Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 2019)
Local Vocal and DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION BY ROSCOE CARON AND LARRY LEWIN Up Against the Machine BILLS IN SALEM FIGHT THE EDUCATION COMBINE “You had a choice: You could either strain and look at things that appeared in front of you in the fog, painful as it might be, or you could relax and lose yourself.” — Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest I n Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the character Chief Bromden could hear the hum of “The Combine” in the walls. It was the sound of the system that strips us of our humanity and individuality. It crushes spirits until they conform. Pop quiz: What would Ken Kesey think of to- day’s corporate “reform” model of education that reduces much of the adventure and joy of learning to meet- ing pre-ordained metrics and benchmarks based on end- lessly repeated standardized testing? Community Alliance for Public Education (CAPE) members have been busy in Salem working on legisla- tion designed to challenge parts of the testing-industrial complex. Made up of testing companies, the vast data- gathering state and local educational bureacracies, the corporate-backed “stakeholder” lobbying groups that promote “accountability,” and legislators who are unable to oppose those forces — this is “The Combine” that has run educational policy in Oregon for two decades. This is the machine that presently runs your child’s classroom. The “Too Young to Test” bill (HB 2318) that would pro- hibit mandatory testing from prekindergarten through grade two is stalled. House Education Committee mem- bers know this testing is excessive and inappropriate. Fac- ing intense lobbying and not able to envision an alternative to the failed testing-based model they have historically supported, they are stuck. The “Eliminate Oregon’s Graduation Barrier” bill (SB 456) is doing better. There’s less money involved and join- ing the 40 states that have no graduation testing require- ment is less threatening but is certainly not a slam dunk. Also up against the machine, our hero in Salem, Sen. Lew Frederick (D—Portland), has an “Opt-Out Strength- ening Bill” (SB 433). Frederick, an author of the original 2015 opt-out bill, is furious at the way local districts are doing everything possible to prevent parents from opting out of state-mandated high-stakes testing. This includes minimizing notification of parents’ rights, ordering teach- ers to not talk to parents about their rights and directly discouraging parents from opting out. This is a system based on fear and misinformation. Frederick’s other bill, “Comprehensive Audit of Testing Costs” (SB 428) would document the real costs of manda- tory standardized testing. It’s fascinating that the data- obsessed complex displays no desire to know the actual costs of its own system: “the impacts on instructional time, curricula, educators’ exercise of professional judgment, budgets and administrative time and focus”. If the public knew the real price of the corporate “reform” model, they would reject it. The testing machine operates in the shad- ows, behind walls. Locally, last school year CAPE conducted a pilot study of time consumed by mandatory standardized testing with 10 local teachers keeping a log of time they spent ad- ministering, practicing or meeting to discuss tests with colleagues, administrators or parents. These teachers averaged 46 hours in the year — some spent considerably more time. We believe most teachers do. This computes to six school days — even more than the recently lost snow days. We moan about making up snow days in June but somehow accept days lost to testing. And so much more than time is being lost to testing. Time to jam the machine. Roscoe Caron and Larry Lewin, retired Eugene School District middle school teachers, are members of the Community Alliance for Public Education, which works “to defend public education from the damag- ing practices of ‘reformers’ and corporate interests.” CAPE is a member of the Oregon Public Education Network (OPEN). Find us on Facebook and the web for more on these bills. NOW OPEN PlantFashions Plus STAY TUNED! Springing up in the Whit! L OCALLY O WNED P LANT N URSERY Beautiful Spring Color! Ranunculas • Pansies • Violas Petunias • Dianthus • Stock Expect the best quality! Plants grown on-site. 4380 Jasper Road • Springfield plantfashionsplus.com Tue-Sat 10a-5p • Sun 11.-4p Closed Mondays RESTAURANT & BAR CONSCIOUS CUISINE & CRAFT COCKTAILS Serving 8 am - Late Night BRUNCH ALL DAY EVERY DAY! -options for alternative diets- LOCAL INGREDIENTS POSITIVE VIBES ART * COMMUNITY * MUSIC beads m a ro or fro ld 394 BLAIR BLVD. w und the 2833 Willamette • (541) 683-5903 www.harlequinbeads.com 6 M A R C H 2 1 , 2 0 1 9 @DEWDROPEUG dewdropinneugene@gmail.com 541-844-1407 LET FOOD BE THY MEDICINE E U G E N E W E E K LY . C O M