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Lawmaker Hopes To Give Parents Right To Help Kids Skip PARCC Test

Will Guzzardi, a Democratic state representative from Chicago, talks about allowing kids to skip the PARCC test.
Dusty Rhodes
/
WUIS
Will Guzzardi, a Democratic state representative from Chicago, talks about allowing kids to skip the PARCC test.

Hear the story here.... A measure pending in the Illinois legislature would give parents the right to have their children skip the standardized test associated with the Common Core curriculumThe plan proposed by Democratic Representative WillGuzzardi, of Chicago would require schools to honor written requests from parents for their kids to skip thePARCCtest. Currently, students themselves can refuse testing, if they're able and willing to ask, butGuzzardisays there’s no policy telling schools what to do with those kids.

Will Guzzardi, a Democratic state representative from Chicago, talks about allowing kids to skip the PARCC test.
Credit Dusty Rhodes / WUIS
/
WUIS
Will Guzzardi, a Democratic state representative from Chicago, talks about allowing kids to skip the PARCC test.

“Some schools and teachers and principals say, 'Sure, parent letters are fine, that suffices.' Some administrators say a parent letter is absolutely not sufficient," Guzzardi said. "Some say okay, if you’re not taking the test, you can go to the library and read a book. Some say if you’re not taking the test, you have to sit and stare at the wall.” 

Mary Hughes, the mother of a special needs child in a Chicago public school, spoke in support of the measure at the state capitol today.

“I assert that it is cruel that, according tothe Illinois State Board of Education, I have to ask my sweet son to tell his teacher, who he very much wants to please, that he is not going to take the test that she told him he’s supposed to take,” Hughes said.

Guzzardi’s plan would require schools to provide instruction or enrichment activities to occupy students while others took the test. Guzzardi’s plan would require schools to provide instruction or enrichment activities to occupy those students while others took the test.

The State Board of Education opposes thelegislation.

Copyright 2015 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

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