Below is the video broadcast of last night’s Students Not Scores forum in Coram. I was fortunate enough to be joined by Jeanette Deutermann, Michael Hynes, and Tracy Zamek. Jump to about the 2:30 mark for the start of the forum.
Tag: Public Ed
Students Not Scores Forum Coming to Longwood
Spread the word…

McMullan- What, exactly, is unethical?
I took the piece below from the Students Not Scores website. It was written by the PJSTA’s very own Melissa McMullan in response to New York State Education Commissioner Mary Ellen Elia referring to teachers as being “unethical” if they support the opt-out movement.
In addition to being one of the best writers I know, Melissa is as passionate of an activist as you can find and I am proud to count her among the PJSTA’s rank and file!
What, exactly, is unethical?
If you are a parent of school-age children in grades three through eight in New York State, if you are fortunate like me, you received a letter from your child’s school district asking you to indicate your choice, for your child, regarding New York State’s grade three through eight testing program. For me, this is a very simple choice. Given the complexities of assessment in New York State, it is important that you have some very honest, straightforward information from a teacher who is also a parent.
Developmental Appropriateness
The assessments, especially the English Language Arts Exam (ELA), are not developmentally appropriate for many children. Last year’s sixth grade ELA contained a vast number of scientific terms that many adults would have a difficult time working with, such as “polymers” and “sodium polyacrylate”. Sixth grade children will read passages, and have to respond to questions such as “How does the arrival of electricity propel the main events of the plot?” or “The author conveys the purpose of the article by” and swim through four different choices and determine not the correct answer, but the answer that best answers the question. You need to know that we, as teachers, upon reading the passages and the questions, argue over which choices are the “best answers”. If we cannot be certain, how can a child be certain? I urge you to go read the passages and questions released by the state: https://www.engageny.org/resource/released-2015- 3-8-ela-and-mathematics-state-test-questions
Fluctuating Passing Scores
When teachers give students an assessment in the classroom, both teachers and students have very clear understandings of what a passing score is, and what needs to happen to make it possible. This is because the purpose of any test or quiz a teacher gives is to check for understanding. Showing understanding is very clear and concise on a teacher’s test or quiz. We are all familiar with standard passing grades (for my students and I, passing is answering a minimum of 65% of the test or quiz accurately). On the New York State Assessments over the last ten years in sixth grade, the raw score required to pass with a three (proficiency) has fluctuated like the barometric pressure – from answering 73% of questions correctly to answering 82% of questions correctly the next year. How can we follow a child’s progress when we move the bar up and down? Can you imagine measuring your child’s height with a measurement system that changed sizes from year to year?
An Inability to Inform Instruction
Anything a child does in a classroom should be linked to his / her own personal growth. Teachers provide experiences and assessments that help them know what their students know and don’t know. A test or quiz given in the classroom helps a teacher know where each child is within the given subject matter. When our children take New York State Assessments, over multiple weeks, and innumerable hours (more than the MCAT to enter medical school), teachers gain no information that can help their students. We do not get any information that would help us better meet our students’ needs. In my classroom, if something does not benefit my students, we don’t do it. Commissioner Elia, at the helm of the New York State Department of Education, is calling teachers who speak out against New York State Testing “unethical”. It would be unethical for me to remain silent about the failures of our state assessment system. It is unethical for the state to cherry-pick passages and questions for parents to read, as parents are trying to gain understandings about the assessments their children are asked to take. These assessments should be released in their entireties so people can make informed decisions. Each parent has the right to decide whether his/her child participates in this system. You are urged to go read the questions released by the state. Additionally, ask your child’s teacher what assessments he/she is already using in his/her classroom to inform instruction, and ask how they are used. Our children have the right to a public educational system that places learning, not testing, first. We, as parents, have the right, and the obligation, to make sure this what our children receive in school.
Welcome New PJSTA Members!

Welcome to the newest members of the PJSTA! Today, 18 new members had their orientation with members of the PJSTA’s executive board along with members of our rank and file. In addition to taking care of membership paperwork and getting to know their contract, PJSTA’s newest members were briefed on the current landscape of public education in New York State and encouraged to get involved in being an activist who will advocate for their profession, their students, and the communities that we serve.
If you are a new PJSTA member, or someone else who is wondering where you can get informed and stay informed on all the happenings in public education, you will want to be sure to regularly check out the following…
Blogs
- Perdido Street School- An brilliant blog, updated regularly, written by a NYC teacher who covers all things public education in New York.
- NYC Educator– Updated nearly daily, another blog written by a NYC teacher, providing commentary on all the happenings in public education.
- Diane Ravitch– The foremer Assisstant Secretary of Education keeps us up to date on public education in the US.
- Ed Notes Online– Retired educator and long time activist Norm Scott’s well know blog dealing with public education and teacher unions.
Facebook Groups
- NY BATS– New York’s Badass Teachers
- Lace to the Top– Anti-High stakes testing
- STCaucus– The Rank & File Caucus of NYSUT
- Long Island Opt-Out– The go to resource for opt-out information in New York State
- @ThePJSTA– The official Twitter account of The PJSTA
- @beth_dimino– PJSTA President Beth Dimino
- @sashammy– PJSTA 1st Vice-President Brian St. Pierre
- @Refusethetests– PJSTA rank & file member, and dynamic public education activist Melissa McMullan
- @STCaucus– The Rank & File Caucus of NYSUT
- @nysape– New York State Allies for Public Education
- @LIOptOut– Long Island Opt-Out
- @perdidostschool– The Twitter account of the Perdido Street School blogger
- @TeacherArthurG– The blogger who write the NYC Educator blog
- @DianeRavitch– The aforementioned Diane Ravitch
This is by no means a comprehensive list, however it is a good list to get started with. If you read these blogs several times a week and follow them on social media you are on your way to becoming an informed public school teacher in New York!
Howie Hawkins, Brian Jones, and Where they Stand on Public Education
Yesterday the PJSTA hosted an approximate 50 people who came out to hear gubernatorial candidate Howie Hawkins speak. Hawkins, the Green Party candidate endorsed by the PJSTA, is the only pro-public education candidate in the election.
To see where each candidate stands on issues related to public education click here: GOVERNORS RACE SIDE BY SIDE
To listen to Hawkins and his running mate, Brian Jones, talk about the issues related to public education, check out the videos below…
Hawkins and Jones on Teacher Tenure
Hawkins and Jones on the Triborough Amendment
Video: Zephyr Teachout Talks Public Ed at PJSTA Conference Day
One Last Time… Join us on Saturday!!!!
All PJSTA members headed out to the rally in Manhattan on Saturday will receive a free doughnut, cup of coffee, and train ticket compliments of the PJSTA. Meet at the Ronkonkoma Train Station at 11:20 AM in time for the 11:40 train into Penn Station. The rally will be held downtown at City Hall Park. Dr. Rella will be one of the featured speakers…
#Red4Ed begins this Wednesday!
Spread the word far and wide!
Introducing “Wear Red for Public Ed!
The PJSTA is excited to announce the launch of a new campaign that we will thread throughout the rest of the school year. The campaign, dubbed “Wear Red for Public Ed” gives every PJSTA member an opportunity to take sustained action throughout the rest of the school year in a support of public education. We will be starting on Wednesday, October 2nd! Here is what Wear Red for Public Ed consists of…
- Every Wednesday we will ask every PJSTA member to wear red to work in some form. Red short sleeved and long sleeved PJSTA tee-shirts will be available as an option, but any red will do.
- Hopefully you will be asked why you are wearing red. You can say that you are wearing red because you stand in support of public education and against top down, corporate reforms that have been imposed on us. You can then give them a copy of our flyer (see bottom of this post).
- On Wednesday we will ask you to use the hashtag #red4ed on social media to share why you wear red. Tweet it, set it as your Facebook status, take pictures of your colleagues in their red and post to Instagram. We anticipate other groups joining this cause and we are hoping to get #red4ed trending on Twitter every Wednesday! A great example could be “I wear #red4ed today because I care about my students!” or “I wear #red4ed today because I stand against high stakes testing!” Be creative and have fun with it!
Once again, we will be starting on Wednesday, October 2nd! If you would like to order one of the red PJSTA shirts please email Beth Shapiro at bethshapiro1@gmail.com. Be sure to specify short sleeve (50/50) or long sleeve (100% cotton), along with your name, your shirt size, and what building you work in.
Feel free to use the comment section below for any questions.
Cuomo: “a death penalty for failing schools”
WARNING: The video linked to below may cause nausea, vomiting, and dizziness.
Click here to watch Governor Cuomo call for failing schools to receive the death penalty.
New York State Dictator Governor Andy Cuomo yesterday called for the death penalty for failing schools. He seriously used that terminology when talking about schools. The video is rather chilling. Cuomo says…
“We’re making great progress in the education system.”
That might be the most “off-target” comment, regarding public education, that I’ve heard.
About the evaluation process he says…
“You’ll be able to know what teachers are working well. What teachers are not working well.” and “You’ll be able to know what schools are working well and what schools aren’t working well.”
“We can’t allow these failing schools to continue. Whether it is a take over by the state or mayoral control or take over by a charter school there’s going to have to be a death penalty for failing schools”
So here is the governor’s agenda:
Use junk science to show how bad teachers are. Fire them. Use junk science to show how schools are failing. Strip those districts of local control. Place control in the hands of John King. Replace the schools with charter schools, which have proven to be less effective than public schools. Have the people profiting from those charters fund Cuomo’s campaign for president.
PJSTA members, if you haven’t been paying attention to education issues you should. Regardless of how well things are or are not going in your classroom, there is a significant push to destroy your profession and it is funded by some very wealthy and influential people. The PJSTA will be offering you plenty of opportunities to ACT this year. Actions that show your support for public education. Actions that show you will NOT continue to be pushed around by forces bent on destroying you. We are excited to work with you and with our allies this coming school year as we act against those forces.




