This year’s debacle
with the
state’s grades
3–8 ELA exams proved
to be a nightmare for students
and teachers alike
— and certainly underscored
NYSUT’s “Correctthe Tests” campaign.
While State Education
Commissioner MaryEllen
Elia assured parents and
educators this year’s testing
would be better, it
turned out to be much worse. By the
end of the first week of ELA testing,
Elia expressed regret for the complete
shutdown of computer-based
testing and vowed to hold the testing
vendor, Questar Inc., accountable.
“Regrets are not enough,” said
NYSUT Executive Vice President
Jolene DiBrango at an April 8 press
event on the steps of the State
Education Department while the
Regents met inside. “We need action
now.”
The state testing problems
went far beyond the epic failure of
the computer-based testing trial,
DiBrango noted. There was just as
much frustration with the traditional
paper and pencil exams, which are
still way too long and developmentally
inappropriate.
“We received hundreds of heartbreaking
stories from teachers, parents
and students,” DiBrango said.
“While testing is federally required, it
doesn’t have to be this way.”
“My third-graders were breaking
down in tears out of frustration and
falling asleep because of the length
of the test,” said Schoharie Teachers
Association President Natalie McKay.
“Many were sitting more than 3.5
hours —
that’s longer
than the SAT college
entrance exam!”
McKay said the ELA
exam is more a test of endurance,
than content,
for her 8- and 9-year-old
students.
“It crumbles their
confidence,” she said.
“The kids are not even
showing what they can
do.”
DiBrango noted the
union has also received
disturbing reports of district
administrators using
blatant misinformation and intimidation
tactics to discourage opt outs.
Some building administrators
were refusing to honor parents’
requests to opt their children out,
while others were offering bonuses
for students to participate. Incentives
included pizza parties and special
events where the principal would
shave his head or “kiss a pig” if participation
rates hit 95 percent. Some
schools promised to exempt students
from final exams.
While such events might sound
like harmless fun, parents and educators
argued these kind of activities
made students feel left out, harassed
and traumatized. At least one family
has filed a bullying complaint against
their district under the Dignity for All
Students Act.
The NYSUT media event also
featured a number of Assembly members
who said it is time for SED to
overhaul its testing system or expect
legislative intervention.
“We’re not going to let this continue,”
said Assemblyman Angelo
Santabarbara, D-Rotterdam.
CORRECT THE TESTS
NYSUT’s campaign is urging the
Board of Regents and State Education
Department to fix its flawed and
unfair grades 3–8 testing system. Key
concerns include:
- The state’s ELA and math tests
are too long;
- Untimed testing can be cruel and
traumatic;
- The tests are developmentally
inappropriate;
- Invalid scoring benchmarks
mislabel children and schools;
- Computer-based testing is problematic
and has been rolled out too
quickly. NYSUT opposes online testing
for grades 3–5.
Your Letters
Read the following testimonials
from members across New York State
and share your testing stories at correctthetests.com:
Capital Region
I teach a class with several English
language learners. One student has only
had two years of formal education. This
child wanted to do her best and spent
five hours on day two of the ELA test trying
to read and answer stories and questions
that were far out of reach for her. It
was torture to watch her struggle. Why not
test her at her level and let her find some
success?
Western New York
This year, despite the “shortened” test,
I had 8- and 9-year-old students sitting
for at least two hours straight. As I know
through experience and research, a child
is not developmentally ready to work at
something for this length of time. If testing
of this nature is required, at least make
it accessible to children ... fewer texts to
read and more developmentally appropriate
questions. The written responses were
incredibly long for third graders — six short
response questions and an essay. This
was way too much for them.
Central New York
I was told that if I even ask a child if
they have an opt-out letter I would lose my
certification. I was also told by admin that
as a state employee I was to “sell” the test.
Our school leader told students there were
no opt outs this year. For those that did
bring a letter, a phone call to parents was
made. Parents were told their child would
need the test to qualify for accelerated
classes or to get the help they need.
Lower Hudson Valley
Today I witnessed a very hardworking
student hysterically crying because she
was almost done and her test froze. When
she was able to log back in, all of her
work was gone. Insanity. This child worked
SO hard. How on earth can you expect a
12-year-old to get back into the mindset
to being test ready after having lost all
their hard work?
Lower Hudson Valley
My students had to sit and wait 1 1/2
hours to get onto the system. Finally, when
they did get on and completed the test,
they could not submit! One of my students
had a breakdown, crying. The psychologist
needed to be called in.
Long Island
I had two fifth graders who began day
two of the ELA test at 9:35 and continued
testing until 2 p.m.! They missed lunch,
recess and music. They were permitted to
bring their lunch into the extended testing
room and eat for 10 minutes. They were
so stressed out, but wanted to do their
best. Afterward, when they finally joined
the class again, one of the students asked
me for a hug.
Central New York
A third-grade student told me she
spent the whole day taking the test and
only stopped for lunch. This is abuse.
I think that the governor and other NY
politicians should have to sit and take
the fifth-grade test and only be allowed to
get up for lunch and the bathroom for two
days straight.
Lower Hudson Valley
On day two of the test, my students
had to write six short answers and one
long response! Of my 23 students, 15
were still writing their responses at 2:30!
That’s five hours of testing! When I took
the SAT at 18, it only took three hours to
complete and I was 18, not 8! This was a
form of child abuse.