utah.gov/~2012/bills/hbillenr/hb0015.htm

[13] https://www.utahnsagainstcommoncore.com/dr-thompsons-letter-to-superintendent-menlove/

[14] http://www.air.org/about/?fa=viewContent&content_id=96

[15] http://le.utah.gov/code/TITLE53A/htm/53A13_030100.htm

[16] http://epic.org/apa/ferpa/EPIC-ED-FERPA-MSJ.pdf

[17] http://www2.ed.gov/about/inits/ed/edfacts/index.html

[18] http://www.dataqualitycampaign.org/stateanalysis/states/UT/

[19] http://nces.ed.gov/programs/slds/state.asp?stateabbr=UT

[20] http://whatiscommoncore.wordpress.com/2012/07/28/usoe-the-answer-is-no-can-a-student-attend-public-school-without-being-p-20slds-tracked/

[21] http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/01/19/unlocking-power-education-data-all-americans

[22] http://siec.utah.gov/

[23] http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/inside-school-research/2012/07/ed_urges_states_to_make_data_s.html

[24] http://www.ed.gov/recovery

[25] http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/tenth_amendment

[26] http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/leg/blueprint/publication_pg4.html

[27] http://dianeravitch.net/2012/12/27/teacher-common-core-harms-my-title-i-students/

[28] http://www.ed.gov/news/speeches/vision-education-reform-united-states-secretary-arne-duncans-remarks-united-nations-ed

[29] http://www2.ed.gov/policy/eseaflex/ut.pdf

[30] http://www.aasa.org/uploadedfiles/publications/newsletters/jsp_winter2011.final.pdf

[31] http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2011/04/27/30pearson.h30.html

[32] http://www.uaedreform.org/wp-content/uploads/2000/01/Stotsky-Invited-Testimony-for-Kansas-on-Common-Core.pdf

[33] http://greatlakescenter.org/docs/Policy_Briefs/Research-Based-Options/02-Mathis_CommonCore.pdf

[34]  http://heinemann.com/shared/onlineresources%5CE02123%5CNewkirk_Speaking_Back_to_the_Common_Core.pdf

[35] http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/RI/11-12

[36] http://www2.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/eec/equity-excellence-commission-report.pdf

[37] http://zhaolearning.com/2013/01/17/more-questions-about-the-common-core-response-to-marc-tucker/

[38] http://www.k12innovation.com/Manifesto/_V2_Home.html

[39] http://aclj.org/education/parental-rights-in-education

[40] http://www.utah.gov/governor/news_media/article.html?article=7433

[41] http://www.prosperity2020.com/2011/07/27/a-focus-on-the-basics/

[42] http://www.utahdataalliance.org/

[43] http://house.michigan.gov/sessiondocs/2013-2014/testimony/Committee223-3-20-2013-6.pdf

[44] http://www.city-journal.org/2012/22_3_massachusetts-education.html

[45] http://hoosiersagainstcommoncore.com/james-milgram-testimony-to-the-indiana-senate-committee/

[46] http://www.uaedreform.org/wp-content/uploads/2000/01/Arkansas-Testimony-2013.pdf