Activists driving the resistance to state exams are attempting to build on their state-level momentum over the past year, while also venturing into a new political landscape that will test whether the energy behind their initial victories will last.
And they say they鈥檙e forging ahead with their plans regardless of how much support they get from traditional education advocacy groups, including teachers鈥 unions.
Several leaders within the so-called testing opt-out movement, which has gained considerable traction in New York and also found a foothold in states like Colorado and Connecticut, say they will continue to push parents to refuse to allow their children to take standardized exams, particularly state tests, for as long as it鈥檚 necessary.
They鈥檒l stop, they say, when states adopt accountability policies that prevent tests from being used to rank, sort, and impose what opponents consider unfair consequences on students, teachers, and schools.
Some groups also are looking to extend their influence beyond testing fights to push in states for higher and more equitable levels of school funding and changes to K-12 governance to increase what they say is more local and more democratic control.
ESSA鈥檚 Impact
Like other education-focused advocacy organizations, groups seeking to alter testing鈥檚 place in public schools say they鈥檙e looking forward to life under the Every Student Success Act, the new federal education law that returns many key policy decisions to states. That includes application of the federal policy requiring states to test 95 percent of their students for accountability purposes.
That mandate remains under ESSA. But the newly reauthorized version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act specifically lets states decide how missing the requirement will impact school ratings.
Anti-testing advocates may have new chances for success in state capitals that offer them a smaller scale than Washington, said Diane Ravitch, the president of the Network for Public Education, or NPE, a nonprofit that supports the opt-out movement and pushes for local control of schools.
鈥淐ongress doesn鈥檛 pay attention to a grassroots group that has no lobbyist,鈥 Ravitch said, referring to her own organization. 鈥淪o I think that means we can be much more effective at the state level.鈥
Wielding Leverage
A rough measure of the opt-out movement鈥檚 success surfaced last month, when the U.S. Department of Education released letters it had sent to 13 states about test-participation rates that were below 95 percent, either in individual districts or statewide. In New York, home of perhaps the most robust opt-out movement in the country, 1 in 5 students eligible to take the state English/language arts and math tests did not do so in the 2014-15 school year.
Almost a year ago, Education Week Assistant Editor Liana Heitin spoke with opt-out advocates at an anti-testing conference in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Organizers of the conference and those attending it said they hoped to end 鈥渨hat they consider punitive and overly burdensome testing practices in K-12 schools,鈥 Heitin wrote. Below are videos of interviews with those attending the Fort Lauderdale conference discussing various aspects of resistance to testing.
Amy Ackermann, the founder of Opt Out Palm Beach County, explains the struggles parents and students face when they choose to opt out.
Cindy Hamilton, a co-founder of Orlando Opt Out, says that while refusing to take a test may put the burden on students, it鈥檚 not hard and many 8-year-olds do it.
Sam Anderson, a retired professor of mathematics and black history, discusses the effect demographics have had on the opt-out movement so far.
Several opt-out leaders say that if test refusal numbers continue to rise in the short-term, as they expect, it will add momentum to their agenda.
Next month, Ravitch鈥檚 group plans to release a 50-state report card on education policy. It鈥檚 designed to be a direct response to report cards by groups whose positions her organization generally opposes, including 69传媒First and the American Legislative Exchange Council, said Carol Burris, the executive director of the network鈥檚 501(c)3 arm.
The groups in her network鈥檚 crosshairs don鈥檛 necessarily align perfectly on all fronts鈥擜LEC, for instance, has praised states that have created a relatively loose regulatory environment for home schoolers, whereas 69传媒First has not.
The NPE鈥檚 report card, in contrast to ratings from those groups, will penalize states that create friendly environments for privately operated charter schools and vouchers. It will also reward those that provide relatively high and equitable levels of school funding, and uphold policy to 鈥減rofessionalize鈥 teaching. (Burris declined to elaborate on what that latter phrase meant, although the group is critical of those like Teach For America that promote nontraditional pathways to teaching.)
鈥淚t鈥檚 a very public way that the Network for Public Education and United Opt Out can bring attention to a bigger cause,鈥 Burris said, referring to another pro-opt-out organization. 鈥淭hat cause being: We鈥檝e become so obsessed with testing, with the ranking and the rating of schools, and then using testing as a weapon against public education.鈥
鈥榃e鈥檒l Watch Legislation鈥
Those backing opt-out have won some concessions at the state level recently. One of their clearest recent victories was in Oregon, where last year Democratic Gov. Kate Brown signed a bill requiring districts to notify parents about their rights to refuse to have their children take mandated state tests. The bill also created two school-ratings systems, only one of which penalizes schools for high opt-out rates.
But early victories don鈥檛 mean that the path ahead in state legislatures is uniformly smooth.
Colorado opt-out activists鈥 primary goal this school year is to increase the number of parental test refusals in Colorado to 300,000, roughly triple the number of opt-outs on the state鈥檚 Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC) exams last year, said Stefanie Fuhr, a United Opt Out, Colorado leader.
鈥淲e鈥檒l watch legislation, of course,鈥 Fuhr said. 鈥淏ut right now, our goal is to make sure the people know that the system is flawed.鈥
Fuhr conceded that she doesn鈥檛 鈥渉ave a lot of faith in our legislators,鈥 since many Colorado lawmakers, in her view, are more likely to be influenced by groups like the Colorado chapter of Democrats for Education Reform, which supports the need for tests in accountability, than they are by opt-out supporters.
Fuhr also said her group is increasing outreach efforts to poorer communities in places like Denver.
Monty Neill, the executive director of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing (known as FairTest), which opposes high-stakes tests, said it鈥檚 crucial that advocates get a good handle on their state鈥檚 politics.
鈥淭here are so many variables for each movement in each state,鈥 Neill said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 clearly an issue. Movement activists, whether they鈥檙e heavy into opt-out or doing other things, have got to figure that out.鈥
Long-Term Outlook
It鈥檚 also not clear whether the opt-out movement will rely on or need an ideologically diverse coalition. In at least a few instances, groups with different views on other issues have pushed in the same direction to oppose high-stakes testing.
For example, Neill pointed out that Save Our 69传媒 New Jersey, which advocates for greater school funding as well as opt-out, has previously made common cause with the Eagle Forum of New Jersey, a conservative group that has fought the Common Core State Standards for several years in part because it believes the standards represent a federal intrusion into schools. Both groups oppose the PARCC testing regimen in New Jersey, albeit not for identical reasons.
But there鈥檚 relatively weak support for opt-out among the general public, said Paul Peterson, a professor of government at Harvard University who runs its education policy and governance program. The program鈥檚 2015 national polling data reported that 59 percent of the general public and 52 percent of parents oppose the right to opt out, compared to the 25 percent and 32 percent, respectively, who support it.
If arguments about teacher evaluations become less explosive, that could also hurt opt-out鈥檚 long-term prospects, according to Peterson.
鈥淚 think the parent opt-out effort is endangered,鈥 he said.
Union鈥檚 Role
Observers and activists also differ about how important teachers鈥 unions are to the opt-out movement鈥檚 credibility and long-term viability.
Peterson said if teacher evaluations move to the political back burner, unions could have less incentive to help the movement.
But some state teachers鈥 unions likely need all the political allies they can get, while opt-out in turn might come to consider the union鈥檚 financial muscle and organization crucial, said Jeffrey R. Henig, an education professor at Teachers College, Columbia University.
鈥淭he challenge is not being trapped into it being simply an 鈥榓nti鈥 focus, but also to flesh out a little bit more what a positive vision and alternative might be,鈥 Henig said.
The American Federation of Teachers has already pushed back against what it sees as unwarranted federal incursions into the new boundaries set by ESSA. In response to an Education Department letter to states last month that they must have plans for dealing with low participation rates or face federal sanctions, AFT President Randi Weingarten stressed in her own January letter that states could decide how those rates factor into accountability. She added the opt-out movement was 鈥渁 referendum on this administration鈥檚 policies.鈥
Regardless, opt-out leaders stress that unions have never led the movement and aren鈥檛 crucial to it. Ravitch noted that New York State United Teachers, which called for a boycott of state exams last year, only backed the opt-out movement late in the game.
And Neill said opting out of exams isn鈥檛 always a prerequisite for rolling back assessment鈥攈e pointed to the backlash to the volume of state exams in Texas that led the legislature to reduce testing鈥檚 footprint in 2013 without relying on opt out.
Said Ravitch: 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing more and more of a mainstream recognition.鈥