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EdAction November 2, 2001 NAEP Hidden Only From Parents
The October 25th St. Paul Pioneer Press article and the October 24th Education Week article regarding excerpts from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) being posted on the Maple River Education Coalition (MREdCo) website entirely missed the most important point of public interest. The National Assessment Governing Board calls posting the NAEP a "security breach." What is this nonsense about "security"? The truth is that the supposed "security" of the NAEP extends only to parents. Everyone else seems to have access! Any branch of government and many corporations have total access to the NAEP questions and to the detailed data gathering it conducts on students, schools, teachers, private homes and communities. The RAND Corporation, the Department of Agriculture, MPR Associates, Stanford University and the National Goals Panel are just a few known examples of groups with access to the NAEP questions and databases. So why are parents denied access to the NAEP questions? Could it be because two-thirds of the NAEP asks questions about personal information and family habits? Of the remaining third, many of the questions measure students' personal opinions and assess viewpoints that many would disagree with or find objectionable. (See more on the NAEP) Furthermore, with the new federal legislation about to be passed by Congress, the NAEP will be instantly transformed from the "Nations's Report Card" to the national dictator of curriculum in all schools in the country. Tests always drive the curriculum, and a national test forces a national curriculum. States will be given rewards and sanctions based on conformity with the NAEP. What business does the federal government have dictating the attitudes and values our schools must teach? Does anyone really think a test with this much power ought not be reviewed and critiqued by the public? Other nationally norm-referenced tests, such as the Iowa Basics, are available for viewing, why not the NAEP? The NAEP has been marketed to the public for over three decades as an academic achievement assessment. If the NAEP were available to parents, the public would demand that it be rewritten to focus on basic academic knowledge and to eliminate offensive propaganda that intrudes into the private lives and worldviews of families. Julie M. Quist |
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EdAction - 105 Peavey Rd, Ste 116, Chaska, MN
55318 |
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