Instructions below for getting on the agenda.
- November 18, 2013, 5-7 p.m. - Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, 75 Pleasant Street, Malden (Meeting Notice Posted: 11/13/13, 9:05 A.M.)
- November 19, 2013, 8:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. - Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, 75 Pleasant Street, Malden (Meeting Notice Posted: 11/13/13, 9:05 A.M.)
The Board of Elementary and Secondary Education welcomes public comment on matters within its purview. Accordingly, the Board makes available a maximum 30-minute period at its regular meetings for persons in the audience to address the Board for no longer than 3 minutes. Written material of any length may be submitted. Preference will be given to persons who seek to address the Board on specific agenda items for the upcoming Board meeting. Agendas for upcoming Board meetings are generally posted 5 days prior to the meeting at www.doe.mass.edu/boe/docs/. Persons wishing to speak are strongly encouraged to submit their request before the day of the meeting; contact information is provided below. Preference will be given to those who submit requests by 5:00 p.m. on the Thursday preceding the regular Tuesday meeting. If time permits, the chairman will allow members of the public who have not contacted the Department in advance to speak in the public comment period; those individuals must sign in prior to the start of the meeting. The chairman may limit the number of speakers due to time constraints and may increase or reduce the time allocated per speaker. While there is no requirement to submit written testimony, a speaker who elects to do so should submit 15 copies of the testimony prior to or at the meeting for distribution to Board members. Requests to address the Board, written testimony, and other inquiries may be transmitted by mail, e-mail, fax, or telephone to: Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, 75 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA 02148, Phone: 781-338-3102, Fax: 781-338-3770, E-mail: boe@doe.mass.edu.
The Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, an affirmative action employer, is committed to ensuring that all of its programs and facilities are accessible to all members of the public. We do not discriminate on the basis of age, color, disability, national origin, race, religion, sex, gender identity, or sexual orientation. Inquiries regarding the Department's compliance with Title IX and other civil rights laws may be directed to the Human Resources Director, 75 Pleasant St., Malden, MA 02148, phone: 781-338-6105.
From my own 3 minutes of comments a while back on the eve of Massachusetts teacher evaluation scheme based on test scores:
Public Testimony on Massachusetts
Teacher Evaluation Proposal
Jim Horn, Schools Matter
April 27, 2011
For the
teachers who are growing our future today and can't be here, I speak against
this latest plan by the Business Roundtable to further cripple our public
schools, to more profoundly objectify our children, to pull apart the
teacher-child relationship built on caring and trust.
This new
corporate reform represents a well-funded form of bullying at the highest
levels, not by elected officials or their appointees, but by unelected
oligarchs whose hostile ideology threatens a takeover of public institutions in
order to control steerage of an economy whose jobs they have shipped abroad,
where children who can’t read or write work for slave wages to make the goods
that Americans once made.
Corporate
meddling in schools is nothing new. At the turn of the 20th Century, efficiency
zealots insisted that schools operate as efficiently as the Henry Ford’s new
production lines. Bolstered by the new psychometrics, and inspired by eugenics,
those scientific managers kicked off the first orgy of tabulation in American
schools, replete with scandalous IQ and achievement tests used to drive class
wedges into the heart of the common school.
It took an
economic depression and a world war to end that testing crusade, but it didn’t
take long for a similar sorting machine to replace it, and another one after
that with a new corporate label—accountability. So for the past 30 years we’ve
devoted enormous energies to more sorting the poor by testing, that deform children, debase our ethics, and
blow up our public schools, thus leaving urban poor kids more intensely
segregated in corporate welfare charter schools built on a chain gang pedagogy
that accepts no excuses, not even hunger or homelessness.
Even so,
public school teachers of the Commonwealth persist in their noble work of
teaching children, and
teaching them well despite the unending attacks in the media.
In January,
in fact, Governor Patrick announced that our 4th graders tied for first, and 8th graders tied for
second on the most recent NAEP tests, having led the nation since 2005. On the
2007 TIMSS international math and science test, our 4th graders ranked
second worldwide and 8th graders tied for first. If it weren’t for the bottom quintile of
poor kids, in fact, most states’ schools would be ranked among the top
countries in the world.
So what is
the crisis to be averted this time by making test scores even more high stakes?
Beneath the threadbare corporate veil of concern for achievement, we find here
a transparent attack on teachers, on academic freedom, job security and
autonomy, and on the teacher-student bond as teaching and learning give way
even more to testing production. To achieve these goals is essential, however,
if children and teachers are to be molded to fit a global economy with fewer
local options and more dead end jobs.
One teacher
recently interviewed spoke facetiously or cynically (it is hard to tell the
difference these days) of how students may soon enter her classroom labeled as
“pay cut” or “bonus.” This is harsh, but the reality is that a model that
explicitly ties children’s scores to monetary worth creates such an atmosphere.
Even effective and empathic teachers will be aware of how individual students
may influence their own family’s economic security. Tying teacher pay or job
security to test scores will not make teachers more accountable for student
achievement, but it will have a deadly impact on the now tenuous relationship
at the heart of student learning and growth.
This whole
business of using value-added testing to evaluate teachers requires much more
research before it can ever be done responsibly. I urge you to heed the
National Research Council findings instead of parroting papers by the New
Teacher Project or Education Trust or NCTQ, whose funders control both sides of
the aisle of that same corporate jet fueled by tax credits.
Don’t turn children
into Pay Cut Sally or Bonus Billy based on their socioeconomic status before
they ever sit down at a desk. This is bad policy that threatens to finish off
the profession and to turn teaching toward a low-level child management
occupation of last resort.
When the
disgusted Spanish philosopher Unamuno confronted the fascist General Milan Astray
in 1936, he said:
You will
win because you have more than enough brute force. But you will not convince.
For to convince you need to persuade. And in order to persuade you would need
what you lack: Reason and Right in the struggle. I consider it futile to exhort
you to think of Spain.
I do not
think it futile to exhort you to help preserve the teacher-child relationship
in Massachusetts. We are not yet a corporate dictatorship. In the meantime, the
teachers, parents, and other active citizens of the Commonwealth are not
persuaded. Reason and Right are lacking. We shall continue to stand for Reason
and Right and to resist all else.
No comments:
Post a Comment