Is there a connection between the Common Core and data privacy violations? #commoncore #stopcommoncore

NOTE:  Thank you Leonie for doing this research and then sharing it in such a clear and concise manner.

New York Public School Parents -

by Leonie Haimson,

inBloom was sold to states and districts and still is being justified by NY State as helping kids become “college and career ready,” and its interoperable instructional tools were supposed to be be aligned with the Common Core.

It is clear, in any case, that having the same common standards and tests across states would simplify the task of comparing and collecting student data, and that the feds wanted to encourage this data collection and sharing through their revisions of FERPA and via their grants for state longitudinal data systems provided by the fiscal stimulus funds and Race to the Top.

But I had thought the close connection the right wingers had made between the Common Core and violating student privacy was rather tangential until today; when I happened to watch a video of Joy Pullman at the Heartland Institute of all places - I disagree with Heartland on almost every issue.  She showed this slide:

 

hearland institute PARCC etcPARCC and SBAC are the two Common Core testing consortia that were established with federal grants.  Here is a list of PARCC states , including New York (though I believe Indiana Florida and Pennsylvania have now pulled out.)  Here is a map of the SBACstates.

I looked up the quote above, and sure enough I found it in both the PARCC and SBAC agreements with the US Department of Education.  Here it is, from the SBAC site:

SBAC quote

So I wrote the people at the Data Quality Campaign, funded primarily by the Gates Foundation, which is now running the counter-campaign on privacy and holding webinars with other Gates grantees like the National PTA, in a desperate attempt to convince parents that they have nothing to fear from the Common Core or student data collection.

See this for example, from a DCQ webinar held yesterday:

DQC slide

So I asked the DCQ directly about the clear statements in the US Ed Department contracts with PARCC and SBAC which seem to contradict their claim that the federal government has no intention of collecting personal student data.

Here is the response I got from Paige Kowalski, the Director of State Policy and Advocacy:

From: Paige Kowalski [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2013 4:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: FW: question re federal involvement in data collection

Hi Leonie,

This is a great question and it’s one that we had asked the U.S. Department of Education a while back and, in response, they have clarified that language on an FAQ website. In addition to the 4 federal laws that prevent student level data from being collected and stored by USED (these laws would trump any poor wording in a federal contract), USED says the following:

MYTH: The two consortia of states developing new assessments aligned to the Common Core State Standards are required to provide individual student data to the Federal government. FACT: The Department does not, and will not, request or collect personally identifiable information (PII) from the consortia and it is not legally authorized to create a student-level database. As stewards of the taxpayers’ funds, the Department collects basic project information—such as aggregate research results, but not PII—to evaluate the progress the grantees are making.

You can go to this website directly at http://www.ed.gov/k-12reforms/standards. USED will collect the same aggregate data, originally authorized under NCLB to determine AYP by school, for non-common core states like TX and VA as it will for states whom have adopted the standards (e.g., MD, ID, etc.). This same aggregate level data will be collected for states whom have adopted the standards but are choosing a separate (i.e., non-consortia) assessment including GA and OK.
I encourage you to join our next two webinars and the 3rd one in particular which will include officials from the U.S. Department of Education to address these very concerns. My understanding is that both SBAC and PARCC governing states are working on data privacy language and I encourage you to check out their websites for the most recent statements they have made on this topic.

Best,

Paige

Paige Kowalski Director, State Policy and Advocacy | Data Quality Campaign
1250 H St., NW| Suite 825 | Washington, DC  20005

Here is what I wrote back:

 Now I’ve taken a look at the four laws cited that you say bar federal collection of personally ID student data.  In each of them, there is this quote: 

 “Nothing in this title shall be construed to authorize the development of a nationwide database of personally identifiable information on individuals involved in studies or other collections of data under this paragraph.”

And yet these statements do NOT bar the federal collection of PII data, they just say that this particular law does not authorize this.

You guys have a BIG problem on your hands.  I had believed previously that the connection between the Common Core, inBloom and federal data collection was tenuous, but this language in the consortium contracts makes it clear that what the Gates foundation and US Ed Dept had in their heads the whole time is exactly what the critics have made it out to be.

Until and unless those contracts w/ PARCC and SBAC are changed to specifically bar their sharing PII data w/ the feds, no one is going to believe a word you say on this issue.

I also strongly urge you to come out with a position on parental consent quick, unless you are prevented from doing so because of your financial connections to Gates etc.

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This entry was posted in Common Core Testing, Data Collection, FERPA, Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Is there a connection between the Common Core and data privacy violations? #commoncore #stopcommoncore

  1. judycommoncore says:

    Why do you disagree with Joy Pullmann? Just curious Judy

    Sent from my iPhone

    >

  2. leonie haimson (@leoniehaimson) says:

    Sorry, I meant I disagree with the Heartland Institute on most issues — not Joy Pullman. I especially disagree with the disinformation that they put out on the science of climate change. On the issue of data privacy and the Common Core, however, they appear to be credible — and more so than the federal government, the Data Quality Campaign, or any of the other numerous groups working feverishly to collect and share children’s private data funded by the Gates Foundation.

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