A regular day is hard enough for Parkland students. Now they face standardized tests.

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Tsing Tao, Apr 25, 2018.

  1. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Oh boo friggen hoo. We are raising sissies and we have only ourselves to blame. You want to know what's really unfair? Being dead. If you're alive, you move on - that's how life works.

    Read the comment section.

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    April 23, 2018 06:23 PM

    Updated 15 minutes ago

    Shannon Fest has a modest goal for her 15-year-old daughter this semester: to make it through a full day of school.

    Two months after a gunman killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, going to class is still a struggle for freshman Lauren Fest. She arrives late every morning and skips lunch because the crowds and loud noises trigger her anxiety attacks. The reminders of what happened — the empty desks in class, the shuttered freshman building where the shooting took place — are inescapable. She goes to therapy both at school and after class. And at night, Lauren still can't sleep in her own room.

    Standardized tests and graduation requirements are the last thing on her mind.

    So when Shannon Fest learned that her daughter still has to take a state algebra exam to stay on track for graduation, she was shocked.

    "These kids, they can't think and learn when they're frightened and when they don't feel safe," Fest said. "Right now they can't be held accountable for learning that hasn't occurred, for instruction that hasn't happened."

    "We're all in survival mode," she added.

    State lawmakers exempted Stoneman Douglas students from some standardized tests to give them time to recover from the trauma. Provisions in a massive education bill Gov. Rick Scott signed into law in March stipulate that students at the high school aren't required to take any standardized tests this year, and that seniors are exempt from standardized testing graduation requirements.

    "It's not only the students grieving and trying to recover and all of that other stuff," said Miami Republican Rep. Manny Diaz Jr., chair of the House PreK-12 Appropriations Committee, explaining the thinking behind the bill. "I think it's also the secondary distractions that are just kind of a product of the whole situation."



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    Students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School participated in a national walkout on March 14, the one-month anniversary of the shooting that killed 17 people. Since the shooting, students have had multiple distractions at school, including protests.
    Matias J. Ocner mocner@miamiherald.com


    But the bill doesn't exempt students in lower grades from the graduation requirements, which means they still need to pass Algebra I and English Language Arts exams, typically taken in ninth and tenth grade, in order to stay on track. While Stoneman Douglas students can wait until next year to take the tests, some families worry it will be hard to pass them after all the class time they've missed. Between the shooting and school closures during Hurricane Irma, Stoneman Douglas students have missed several weeks of class this year.

    Many students still have trouble focusing when they are at school. Some teachers have taken time off to heal.

    Laurie Bishara, whose daughter, Gwyneth, is a tenth grader at the school, said that through no fault of their own, teachers and students aren't in the right state of mind to teach and learn. "For these children to be held accountable for information that was supposed to be taught throughout the year is just impossible unless they taught it to themselves," she said. In class, her daughter keeps one eye on her surroundings at all times. "She's only wearing sneakers to school in case she has to run," Bishara said.

    Students now face the difficult decision of sitting for the exams this semester, when the material is still fresh in their minds, or waiting until next year when they've had more time to heal, but also more time to forget what they've learned.


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    Parents of Parkland massacre victim pay tribute to their son

    The testing requirements affect roughly 1,500 students at the school, about half of the student body. In an effort to give students more time to prepare for the tests, the Florida Department of Education has established alternative testing dates over the summer and during the next school year and sent the school a list of alternative exams that also satisfy the graduation requirements.

    Some parents and students are asking state officials to give students a pass, however.

    "The ninth and tenth graders still have this test over their heads that they have to take," said Angie Gallo, legislative chair for the Florida PTA, which has been urging officials in Tallahassee to find a solution. "Not taking this test isn't going to make them not successful, but stressing them out and hurting them again — I just don't see the point," she said.



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    Therapy dogs visit Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Sun., Feb. 25, 2018, for an open house as parents and students return to the school for the first time since the shooting.


    The Broward school district is also asking the state to exempt Stoneman Douglas students from the testing requirements. If state officials can't find a solution this year, school district officials wrote in a memo to Stoneman Douglas principal Ty Thompson, Broward plans to ask state lawmakers for help during the 2019 legislative session. In the meantime, Broward's chief academic officer, Daniel Gohl, told Thompson he doesn't recommend students take the tests this semester. "The priority should be on healing, mental health, and the establishment of a learning environment," he said.

    Shannon Fest started an online petition, which has so far gotten more than 2,700 signatures, calling on Scott to sign an executive order exempting the students from the testing requirements. Scott's office said the governor does not have the legal authority to do so. Only the Florida Legislature can change the graduation requirements in state laws.

    Diaz said the Legislature could discuss the issue next session if there are "pending problems," but added that he wasn't sure there would be support for waiving the testing requirements for graduation. Instead, he said, it might make more sense for Stoneman Douglas or the Broward school district to provide students with extra academic support, like an Algebra I refresher, before they take the test.

    "I understand the parents' perspective," he said. "I think it's something we need to monitor going forward."

    But after everything they've been through, Stoneman Douglas students say waiving the testing requirement would give them one less thing to worry about.

    "I think that we've all suffered enough, more than any kid should have to this year, and I think that having to study for a test that either lets you graduate high school or not is very unfair," said Alexa Kitaygorodsky, a ninth grader who was in the freshman building when the shooting happened. "It's just putting more pressure on us when we're all going through something that teenagers should never have to go through."
     
  2. Perhaps the message that should be taken from this...."we should prepare to defend ourselves should we encounter this again".

    What does anyone think will happen with immigration once the Dems get control of Congress and the WH again?
     
  3. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    I wonder if standardized testing in some obscure county would make it into the politics section of ET if there hadn't been a shooting there?
     
    Frederick Foresight likes this.
  4. Just a way for sick sick puppy Tackleberry Tao to bring up shootings and guns again.

    You have people so see guns as a work tool or an emergency measure and then you have the wrong-headed obsessed ones who dwell on it.
     
  5. Poindexter

    Poindexter

    Good morning paper trader! Speaking of guns... I want to thank you (and your ilk) for opening my eyes to the good that the NRA and Wayne LaPierre do.

    Got my membership card the other day and want to show you! I only joined for five years but promise I'll upgrade that to a lifetime membership when it's time to renew. Thanks again :D

    nra - Copy.png
     
  6. Hotcakes

    Hotcakes

    Not a "standardized test"......
     
  7. Good for you an ahem "Jew" with a black sister who does not care that Wayne would have you both put down or worked to death in a factory. That is a way to show you fear nothing.

    Don't forget to post a cool "last selfie ever" someday.

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Apr 25, 2018
    Tony Stark and lawrence-lugar like this.
  8. Poindexter

    Poindexter

    I'll print this out and give it to her, along with her NRA gift membership. She's difficult to shop for, so thanks for the idea!
     
  9. Dear Wayne, I got another few of these suckers to sign up. You were't kidding, they have no brain at all. One Jews and other mud people get the flag ones with the RFIDs, the whites get the eagles.
     
  10. Poindexter

    Poindexter

    #10     Apr 25, 2018