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Proposed Bill of Rights for Test Takers
- To: CalCare CalCare <ca-resisters@interversity.org>
- Subject: Proposed Bill of Rights for Test Takers
- From: Harold Berlak <hberlak@yahoo.com>
- Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 16:28:35 -0700
- Reply-to: Harold Berlak <hberlak@yahoo.com>
Proposed Bill of Rights for Test Takers: Family and Student Testing
Protection Act
Purpose: to protect students, families and local communities from
abusive assessment practices, violations of due process and civil rights
Problem I:
Growing numbers of students are being denied access to programs and
schools, or barred from receiving high school diplomas or graduation
certificates based solely on standardized test scores. These
students are disproportionately poor, African American, and from
immigrant families whose home language is not English. There are also
significant numbers of students, including exceptionally talented
ones, who do badly on conventional standardized tests.
Remedies:
1. The use of standardized tests as the sole or primary basis for
determining student access to advanced programs, schools, and
awarding of certificates or diplomas is prohibited. Non-
standardized, qualitative modes of assessment should be available to
students or particular groups of students whose education is better
served by alternatives to standardized tests.
2. An Educational Impact Report is required prior to imposition a
system of assessment or particular method of assessment by a
governing authority. This report would seek to determine immediate
and longer term effects on students, schools, and local communities
(disaggregated by race, gender and family income), and to assess the
human and material resources required to fulfill the assessment
requirements.
3. Parents have the right to exempt their children from tests and
assessments that they deem as harmful or inappropriate. No punitive
consequences may be applied by governments to students or schools if
parents choose to exercise their right to exempt a child from taking
a particular test or set of tests.
Problem II
Among the more destructive provisions of NCLB and state testing
regulations is that schools that fail to meet certain numerical
targets set by standardized tests scores face being ‘restructured’ or
dismantled. The are numerous documented cases of exemplary schools
that have closed or are under threat of closure based on student
standardized test scores.
Remedy:
No school or program within a school may be disestablished or
restructured based solely or primarily on rankings of students on
standardized tests.
Problem III
The pressures on schools to raise standardized test scores,
particularly those that serve poor and children of color, narrows the
curriculum, ignoring crucial areas of children’s and adolescents’
development and growth. Among the casualties are music, the arts,
bilingual education, community internships, civic education, fitness
and health education.
Remedy:
State and federal governments have the authority to set general
guidelines and standards under this Act. However governments are
forbidden to mandate local school priorities, or specify curriculum
content and pedagogy.
Problem IV
The federal government using power it claims under the NCLB Reading
First provisions is dictating to states and school districts how
reading should be taught. The US Department of Education currently
approves funding for materials that meet the federal government’s
interpretation of the NCLB Reading First provisions.
Remedy:
The determination of good and appropriate practice resides with the
teachers and local educational authorities. A legal requirement
for ‘scientifically based’ materials and approaches may not be
construed as granting governments the authority to dictate to
schools’ personnel policies and expenditures for texts and curriculum
resources.
Problem V
Parents and students are rarely informed by schools of their rights
with respect to testing and assessment. Information about test
content, technical specifications, and methods of analyzing and
reporting test results are kept secret or withheld from students,
parents, and the public.
Remedy:
Student and parent testing and assessment rights, including those
specified in this Act, must be prominently displayed and a good faith
effort made by teachers and school officials to inform parents, and
students of their rights. Students, parents, and the public have the
right to be fully informed about what content, skills, or
competencies are being assessed.
Harold Berlak
March 21, 2007