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Wednesday, July 2, 2014

NEA president: Current testing system “will crumble” | Chalkbeat

NEA president: Current testing system “will crumble” | Chalkbeat:



NEA president: Current testing system “will crumble”

Nation's largest teachers union meeting in Denver








 Two National Education Association leaders Wednesday called for a massive reduction in the amount of student testing and predicted accountability systems based on such assessments “will crumble.”

Dennis Van Roekel, president of the 3 million-member NEA, told a handful of reporters (and several dozen cheering members), “This entire accountability system that’s based on tests will crumble. It’s not a question of if. It’s a question of when.”
He appeared with Kerrie Dallman, president of the Colorado Education Association, an NEA affiliate. Dallman, citing a CEA teacher survey that concluded 30 percent of the school year is consumed by testing, said, “Let’s cap it at 5 percent.”
The two leaders appeared a day before the NEA’s representative assembly convenes for four days of elections, voting on resolutions and deciding on union initiatives for the upcoming year.
The national meeting at the Colorado Convention Center is the first in Colorado since 1962.
Testing, which has come under increasing criticism from state and national teacher groups in the last year, is expected to be a major topic of discussion. One agenda item proposes creation of a “NEA Campaign Against Toxic Testing” that “will conduct a comprehensive campaign to end the high stakes use of standardized tests, to sharply reduce the amount of student and instructional time consumed by tests, and to implement more effective forms of assessment and accountability.” (Read about full proposal here.)
Dennis Van Roekel (left) and Kerrie Dallman.
Dennis Van Roekel (left) and Kerrie Dallman.
Van Roekel and Dallman pounded on those themes Wednesday, with Van Roekel saying testing “has failed the children of America” and “I don’t need five more years of the same results to show me which students aren’t getting what they need.”
Dallman criticized “the corporate-driven testing culture” and said it’s “taking the joy” out of schools.
“We are here to tell Colorado we are all moreNEA president: Current testing system “will crumble” | Chalkbeat: