Public Comments Received During the 30-day Comment Period
July 2017
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) 2018-2019
ED-2017-ICCD-0087 Comments on FR Doc # 2017-12861
Document: ED-2017-ICCD-0087-0004
Name: Jonathan Roland
First:
Do you know that you will get very few comments from classroom
teachers through this portal? Do you care? I only had a chance of
negotiating this system because I did some work as a regulatory
engineering consultant for DOE, EPA and the military before becoming
a teacher. Few classroom teachers would have a clue how to provide
you comments.
Second:
Please realize that every state test/data collection affects every
student and teacher even if only some students are tested. This
spring, PARCC tested 20% of our students but it required all of our
computers and lab classrooms so computer classes had no computers and
science classes could do no labs for two weeks. Teachers spend hours
and hours proctoring and students spent days taking tests. Who did
the COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS and decided the data was worth the cost to
education?
Third:
My school system (Baltimore County Public Schools, Maryland) took on
all sorts of data collection requirements in order to get some "Race
to the Top" funds. The requirements burden teachers and
administrators and take away significant planning and instructional
time from students The funds were used to fund new
impressive-sounding programs that created new administrative
positions and departments while benefiting few/no students. BCPS is
now stuck with the data collection burdens, the budgetary costs of
maintaining the new positions and departments, and a well-spring of
new oversight burdens continually being created by the RTTT-created
managers whose RTTT-programs are over but who now must justify their
jobs by creating new requirements for teachers to collect data and
write reports. Very little benefit is created while resources are
wastefully consumed. Students are short-changed. The decision-makers
have no reason to stop the waste; their prestige is based on growth.
RTTT made this quagmire possible.
Please,
please, please stop sending money to the schools unless you can
somehow safeguard against money being used to feed the bureaucracy
that diverts teachers' focus, time, and energy away from our
classrooms and students.
Fourth:
While teaching public high school for 23 years, George W. Bush shook
my hand in the White House and congratulated me on winning the
Presidential Award for Excellence in Science and Math Teaching, I was
invited to be one of the eight-member National Academies Teacher
Advisory Council but declined because it would have taken me out of
my classroom, I won the Radio Shack National Teacher Award, I am a
reader for the College Board AP Physics Test and I taught as an
adjunct professor for Johns Hopkins and a number of other
universities.
Fifth:
I hope my credentials give me some credibility, but every teacher who
works in a classroom deserves to be heard. Here is the situation,
please listen. Good teachers have so little margin to voice anything
to the regulators and when we do nobody really listens. You know it
is true. When we talk at all, our whisper is filtered through the
money being made by Pearson and College Board. University Professors
and consultants have much louder voices. The power lies in the
departments, officials and managers whose metric is based on dollars
spent and requirements enacted and checked off. Classroom teachers
are left out of the conversation. We are teachers because our hearts
are in the classroom with our students, not in the public arena but
WE ARE THE ONLY ONES WHO REALLY KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON. How many
students are taught in the halls of the Federal, State, and Local
Departments of Education? None. None. None. But the power and money
are there.
PLEASE,
PLEASE, PLEASE take the money away from the bureaucracy - it only
grows for its own benefit at the expense of the students.
At
the very least, remove every string from local empowerment about how
resources are spent. The parents, guardians and teachers see results
first-hand and learn the best application of resources. As a
rule-of-thumb, the further from the classroom that decisions are
made, the more damaging for students, e.g. Race to the Top (i.e.,
Race to the Top Heavy).
I
remember an open comment session on some environmental regulation
where a man spent his 5 minutes howling like a coyote to speak for
all of the animals who have no voice in Congress. In that vein, I am
tempted to collect "Teacher Development Plans" and whatever
other great cost/small benefit requirements that teachers are forced
to produce to justify the money and jobs invested in educational
management and to fill every room of the Rayburn office building with
this wasted paper representing wasted efforts of teachers across the
country. Education could have been so much better, if only the people
in Washington had insisted on listening to the teachers and students,
instead of taking the counsel from the normal crowd of "elite"
and "experts" and people who make their money on education
while never teaching a child.
Thank
you for reading this.
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NCES Response:
Dear Mr. Roland,
Thank you for your years of service in education, and for your feedback posted on June 23, 2017 to a 30-day request for comments on the proposed National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP): 2018-2019. The National Center for Education Statistics appreciates your interest in the NAEP assessments. I have provided a response (below) to your comments.
The program appreciates the time you have taken to share your perceptions and experiences. Your comments are part of the public record. They will also be shared with the Acting Commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics that administers the NAEP program, and others. Regarding your concerns about Education programs, you might consider writing to your representatives in the House and Senate where laws regarding public education are made.
In response to your concern that, in general, teachers are not heard, the NAEP program has a portal especially designed to capture feedback from teachers and administrators involved in the NAEP assessments. NAEP also sponsors expert panels of principals and teachers to provide feedback on the NAEP program. Additionally, NAEP and NCES welcome feedback from the public, including teachers, on their websites. Their comments can be entered at https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/contactus.aspx?topic=11 and https://nces.ed.gov/help/webmail/.
You have described your view of the impact of standardized testing on instructional time and access to computers at school. State testing programs (including PARCC) differ from NAEP in many ways, not least of which is that each state has a unique testing program that they oversee at the state level. NCES cannot comment on the impact of state testing programs since this not within NCES’ jurisdiction. We can however comment on the procedures used for NAEP testing in which NAEP field staff come into the school with all testing components (test booklets, tablets/devices, and all other equipment being used), set up the testing space themselves, administer the assessment, and then break down the testing space and equipment. School personnel are not responsible for any set-up or assessment-proctoring tasks. In most cases NAEP is in a school for one day and assesses only a sample of approximately 50 students per school. NAEP is sensitive to school burden and works closely with states and districts to limit the effect of our data-collection on schools.
Again, thank you for your feedback. It will be considered as NAEP designs its future assessments.
Sincerely,
Linda Hamilton
National Assessment Division
National Center for Education Statistics
U.S. Department of Education
Office: 202-245-6360
Document: ED-2017-ICCD-0087-0005
Name: Kristen Roland
Please
consider recalculating your total estimated number of annual burden
hours. 371,166 additional annual burden hours are estimated for
adding Oral-Ready Fluency, just one component of testing, to the
existing NAEP requirements.
Consider
the 154,000 hours that my son's high school spent to administer the
PARCC test this spring to 20% of the student body over a period of
ten days. This is only one of several government-mandated testing
programs the school is required to implement.
2200
students and staff x 10 days of disruption to instruction x 7 hours
per day = 154,000 hours of instructional time. This is a very modest
estimate; please read on:
Many
teachers and administrators came in early and stayed late doing
classroom setup and breakdown and a myriad of similar tasks to
facilitate testing and reporting. In addition, groups of students
helped with daily computer setup and breakdown, furniture arrangement
and storage, and similar tasks. My son spent 15 minutes every morning
setting up testing laptops and equipment.
The
school was required to purchase computer mice, microphones and
headphones, extension cords and other testing-related equipment, all
of which needed to be set up, dismantled, and stored on a daily
basis. For ten days.
Every
government-mandated test effectively halts the process of instruction
and learning for the entire school. My son's classes were moved so
the rooms could be used for testing. No one could use the library for
10 days because it was used for testing. Displaced teachers did their
best to instruct in remote locations. Lateness to class due to
constantly changing room assignments. No computers were available for
learning during this time. The normal lunch schedule was disrupted,
and many students were unfit for instructional activities following
hours of testing.
I
am convinced that the individuals or committees that put this burden
on public educators and students were looking through rose-colored
lenses. I would be hard-pressed to find an informed parent or
educator* who would agree with the policies and priorities of this
government with reference to the way money is spent and regulations
are imposed on our nation's public schools.
If
you are estimating 371,166 hours of burden for the nation just for
Oral-Ready Fluency, and my son's high school arguably spent 154,000
hours on the current version of this one assessment, then you are too
far away from a classroom to make an accurate estimate.
*By
educator, I mean a professional who works face-to-face with students
on a daily basis. I am afraid the government fundamentally
misunderstands the difference between educator and manager (i.e.
administrator, superintendent, or anyone else who sits in an office
and makes educators abandon their classes to attend meetings and
training sessions for which they will find little or no
instructionally profitable application.)
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NCES Response:
Dear Ms. Roland,
First, thank you for taking the time to review the materials and for providing feedback (posted on June 23, 2017) responding to a 30-day request for comments on the proposed National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP):2018-2019.
In response to your suggestion that we recalculate the burden for ORF, we would first like to clarify that 371,166 hours is the 2-year annual average burden for NAEP in general. Per Paperwork Reduction Act reporting guidelines, the estimated burden for ORF in 2018 is 500 hours. For NAEP, the burden is calculated as time beyond the cognitive testing time (the time students spend responding to subject-specific content such as math questions). The burden accounts for non-cognitive time such as responding to questionnaires, reading directions, logging into the system etc. The estimates are based on previously collected timing data and are regularly reevaluated as new data are collected each year.
State testing programs (including PARCC) differ from NAEP in many ways, not least of which is that each state has a unique testing program that they oversee at the state level. NCES cannot comment on the burden of state testing programs since this not within NCES’ jurisdiction. We can however comment on the procedures used for NAEP testing in which NAEP field staff come into the school with all testing components (test booklets, tablets/devices, and all other equipment being used), set up the testing space themselves, administer the assessment, and then break down the testing space and equipment. Schools provide only a room and access to electrical outlets for digitally based assessments. School personnel are not responsible for any set-up or assessment-proctoring tasks. In most cases NAEP is in a school for one day and assesses only a sample of approximately 50 students per school. NAEP is sensitive to school burden and works closely with states and districts to limit the effect of our data-collection on schools.
We do appreciate your feedback about the burden of NAEP and will continue to look for ways to minimize our footprint in schools.
Sincerely,
Linda Hamilton
National Assessment Division
National Center for Education Statistics
U.S. Department of Education
Office: 202-245-6360
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