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Wednesday, December 21, 2011

The National Center for Fair & Open Testing | FairTest

The National Center for Fair & Open Testing | FairTest:

As the winter holidays near, all of us at FairTest extend our warmest thanks to everyone working for fair, open and educational sound testing at the local, state and national levels.

We especially appreciate the generous year-end donations so many of you have made in response to Diane Ravitch's special appeal on our behalf.

There is still time to make a tax-deductible contribution for 2011 by going to https://secure.entango.com/donate/MnrXjT8MQqk or mailing your check to FairTest, P.O. Box 300204, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130.

With best wishes for the season and for the new year in which, working together, we will make real progress toward assessment reform.
                                                                                             
Monty Neill              Lisa Guisbond            Bob Schaeffer                  David Mirabella
Executive Director    Policy Analyst           Public Education Director    Office Manager




The National Center for Fair & Open Testing

The National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest) works to end the misuses and flaws of standardized testing and to ensure that evaluation of students, teachers and schools is fair, open, valid and educationally beneficial.

Spotlight

December 13, 2011
Greetings,
Five years ago, I could not imagine that I would one day be writing an appeal on behalf of FairTest. But I have changed my views and now see the damage that test-based accountability and No Child Left Behind have done to our children, our teachers, and our schools. I wish I had realized sooner what I know now. But it's never too late to learn...
See FairTest's news release on the release of the 2011 SAT scores.
The Forum on Educational Accounability (FEA), chaired by FairTest, has published revised 2011 recommendations for a major overhaul of ESEA/NCLB.
“Opting out” of testing is a potentially powerful way to resist No Child Left Behind and the way standardized testing distorts and corrupts K-12 classrooms. Growing numbers of parents and students are questioning the value of NCLB testing and saying they want to exercise the right to opt out. In recent months, a number of Facebook and wiki pages, as well as a web site, have been created to nurture a national campaign to opt out of NCLB and state testing. Below are the names and links to the sites along with descriptions of each site by their creators. Visit them and spread the word to fellow parents and students.