What Works! - 10th Annual AERO Conference | Bookstore | Become a Member!
April, 11 2013 
Dear Readers,
 
This week we have an update on the AERO conference, including a description of Alfie Kohn's talk. There is also an article, published in today's Newsday, about a forum that Nikhil Goyal participated in, attacking the over-testing of our children. He was the only student. Nikhil will be a keynote speaker at the upcoming AERO conference. Also, we have a lot of news and resource items from around the world of educational alternatives. We hope you enjoy the content.
 
AERO Conference Only One Month Away!
Many members of our network are avid followers of Alfie Kohn and have read many of his books. At the upcoming AERO conference, Alfie's talk will foreshadow the book he is currently working on. How lucky can we get?  

FEAR OF SPOILING: Rethinking Common Assumptions About Children
The conventional wisdom is that helicopter parents are everywhere, overprotecting their children instead of letting them learn from failure; that we indulge and coddle rather than setting limits, with the result that we're raising a generation of narcissists; that grades are inflated and trophies handed out too readily. But are these criticisms new? Are they true? And what underlying values -- as well as assumptions about child development, human behavior, and motivation -- have led even political progressives to sound like social conservatives when the conversation turns to children?
 
 
If you have any questions or need to make any special arrangements write to jerryaero@aol.com.

 

Jerry Mintz Interviewed by EduCoup
AERO director Jerry Mintz was recently interviewed by EduCoup's Bernard Moran. You can read the interview in its entirety here.
 
Here's a quote from the interview:
 
"I will help and work with anyone who wants to change the system from within. I'm just very skeptical because every time I've seen someone who is doing good work in the system, as soon as they left any vestige of their work disappeared. Because the system wants to keep its same shape. So, yes we'll help, we'll work with them. But my feeling is that the only way to actually change the system is to work outside of it."

Featured Book: A is for Activist
 
 
30% off - Only $11.95
 
Only 10 Copies Remain - These are the last copies available for months as the book is headed to a second printing!

 
A is for Activist [an ABC board book] 
Written and Illustrated by Innosanto Nagara

A is for Activist is an ABC board book (written that I've written and illustrated for the next generation of progressives: Families that want their kids to grow up in a space that is unapologetic about activism, environmental justice, civil rights, LGBTQ rights, and so on.

The rhymes are fun for the kids to hear and play with, but also meaningful for us grownups. It was important to me that the book be one that I too would enjoy reading over and over-not something I'd want to hide after day 3, even if my son loved it. The illustrations are also multi-layered. Your kid will find something they can learn to recognize on each page. There are new things to discover over multiple readings. There are references for grownups to "get", and maybe even be a conversation starter down the line. Oh, and there's always a cat.
Principals Want to Do Away with Testing
Our own Nikhil Goyal, author of One Size Does Not Fit All, was the only student on a panel at Hofstra University which attacked the testing regimes students are facing in New York State schools.

Anxiety by many at forum on new student tests
John Hildebrand, Newsday, April 10th
 
More than 700 Long Island teachers, parents and others -- many anxious about stepped-up state testing -- cheered and applauded a panel of veteran educators Wednesday night as they denounced Albany's new assessments as "lunacy" and "a perfect storm."

The two-hour panel session at Hofstra University was punctuated by expressions of sympathy for parents who in recent weeks have vowed to pull their children out of the upcoming new English and math tests. The forum, organized by a school principals' group, was entitled "More than a number: How state testing is affecting the educational and emotional health of our students."

Anxieties run high over state tests for grades 3 through 8, which begin Tuesday. State education officials have predicted a potential increase in student failure rates of 30 percentage points or more, and nearly 5,000 parents and others have tapped into a regional website urging families to "opt out" of testing.

This year's test questions, for the first time, reflect national Common Core academic standards that require more sophisticated reading, writing and math skills than in the past.

One panelist, William Johnson, superintendent of Rockville Centre schools, said his district has received letters from more than 20 parents, indicating they will refuse to let their children participate.Johnson, as have many other local administrators, responded that his district cannot force students to take the test, and that those who refuse will be allowed to read silently while classmates do so.

"We don't take issue with testing -- we take issue with the fact that there is more of this than we need," Johnson told the audience. "We have warned the state many times that, if they don't listen to us, the time might come when parents rise up."

The schools chief, a former president of the New York State Council of School Superintendents, added that his district alone has spent $550,000 to $1 million annually for test preparation and administration.

State testing officials have insisted, on the other hand, that all students are required to take every assessment assigned their grade levels. Any drop in test participation rates could result in lower academic ratings for schools, making them ineligible for special financial grants, those officials said.

Dennis Tompkins, chief spokesman for the state Education Department, issued a sharply worded statement Tuesday: "Parents who keep their children from taking these tests are essentially saying, 'I don't want to know where my child stands, in objective terms, on the path to college and career readiness' -- and we think that that's doing them a real disservice."

One disputed issue is whether there are any legal loopholes allowing students to skip state tests. Activists in a statewide opt-out campaign point to a provision in a state manual, specifying that regional assessment offices can enter a code number "999" for students who refuse to be tested.

State officials have dismissed this point as irrelevant. They have said their records list such students as "not tested," except in medical emergencies, and that significant numbers of untested students count against schools' academic standing.


Learn more about schools around the country that are opening their doors to students who opt-out of high-stakes standardized testing.

Free Webinar: Building a Movement for Joy and Justice in Education
Dr. Carlo Ricci, co-editor Turning Points: 35 Visionaries in Education Tell Their Own Storieswould like to invite you to a free webinar featuring author and educator William Ayers.
 
The webinar will be held 11am-12pm, April 20th and has room for only 30 more! Sign up and find out more by clicking the link below:
 
 
 
 
News & Resources
Do you have a news or resource item you think Education Revolution newsletter readers would find useful? Send it to jerryaero@aol.com.
Thank you for your ongoing support. With your help, we will make learner-centered alternatives available to everyone!

Sincerely,

Jerry Mintz
Executive Director
Alternative Education Resource Organization

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