Nashville State Representative Mike Stewart talks about the decision he and his wife made to refuse standardized testing for their daughter this year.
He told Nashville Public Radio:
Parents are rallying in other parts of the state as well, and Rep. Mike Stewart, D-Nashville, is among them. He and his wife decided to opt out their daughter after speaking out against it themselves.
Stewart says, “We just felt like, we’re telling people these tests are so wrong. We should step up and opt out. We should live with our convictions.”
Stewart also noted:
“Testing has it’s place [but] it has gotten completely out of control to where the tests are driving what is going on in the classroom year round.”
As far as keeping up with how many students opt-out, WPLN reports:
School districts are not required to keep track of opt-out numbers because the state doesn’t officially recognize it as an option for students. Blank answer sheets are simply referred to as “irregularities.”
What do you think? Are you a parent “opting-out” or refusing testing this year? Are you a teacher who thinks TNReady’s rollout has caused too much stress? Should districts refuse to administer TNReady Phase II as was discussed by the Murfreesboro School Board?
Let us know!
For more on education politics and policy in Tennessee, follow @TNEdReport