There is some concerning news coming from Florida regarding private school testing requirements that bears watching not only in that state but other states as well. There has been concern raised to Governor Scott by a private school administrator in Deland about possible testing changes in store for private schools.
The smooth system of transferring credits from private schools to public
schools has apparently been eliminated. According to an email sent to
Governor Scott, the Volusia County Director of Assessment informed the
Trinity Christian Academy in Deltona that credit will not be given to
private school students who transfer to public school for courses, such
as Algebra and Biology, because the standardized end-of-course tests are
not available to them. If this information is correct, the Florida
legislature, Commissioner of Education, and State School Board, by an
act of incompetence or by design, have removed all alternative testing
measures available to students in a private school that would serve in
lieu of end-of-course-exams, leaving students unable to graduate from a
public high school.
"Standardized end-of-course (EOC) tests" can be translated into Common Core assessments....meaning the private school needs to utilize curriculum that tests well on Common Core assessments, otherwise, their students transitioning into public school settings will not receive credit for those private school courses.
The blogger continues:
Is this lapse a way to insert Florida's controversial testing and
accountability system into private schools and exert control over
religious schools? Will the standardized end-of-course requirement
ultimately be required of all schools, public and private? Does the
requirement apply to homeschoolers who transfer back to public school?
Bob Sikes, writing in Scathing Purple Musings:
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Florida Governor Rick Scott followed through on his promise to be more open and created Project Sunburst,
a web site which would publish the emails he receives and sends as
governor. One email easily catches the eye of education policy observers
across the state. It’s from a director of students affairs at a Florida
private school.
Dear Governor Scott:
I am an administrator in a SACS accredited private school. Recently, laws have been passed requiring End of Course (EOC) assessments for classes such as Algebra I and Biology. I have been informed that students leaving our school will be denied credit for these classes because the EOC is not available to them, nor is there an alternative test that can be taken. This seems unfair to me since our students’ families pay their taxes as much as public school students.
What’s more, these families bear the cost of education that our government would have had to carry. Private school students should not be penalized for choosing to go to Florida’s private schools. Again, I have been informed by Volusia County Director of Assessments that our students who have received credit for these classes on their transcripts, will not be given credit in a Florida public school if they should transfer. Also, we could not give an EOC ourselves because it would not be a state standardized test. What are we to do?
On another front, given the current failure rate of Florida students on these tests, it seems short sighted to not have an alternative plan for these students. Our public school system will be burdened with students repeating classes and Florida’s drop-out rate will increase. There are many students who are poor test takers, but excellent students. I have seen these students flourish in college, but now, these same students would probably not have a chance to graduate in order to go to college. How does this benefit our state?
I would appreciate an answer to this email. Thank-you for your consideration in this matter.
Sincerely,
Darlene Hellender, MS of Ed
Director of Student Affairs
Trinity Christian Academy, Deltona
There are countless imperfections to the “choice” theme which drives
Florida’s policymakers. Clearly concerned for her students, Hellender
knows that Trinity’s students may return to public schools for any
number of reasons. The accountability system that republicans have
rammed down Floridian’s throats puts voucher and private school students
in a serious Catch-22. They could certainly take the test when they
get to their new school, but they would be at a significant disadvantage
as they did not go through an Algebra of Biology class which covered
the standards which would be on the test. Extending EOCs and other high
stakes tests to private schools defeats the purpose for families who
chose private schools to get away from tests.
Meanwhile Floridians will vote on Amendment 8 – the fraudulently named Religious Freedom Act
– which will open the door for vouchers to schools like Trinity. The
school’s SAC’s accreditation indicates it’s a fine school and the
professional concern that Hellender has for her students is commendable.
There are sure to be more instances where Florida’s test obsession puts
families and children who are going to private schools or have vouchers
in a bind.
It’s doubtful that Jeb Bush’s foundation doesn’t want Floridians to
know about such problems when they vote on Amendment 8 in less than 80
days. They afterall named it in such a misleading way to begin with.
Suppressing flaws, engaging in propaganda and attempting to trick voters
is the way education privatization zealots roll.
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The question and concern then is this:
there is a quiet effort
underway to slip the common core standards, assessment, and database into
private schools. Vouchers and the Blaine Amendment are connected to this.
Ms. Hellender understands the danger of governmental interference in her school's testing decisions. All of a sudden those vouchers that give parents "choice"....don't really give them "choice" at all when it comes to what their children are learning. What their children learn in private school must adapt to the assessments mandated by the government.
This regulatory change became final in April 2012.
ReplyDeleteHere's the link:
https://www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleNo.asp?id=6A-1.09941
In my view, it is clear as mud. Parents will need lawyers to figure it out. You have to read it yourself.
The public school system could not afford to take in all students who currently attend private schools. It would be a physical and fiscal nightmare. Legislation like this has the unintended effect of making parents who send their kids to private schools rethink that choice and consider sending their children back to public schools because no one will officially recognize their work in the private schools. Have the brain trusts that wrote this legislation considered that they may be drowning/bankrupting their public system in students who would otherwise go the private route?
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