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50 Words You Should NOT Say on a Standardized Test
In my essay, No Controversy Allowed, I shared a story about having an assembly program cancelled at a middle school because in my first assembly presentation that morning I agreed with a student that war was a problem and because I mentioned a few apparently “unacceptable” words in my talk (such as healthcare and illegal immigrants). That the students left my presentation with an understanding that it was their responsibility to make connections between their everyday choices and the effects on others; that service to others leads to joy, and that modeling a message of compassion is a good thing, didn’t seem to matter. Those dreaded words, and the potential backlash from angry parents (there was none), sealed the deal. I was not permitted to offer my second scheduled middle school assembly program that day. I had hoped this experience was simply a one-off in my 25 year career as a humane educator and not prescient about the future of schooling.
Though they ultimately backtracked, the NYC Dept. of Education advocated banning over 50 words and subjects it found 'inappropriate' for inclusion on standardized tests administered in city schools.
So when I first read about the New York City’s department of education effort to ban 50 words from city-wide tests, I thought that I’d better corroborate the source. It sounded too much like a satirical piece in The Onion. I thought that this couldn’t possibly be true – my home town, New York City, banning words? Alas, it was not satire. Here is the list of words that NYC Department of Education chancellor, Dennis Walcott, believes should be banned:
Abuse (physical, sexual, emotional, or psychological)
Alcohol (beer and liquor), tobacco, or drugs
Birthday celebrations (and birthdays)
Bodily functions
Cancer (and other diseases)
Catastrophes/disasters (tsunamis and hurricanes)
Celebrities
Children dealing with serious issues
Cigarettes (and other smoking paraphernalia)
Computers in the home (acceptable in a school or library setting)
Crime
Death and disease
Divorce
Evolution
Expensive gifts, vacations, and prizes
Gambling involving money
Halloween
Homelessness
Homes with swimming pools
Hunting
Junk food
In-depth discussions of sports that require prior knowledge
Loss of employment
Nuclear weapons
Occult topics (i.e. fortune-telling)
Parapsychology
Politics
Pornography
Poverty
Rap Music
Religion
Religious holidays and festivals (including but not limited to Christmas, Yom Kippur, and Ramadan)
Rock-and-Roll music
Running away
Sex
Slavery
Terrorism
Television and video games (excessive use)
Traumatic material (including material that may be particularly upsetting such as animal shelters)
Vermin (rats and roaches)
Violence
War and bloodshed
Weapons (guns, knives, etc.)
Witchcraft, sorcery, etc.
I’m normally a pretty optimistic person. I believe that it’s not only possible, but even probable, that humanity will solve our grave challenges and looming crises. I believe that the destructive and unjust systems which pervade our world, within production, agriculture, energy, campaign finance, transportation, defense, and so on, can be transformed. I believe Stephen Pinker’s in-depth anaylsis that reveals that we live in a less violent, less discriminatory, and less cruel world than ever before, and I believe that the unprecedented capacity we now have to collaborate and innovate across every border bodes well for a humane and sustainable future. But the reason I believe all of this is because I also believe that we can transform one primary, underlying system: schooling. I believe that we can embrace a bigger goal for schooling than “competing in the global economy” and commit to graduating a generation of solutionaries who have the knowledge, tools, and motivation to be conscientious choicemakers and engaged changemakers and who are committed to ensuring that the systems within their chosen professions are just, humane, and healthy for all.
But we cannot possibly achieve such an educational goal if we refuse to actually discuss the pressing issues of our time in schools; if we deny our children the opportunity to develop their critical and creative thinking capacities and collaborative skills, and if we dumb down our curricula in such a way that our graduates never learn about the actual issues of our time and are prevented in school from applying their great minds and big hearts toward the challenges we face in today’s world.
An attempt to ban words on school-administered standardized tests is a depressing development within an already depressing era of misguided "school reform". Ultimately, the effort in New York was a way of keeping students from thinking about and addressing the most relevant issues in their lives. Most revealing, is that teachers are being pressed to teach to tests in order to maintain school funding and keep their jobs, but the tests are prevented from serving a deeper and more meaningful education when the questions are cleansed of content that impacts students most. As Thoreau once said, “There are thousands hacking at the branches of evil to one that is striking at the root.” If we eliminate the root solution to unjust and destructive systems – which I believe is schooling – we will find ourselves endlessly hacking at those branches of evil, and I fear we will fail to solve our challenges and avert potential global catastrophes.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllOh how I wish George Carlin had not decided to pack his bags and check out - he has to be laughing his arse off somewhere on this... I guess we should add these words to his prior list! - There was a certain "chancellor" some time ago, 1930's - 40's ish - in a country called Deutchland that had a list of words best not spoken. - Just say'n
Mr. Carlin might well have added the following words to the list of words that "can't be touched"
• think
• brain
• discern
• problem
• injustice
• inequality
• discrimination
• rich
• poor
• "economically disadvantaged"
• hunger
• cold
• preventable medical condition
• Idiotic School Administrators
• censorship
• free thinking
And to think that the FCC was satisfied with banning just SEVEN words. Gubmit is doing a much better job of "protecting" us these days!
Drink Alcohol. Watch Television. Have Faith in the System!
I agree, the root solution to unjust and destructive systems is education. But you fail to mention that the root cause of unjust and destructive systems is unbridled capitalism. The frightful question: How free are we to critique the dirty rotten system?
Good story but Stephen Pinker is a reactionary evolutionary psychologist. Do read
both Andrew Whiten and David Erda's counter point to all this people have always been violent hot air. The facts are that just isn't true. Demonstrable the case as both Whiten and Erdal both point out. Only in the last at most dozen millennia has violence, aggression, etc gained a foothold amond modern humans. Given modern humans go back to at least 100 and maybe 200 millennia ago, that really says something. This BS about the way things used to be is pure hot air. History goes back as far as people, not just to a mllennia or two ago. Oral history, anthropology, evoltionary psychology, and other fields have provided inter disciplinary evidence of the facts.
Currrent research on people who still live as they did 100 millennia ago also adds to the evidence. Erdal and Whiten have done such research as have others.
I don't think it's settled science how much of human violence is embedded in our genetic history and how much is cultural. There is only inferential evidence as to what people before the birth of writing thought and behaved like. Anyone can assemble a bunch of evidence and make a case for any theory they like.
Whatever its root causes are, if humankind doesn't change into something that doesn't do that soon, overcrowding, overpopulation, and other stressors will continue goading people into violence despite the lousy outcomes.
Well, I can understand why they would want to prohibit the mention of "vermin" ...
Pinker himself admits that one major war or "smaller" nuclear strike would throw off his stats for another century or two. Still, we no long draw and quarter, disembowel and burn alive, gouge eyes, cut out tongues and castrate or torture to death in order to "purify through pain". Anyway we no longer do these things as often or with the blessing of official authorities. Slaughter, for most of the last 7000 years, has been a completely ordinary part of human life. Whether humane schooling can help the trend away from slaughter is an unanswered question, but I can't think of a reason not to try. First of course, we will have to convince a lot of people, that they do not have to train the next generation to be efficient techno-worker bees. That citizenship might be more important than "competitiveness". It's not like we are competing with our own banker (China) and that our own equity investment and manufacturing firms are not already in China, making the shit we buy from China. Is Apple in China "competing" with Apple in America? Is GE in China competing with GE in America? No. The same owning class is pitting working classes and to some extent, 2 political classes against each other, but at the top, there is no competition, so why does "competitiveness" have to be the goal of education? Oh wait, I used a "prohibited" term, "working class". We can't mention that. It's "class warfare"!
"Still, we no long draw and quarter, disembowel and burn alive, gouge eyes, cut out tongues and castrate or torture to death in order to "purify through pain".
No, but the Elite still waterboard, practice sensory overload or deprivation, force people into 'stress positions', confine them for 23 hours a day with no human contact, electrify genitals, threaten with dogs, force people to masturbate, rape women as a tactic of war, cut off ears and fingers as trophies, urinate on 'enemy' dead, deprive them of sleep, threaten them with extreme judicial punishment, violate them with broomhandles, bomb them with white phosphorus, irradiate their countries with 'depleted' uranium, target them with Hellfire anti-tank missiles fired from Predator drones, expose them to deafening LRAD sound cannons, chemically assault them with capsasin extract (pepper spray), intimidate with racially and socially targeted street 'stop and frisks'... need I go on?
Western pseudo-culture may not practice the more graphic and 'clumsy' methods of coercion and torture, but the intent hasn't changed at all.
This list of words no longer permissible to mention in a schooling context is nothing more than yet another attempt to CONTROL and inculturate the paradigm of the top-down ONLY exhibition of force, from the powerful, to the powerless.
When you control the LANGUAGE, you control the CONVERSATION.
"It's 'class warfare'!"
- NO SHIT! REALLY?!
Everything on the list is designed to make people think, and consider aspects--even unfamiliar ones--about the world in which they find themselves. Therefore this list, which sounds like something taken from an Authoritarian Born-Again Christian Program, is designed to do away with in-depth thought, itself.
First they came for the words...
Next, they banned books. (Arizona's treatment of ethnic studies programs is setting that precedent, anew.)
How long before they start burning them again?
Isn't that the signature of history's notably fascist regimes?
It's all about control! Now they want OUR MINDS! It's not enough for "the 1%" to own the media to better manufacture consent. They also have purchased the presidency, determined the ideological character of The Supreme Court, guaranteed further investment in endless wars... in part as rationale for doubling down on the cessation of citizens' precious liberties. Now they've legalized torture and illegal spying leaving citizens with NO right to a trial, NO right to know the charges against you, NO right to an attorney, NO presumption of Innocence, and No right to privacy in one's person. Heck, you may have to strip and spread 'em if your local police department thinks your parking violation warrants as much!
This may not be End Times, but sure as Hell is Mad Times.
Or as Dave Lindorff put it, "This can't be happening..."
Sinclair Lewis must be turning over in the grave!
"I'm normally a pretty optimistic person." She may be a lot less optimistic in the years to come.
I propose the following alternative list of forbidden words and themes:
charter
assessment
learning outcome
rubric
privatize
standardize
stem
No reference to Shakespeare's Macbeth (there is a character named Duncan)
accountability
no references to either racing or climbing
no mention of the Left Behind books
distance learning
And so on.
You forgot deregulate.
I'd like to add:
terrorist
warrior
patriot
hero
democracy
religion
god
When do they pass out the "soma"?
If you haven't read it give Huxley's "Brave New World" a go.
You know instead of talking about the words we shouldn't use on these tests, we should be discussing the 50 standardized tests none of us should be submitting ourselves to.
Why do we? Do they ever deliver on their promises? We wear helmets for almost any physical activity, we submit to pee tests, we strap our babies backwards in the back seat, we buckle up, do they ever lower their rates?
I am glad I am so old I don't get ask to take many tests anymore. I am just sorry kids get subjected to so many.