NEW: Students Dress as Lab Animals to Protest High-Stakes Testing

Nicholas Handy, GoLocalProv Contributor

NEW: Students Dress as Lab Animals to Protest High-Stakes Testing

Student members of Providence Student Union (PSU) gathered in the Rhode Island State House Rotunda on Wednesday afternoon dressed as guinea pigs and lab rats in opposition of the new high-stakes testing graduation requirement in Rhode Island.

Joined by parents, legislators, and members of the community, the demonstration was a mix of speeches by two students and Teresa Tanzi, a State Representative from Narragansett, and a student performance in which the students equated themselves to lab rats being experimented on by the Rhode Island Department of Education.

A graduation requirement

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As of this current school year, RIDE now requires students to score at least partially proficient on their NECAP testing in order to graduate. Various organizations including PSU have been outraged, calling the high-stakes testing legislation an “unproven experiment” that gambles with the futures of high school students.

“What people should know is we're not against the NECAP itself -- most people think we want the test itself to go away,” said Jose Serrano, a member of PSU. “We just don't believe it should be a graduation requirement. The NECAP was always intended to be an assessment.”

Results coming Friday

NECAP testing is held during the fall every year and tests high school juniors and their proficiency levels in reading, writing, and math. In addition to the juniors who typically take the test, 2013 saw an addition of around 4,000 seniors who had to re-take the test. Students are currently awaiting these test results – which will be released by RIDE this upcoming Friday – as they ultimately decide whether they will graduate this spring.

“Public policy is at its best when it is visionary and not reactionary, and I am proud to stand with leaders who have been fighting to change the high-stakes testing policy,” said Representative Tanzi. “As a legislator, I have been troubled by the inconsistency demonstrated by RIDE’s recent announcements. Take, for example, the guideline that students attending CCRI will be subject to the NECAP testing graduation requirement, while students accepted to other colleges will not.”

Tanzi refers to a waiver policy instituted by RIDE in which students can still graduate with a diploma having failed the NECAP testing, provided they are accepted to a non-open enrollment, accredited higher education institution or a national community service program. Schools like CCRI who do not fit the profile of RIDE’s waiver will still require adequate NECAP testing scores.

Seeking a more constructive evaluation model

PSU calls for an end to the current high-stakes testing legislation, hoping to delay the make-or-break model to find a more constructive way to evaluate students. PSU has pointed to a bill by Senator Adam Satchell which calls for a five-year moratorium on the high-stakes testing, as well as a bill introduced by Representative Teresa Tanzi that would allow for students to balance their strengths and weaknesses through compensatory summation as potential ways to remedy the situation.

“We really want to get rid of the high-stakes portion of NECAP testing,” said Sam Foer, another member of PSU. “If it continues, we think there will be more low income families and more high school dropouts.”


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