The Record says that the "movement to get parents to keep their children from taking new state exams next month — fueled by protests on social media and encouragement from the teachers union — is gaining steam.” (The media is happy to help: this article from the Courier-Post describes "the PARCC's poorly worded, complicated and even misleading questions" and here's a video from the Asbury Park Press entitled "The Common Core's Greatest Pitfall although the the piece never mentions the Common Core and the link says the title is "PARCC Leaves Poor Students Behind.")
ICYMI, here's my (somewhat jaundiced) view of Ass. Diegnan's second bill.
NJ Spotlight looks at certain fiscal penalties that N.J. might incur by backpedalling on our Race to the Top application that swore we'd use student outcomes for teacher evaluations. Also see Spotlight for this: “A month before New Jersey is to start controversial new state testing aligned to the Common Core State Standards, Gov. Chris Christie muddied the waters this week when he said he now has 'grave concerns' about the standards he previously endorsed and which his administration is busy promoting.” [Question: if Christie is now against the Common Core State Standards and PARCC, will his change of heart provoke NJEA and Save Our Schools to respond by lobbying in favor of high quality standards and assessments?]
Local school districts continue to offer parents opportunities to take the PARCC and see what all the fuss is about. The Star-Ledger reported yesterday from Bloomfield on a simulated 6th grade language arts PARCC test:
Patrick Collins said he found the questions to be straight forward. But he ran into a few problems with the technology.
In answering one question, he thought he had correctly identified the conflict in the reading passage as well as three corresponding events that led to a resolution.
The question required him to click on the correct answers and drag them into sequential order at the bottom of the screen. But some of the answers he clicked on wouldn't seem to move.
"I'm sure my daughter is better at this that I am," Patrick Collins said.
Trenton City Schools has a $19 million budget gap and U.S. Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman says it’s all the state’s fault. The Trentonian looks back to the original appointment of a state fiscal monitor last year:
“It almost appears that every time that it looks at though we are free of this that we’re no longer ‘12 Years a Slave,’” board attorney Kathleen Smallwood Johnson said at the time to applause from the crowd, referencing last year’s Academy Award winner for Best Picture. “I see nothing, sir, in all due respect within the law that mandates that this district has to stay under the bondage of a state monitor.”
The state Department of Education never fully provided an explanation for the monitor, but hinted a reason was student achievement. Trenton’s graduation rate only recently hovered above 50 percent after years of falling below that number.
NJ Spotlight ranks the top
ten public open admissions high schools (i.e., not magnet schools) based on SAT
scores.
The Washington Post looks “behind the curtain” of the Montgomery County Public Schools:
We live in a county where many deride free-breakfast programs but brag about million-dollar sports fields. We complain that our children are losing sleep but ignore children without a bed in which to sleep. We offer $100 yearbooks while some are struggling to read. We are a county with a wide divide — and a color line — between children who “have” and those who “have not.”
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