MAP test

Dear Superintendent Banda and Members of the School Board,

Since MAP testing was imposed in Seattle Schools in 2009, Seattle school librarians have continually expressed concern about the loss of library resources for students. School libraries are a proven tool to improve student learning. With the onset of MAP testing, however, the libraries in many schools have been closed for weeks at a time while the space is devoted to testing. Librarians, whose role is to teach information skills and support reading instruction, have been required in many schools to spend weeks and weeks as testing clerks. In many schools the first time a student visits the library is not to check out a book or research a topic, but to take a test—a test that is not aligned to curriculum and covers material that they have not learned.

Scarce computer resources in schools are devoted to testing, and are unavailable for teaching and learning. Scarce technical support—the Department of Technology Services has been cut in recent years—is devoted to shoring up the MAP test, while student and teacher computers sit “Out of Order” for months because no one is available to fix them. These issues and many others were raised by librarians and teachers to district administrators over the years, but no major changes have been made.

On January 11 the teachers of Garfield High School announced that they will no longer administer the MAP test because of its negative impact on students. We, librarians in Seattle Public Schools, agree that MAP wastes resources in our schools without benefiting our students. We ask Seattle Public Schools to discontinue MAP and focus on assessments that truly support student learning and which are chosen in consultation with educators who work directly with students every day.

In response to Superintendent Banda’s email of January 14, we recommend suspending the MAP requirement until the promised review has been completed.

Signed by these Seattle Schools Librarians,

Laurie Amster-Burton, Seattle World School

Janet Woodward, Garfield High School

Jeff Treistman, Denny International Middle School

Winifred Unterschute, Library Assistant, Roosevelt High School

Nancy Howard, Van Asselt Elementary School

Amy Young, View Ridge Elementary School

Katie Hubert, Chief Sealth International High School

Kathy Egawa, Pathfinder K-8

Merilee Hudson, Thurgood Marshall Elementary School

Chris Gustafson, Whitman Middle School

Nancy Fisher-Allison, Schmitz Park Elementary School

Ginny Allemann, Thornton Creek School

Stephen McIntyre, Sacajawea Elementary School

Ruthanne Rankin, Viewlands and Greenwood Elementary Schools

Steve Kovnat, Coe Elementary School

Susan Jenkins, Pinehurst K-8

Pat Bliquez, Roxhill Elementary School

Elaine Harger, Washington Middle School

Steve Marsh, John Muir Elementary School

Craig Seasholes, Sanislo Elementary School

Kristine McLane, North Beach Elementary School

Betty Brennan, Ingraham High School

Linda Illman, Salmon Bay K-8

Ann Brooke, Jane Addams K-8

Carolyn Burns, Northgate Elementary School

Danae Powers, McGilvra Elementary School

Mary E. Bannister, Whittier Elementary School

Tom Brown, Laurelhurst Elementary

Suzanne Babayan, Franklin High School

Deborah Gallaher, Nathan Hale High School

Katharine Donnelly, B.F. Day Elementary School

Added after January 18:

David Nelson, Aki Kurose Middle School

John Brockhaus, Orca K-8

Anne Aliverti, Bryant Elementary School

Anne Miller, Wedgwood Elementary School

*School names are provided for identification purposes only. This letter represents the views of those who signed, not any school’s staff or all Seattle Public Schools librarians.