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  1. #1

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    WA: School Test will be changed to satisfy Mexicans

    By: ERIC WILKINSON / KING 5 News
    SEATTLE - A question on a controversial statewide exam that Washington State high school students must pass to graduate is being removed because a student found it offensive.
    The complaint is now prompting a statewide examination of the Washington Assessment of Student Learning, or WASL, to determine whether the question created a bias against some students.
    The issue surrounds a question on the reading portion of the WASL and a passage that a 10th grade Mexican-American student found offensive to Hispanics. The passage comes from the award winning book "Breaking Through". It's the story of a Mexican immigrant's life in a migrant family during the 1950's.
    In an e-mail to Governor Christine Gregoire, the unnamed student deemed the question "extremely offensive" and going "too far in Hispanic stereotypes." "It presented Hispanics as low-income, as strawberry pickers as janitors," said Juanita Doyon of the Parent Empowerment Network. "It presented as issue where one of the people in the story was deported."
    State education officials say the question passed a review for bias and sensitivity, but the fact that the story was written in another era should have been disclosed to students taking the test. "If someone were to read that in a 2007 context, we understand how you could get a different view of things and perhaps take some offense at it," said Thomas Shapley, an official for the state Superintendent's office.
    The organization pushing for removal of the question says this is not about political correctness, but rather making sure students do as well as possible on the WASL. The 10th grader who lodged the complaint is reportedly an honor student, but still had a hard time concentrating after reading the offending question.
    "If this affects this student in this situation, how would it affect a student in the Skagit Valley in the strawberry area or how would it affect a student in the Yakima area," said Doyon.
    A spokesman for the State Superintendent of Public Instruction says officials will take a look at answers to that particular question and see if Hispanic students scored more poorly on it than non-Hispanics. If so, that question will likely be omitted from the test for all students. School officials say that same question was on last year's WASL, but nobody complained.

    http://www.king5.com/localnews/stori...P.8102e8e.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member fedupinwaukegan's Avatar
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    I betcha I could look at the test and find a question that deeply offended me as well.

    GIVE me a BREAK!!!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by fedupinwaukegan
    I betcha I could look at the test and find a question that deeply offended me as well.

    GIVE me a BREAK!!!
    DITTO!!!

  4. #4
    Senior Member americangirl's Avatar
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    "It presented Hispanics as low-income, as strawberry pickers as janitors," said Juanita Doyon of the Parent Empowerment Network. "It presented as issue where one of the people in the story was deported."
    Sounds pretty accurate to me.
    Calderon was absolutely right when he said...."Where there is a Mexican, there is Mexico".

  5. #5
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    Western Washington is becoming even more of a joke! It is about as silly as San Francisco. I just moved out of Washington and I'm soooo happy!

    Sorry legal4mykidsfuture!

  6. #6
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Yeah, let's all bow down to more people that find everything offensive!
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  7. #7

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    Item on WASL to be removed after complaints
    By Linda Shaw
    Seattle Times staff reporter
    A chapter from a novel used on this year's Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL) will not be used on future exams after a student complained it was offensive to Latinos.
    Superintendent of Public Instruction Terry Bergeson and her staff on Thursday reviewed the selection, from "Breaking Through," the second of two books about a migrant family in California in the 1950s.
    Bergeson determined it should not have been on the test without a note about when it took place, spokesman Thomas Shapley said.
    A number of Latino groups, including the Governor's Commission on Hispanic Affairs, were upset that a passage that reinforced stereotypes about Latinos could have ended up on the reading part of the exam, given to 10th-graders last week.
    "Breaking Through" is a fictionalized memoir by Francisco Jiménez, an author and professor at Santa Clara University in California. The main character is a youth who works summers in the strawberry fields with his father for low wages — about $1 per hour. Their employer comes to visit their house and makes a reference to another worker being deported.
    Students were asked to read the passage and answer questions about it.
    "For awhile, we've been saying that the WASL is not culturally relevant," said Uriel Iñiguez, the Hispanic affairs commission's executive director. "This just proves it."
    Citizen committees review all WASL exams for cultural bias. The panel that looked at the excerpt in question recommended it not be used without a note about the year in which it was set, said Cenobio Macias, one of the panel members.
    Macias, a retired Tacoma teacher, said the committee recognized that the passage included stereotypes but concluded it could be used if its timeframe was made clear.
    "If the introductory paragraph didn't do that, it shouldn't have been included," he said

    The introduction said only that the passage chronicles the experiences of a son of migrant workers.
    The student reportedly complained to a group called the Parent Empowerment Network, headed by Juanita Doyon, a longtime critic of the WASL and high-stakes testing. Doyon declined to identify him, saying only that he is Latino, the son of someone she's known a long time, and lives on the west side of the state.
    She distributed an e-mail she said she asked him to write about the selection. The e-mail said he found the passage "extremely offensive" and that he wasn't able to start the test for about 10 minutes. The message also said he feared that students across the state would conclude that Mexicans are "all working for nothing and being deported for no plain reason." Friends snickered at him after the test, he wrote.
    The passage was a pilot question last year, Shapley said, and no concerns were raised about it then.
    The full novel is used in classrooms throughout the state, he said, and teachers "have great things to say about it." It has won several awards, including the Pura Belpré Award, given to writers who best portray, affirm and celebrate the Latino cultural experience.
    But teaching a full novel is different from including an isolated excerpt on a test, representatives of several Latino groups said.
    The commission fears that the item could reinforce stereotypes that all Latinos are farm workers and/or illegal immigrants.
    "Every day we battle this type of stereotype," Iñiguez said. "When it's reinforced in a statewide exam, it really doesn't help."
    The process used to review the WASL needs to be revised, he said, and more ethnic minorities need to serve on the bias and fairness panels.
    Maria Rodriguez-Salazar, Northwest vice president for the League of United Latin American Citizens, a national civil-rights group, said her group has forwarded the information to its legal team.Doyon wants OSPI to invalidate the entire test. "If that question is anywhere near the front of the test, it's going to affect the entire test," she said.
    Macias wasn't sure he remembered the excerpt in question until told his panel had recommended it not be used without an introduction.
    He said the panel concluded that it was "a salvageable item with proper explanation." With a note that it was set in the 1950s, he said, the committee thought it would be clear that "not all Latinos fit into that mold."
    Along with removing the items from future exams, OSPI officials also say they'll review the performance of Latino students on the questions about the passage on this year's exam. If that indicates the passage could have affected their performance, those questions might not count.
    Questions have been dropped from the WASL before. In 2001, OSPI removed a math question after some students realized that the answer sounded like the name "Mary K. Letourneau," a former teacher convicted of raping one of her students.

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/l ... sl23m.html

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