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Re: Kozol to Kennedy


  • To: <arn-l@interversity.org>
  • Subject: Re: Kozol to Kennedy
  • From: "Monty Neill" <monty@fairtest.org>
  • Date: Fri, 4 Jan 2008 16:47:08 -0500
  • References: <74ef86749757.74975774ef86@montclair.edu>
  • Reply-to: "Monty Neill" <monty@fairtest.org>

Yes, the best of assessment practices can be perverted by stupid and destructive approaches to accountability. In MA, a state portfolio process to be used for students with disabilities who could not take the state test was so cumbersome and time-consuming that even teachers who liked and used portfolios on their own hated it. Good assessment practices will not thrive in harmful accountability structures. NCLB reinforces weak to bad assessment in a damaging structure. We must push Congress to change both aspects - hence all the links among test-ayp-sanction.

Monty
----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter S. Campbell" <campbellp@mail.montclair.edu>
To: <arn-l@interversity.org>
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2008 4:00 PM
Subject: Re: [arn-l] Kozol to Kennedy


Even in using more valuable kinds of assessment, e.g., classroom-based formative assessment, there's a tension between assessment for learning and assessment of learning for documentation and accountability purposes. In other words, it's hard to care about students when you're so busy writing down observable performance data about them that ties into State Standards CA42.A1, SS16.B12, and M27.J4. Learning vs. proving you have learned are two different objectives. In the former, both the student and the teacher may actually care about the outcome. And they may care less whether it can be quantified and recorded.

But in this new quantifiable game, "proving I have taught well" or "proving I have learned" are euphemistic covers for "please don't fire me" and "please don't fail me" respectively. Under NCLB, even really good assessment practices, when operating under the weight of "accountability," can become about covering one's derriere. Inevitably, and quite logically, students may focus only on those things they can demonstrate they know and that they are good at. Teachers may focus only on those things they can demonstrate they can teach with predictable, positive outcomes. Neither can afford to show process or ambiguity, and certainly neither wants to show a lack of knowledge or competence or even – heaven forbid – that they are wrong about something. Moreover, if the measures they use to capture and record knowledge and performance are biased towards reliability instead of validity, such measures as "process" and "growth" do not even register as possible options.

Peter Campbell

----- Original Message -----
From: PRISCILLA GUTIERREZ <pgutpgut@msn.com>
Date: Friday, January 4, 2008 11:31 am
Subject: Re: [arn-l] Kozol to Kennedy



Last month I wrote to Kozol, suggesting he introduce the term, Body
of Evidence, into the discussion. I received an email from one of
his assistants stating Kozol considered it "tremendously good and
apt" and will attempt to bring the concept into the discussion when
he meets with the Senator next week. We shall see...




Priscilla Gutierrez
Outreach Specialist
New Mexico School for the Deaf

...change is inevitable, growth is optional...



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