From In These
Times.
It's not like tests themselves are
inherently evil. Almost every teacher gives some kind of test or assessment.
But when you place so much, so many outcomes on that edifice it's too much
weight for that instrument to bear. It distorts and warps the whole teaching
and learning process.
“Teaching is a caring profession–a humane
profession about human beings engaging with one another,” says Brian Jones, a
former New York City public-school teacher now pursuing a PhD in urban
education. “Relationships between the teachers and the learners are an important
part of the whole process.”
Jones and other teachers worry that the new
system of teacher evaluations slated to be implemented this fall in New York's
public schools will take caring out of the equation.
The new system, which was imposed by state
education commissioner John King after the United Federation of Teachers and
Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration could not negotiate a deal, will bring millions in federal “Race to the Top” funds to
the city's schools.
In a statement, Michael Mulgrew, the
president of the UFT, wrote: “New York City teachers will now have additional
protections and opportunities to play a larger role in the development of the
measures used to rate them. Despite Mayor Bloomberg’s desire for a 'gotcha' system,
as Commissioner King noted today, New York City 'is not going to fire its way
to academic success.'” He pointed out that there are additional opportunities
for teachers to challenge violations of the process by supervisors before they
get their ratings.
But UFT members now face the possibility that
they could lose their jobs if they receive “ineffective” ratings two years in a
row. Teachers will be ranked “highly effective,” “effective,” “developing,” or
“ineffective”—or, as John Surico at the Village Voice
describes it, “Instead of pass/fail, we now have more of a letter-grade-esque
method to grade our educators with more lethal consequences if you earn too
many Fs.”
The deal requires that 20 to 25 percent of the
teacher's rating come from state tests, another 15 to 20 percent from “measures established by the school”
(which Jones says are likely to be more tests), and 55 to 60 percent from
in-class observations or video-recorded performance assessments by principals.
But an “ineffective” rating on the tests trumps
the other measures. Jones explains, “Teachers rated ineffective on the tests
have to be rated ineffective overall. Even a glowing teacher with great rapport
with her students, if the test scores don't rise at the predetermined level,
that teacher has to be rated ineffective.
Carol Burris, New York's 2013 Principal of the
Year, criticized this aspect of the system in the Washington Post,
calling it a “foolish inequity, with real life consequences.”
A brief history of (resistance to) standardized
tests
The new evaluation deal comes at a time when the
pushback against standardized testing, from parents and students as well as
teachers,has reached new heights. Seattle's Garfield High School teachers
rocked the education world when they refused to administer the Measures of Academic
Progress (MAP) test this past January, gaining support from
students and seeing their boycott spread to other Washington schools before
winning a huge victory—the MAP will now be
optional. And the president of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi
Weingarten, called for a moratorium on high-stakes standardized testing tied to
new Common Core Standards,
noting that tests have led to unprecedented student stress and proposing that
until states and districts work with teachers to implement the standards
properly, “the tests should be decoupled from decisions that
could unfairly hurt students, schools, and teachers.”
Last winter, I spoke to Ira Shor, a
City University of New York professor who studies urban education, about the
problems with standardized testing:
These tests, he explained, emerged around World
War I as “intelligence” tests for the US Army. Public schools took them up at a
time when dropout rates were high among working-class students and young people
were “sorted” into tracks, pushing working-class students into vocational
programs while the more elite students were tracked for more rigorous academic
work. During the Cold War, students were tested more rigorously, but the '60s
and '70s saw pushback from social movements on the way education was set up.
But, Shor noted, for the last 40 years, there has been a strenuous public
relations campaign pushing for more testing – more “accountability” to keep
American students “competitive.”
As discontent has grown, parents around the
country have been opting out of standardized tests
for their children, but New York, it appears, is doubling down instead.
“For the students, this is going to be way more
time spent taking assessments, in every single class they take, there will be
no break from assessments,” Jones says. “If we thought the testing regime was
too much already, it's going to be more out of control now that you're going to
have to have a test for the gym teacher, a test for the music teacher.”
“It's not like tests themselves are inherently
evil. Almost every teacher gives some kind of test or assessment,” Jones says.
“But when you place so much, so many outcomes on that edifice it's too much
weight for that instrument to bear. It distorts and warps the whole teaching
and learning process.”
That teaching process becomes focused on the
test, drilling students over and over so they can answer the questions
properly, so the teachers' ratings don't fall. It incentivizes cheating, Jones
notes, and indeed we've seen this problem in other cities that relied heavily
on standardized testing. And all that cramming leaves less room for the other
parts of a teacher's job, the parts that aren't as easy to test.
“Women's work”
As I wrote recently for Jacobin, the emotional labor
component of many jobs, including teaching, has been systemically undervalued
even as those jobs were shaped by the expectation that those who did them would
be natural carers. Their purported inherent ability to care was a convenient
ideological excuse to seek out women, who would work for less money, for
teaching jobs, as Dana Goldstein has written. Emily
Giles, a high school science teacher in the South Bronx, noted during a recent panel I hosted at Left Forum that
since the beginning of public schools, teaching has been dominated by women.
Currently, 75 percent of New York State public school teachers are women.
Women teachers had to then fight to get equal pay
and job security. “In some states it took up until 1960 for, specifically,
married women to be granted the right to tenure,” said Giles. “In other places,
like New York City, equal wages for women in the classroom and tenure for
married women were won as early as 1911, because along with super-high demand
for teachers in the classroom, there was an active feminist movement fighting
alongside [the teachers], saying 'Yeah, we're going to put women in the
classroom but you're going to pay them the right amount, they're going to be
granted the rights that they deserve.'”
The care women were expected to provide was never
treated as a skill that deserved decent pay; instead, it was (wrongly) seen as
an inherent characteristic. Yet in the push to strip down teaching to its
testable components, the very traits that were once seen as integral to the
profession are now being cut out. “The space for other kinds of pedagogies that
are more child-centered or more child or learner-directed is very much
closing,” says Jones.
The end of any pretense at valuing care instead
seems to lay bare the real reasoning that the field became dominated by
women—the lower wages and less respect.
Now, Giles sees what she considers the removal of
tenure as a feminist issue. Only 13 percent of teachers who receive an
“ineffective” rating will be allowed to appeal, she noted, and it's unclear how
those 13 percent will be chosen.
Teachers under the microscope
Concerns about the new evaluation system stretch
beyond the standardized testing component. Jones notes that the new evaluation
system requires far more observation of teachers by administrators.
“Administrators are going to have very little
time for parents or children or programming or planning or anything other than
these observations and teacher evaluation,” he says.
Video recordings of teachers' work may be part of
the evaluation process, adding yet another layer of surveillance to the process
that already leaves many teachers feeling like they're not trusted.
(But it could be worse—news broke earlier this
month that the Gates Foundation is spending $1.4 million to
test biometric bracelets that claim to measure student engagement by a sensor
on their wrists. They're not required in classrooms yet, but the very news that
they're being tested shows the increasing desire to observe, control and
measure every aspect of what happens in the classroom. Measuring how much a
student is responding to a lesson by their “arousal” might seem in some sense
more humane than boiling everything down to a Scantron sheet, but in the end
the result, a Gates spokesperson admitted, would probably be the same—a process
originally sold as a way to help teachers improve winding up as a way to make
it easier to fire them instead. It's the drive to measure every facet of the
classroom experience taken to its most absurd end. )
Mayoral candidate and former school-board
president and City Comptroller Bill Thompson called the new evaluation plan
“unworkable in its complexity and bureaucracy.” The comments were notable, the Wall Street Journal pointed out, because Thompson's
campaign co-chair is Merryl Tisch, the New York state Board of Regents
chancellor, who oversees the education commissioner who imposed the plan.
(Tisch, not surprisingly, disagreed with Thompson's comments.)
The position taken by mayoral candidates on the
evaluation system is particularly important because the UFT still has no
contract with the city and will be looking to the next mayor to be willing to
negotiate. In his statement, Mulgrew noted, “The precise measures of student
learning established by this ruling will be in effect unless and until they are
altered in collective bargaining with the new Mayor who takes office in seven
months.”
UFT members have been working without a contract
for over four years now,
longer than most of the other public unions, who've also been struggling to come to a deal with
Bloomberg's administration. Thompson received the endorsement of the UFT after
his comments, despite a report that
he's been cozying up to charter school backers who are close with the outgoing
mayor.
For teachers, though, the question isn't one of
politics, but of teaching. With the focus remaining on finding more and more
ways to track, test, and punish individual teachers, the human parts of their
job get shoved to the back burner, and they—and their students—suffer.
“The parts of helping students find confidence,
helping them to latch on to their passions, empowering them,” Jones says, “that
aspect of teaching and learning is greatly undervalued, and that's a very
difficult thing to impose from above. If you want that kind of teaching
and learning you have to work at that from the ground up. You can't just issue
an edict: 'Thou shalt be an inspiring teacher.' ”
ABOUT THIS AUTHOR
Sarah Jaffe is an independent journalist, a rabblerouser and
contributor to Truthout, AlterNet, The Nation, Jacobin and others.
Follow her exploits on Twitter @sarahljaffe.
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