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Common Core Update: Creative Protests Nationwide

<div>UPDATE&colon; Common Core is having continued&comma; stronger resistence&period; In Florida&comma; where Common Core-aligned testing is mandatory for students&comma; many parents are still refusing to have their children tested&period; One school&comma; however&comma; refused to release a fifth grade student when her mother arrived to pick her up&period; The mother was told that her child was not allowed to leave and that she was not permitted to see her daughter&period; In response&comma; the frightened mother called 911 and a school respource officer was dispatched&period; The principal was ordered to release the child per her mothers request&period; <&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>The tests&comma; which were mostly administered last week&comma; experienced a variety of technical glitches that slowed down the procedure and may have interfered with students&&num;8217&semi; results&period; Ohio&&num;8217&semi;s Department of Education announced that it is refusing to financially penalize schools if students to not take the test&period; Hundreds if not thousands of high school students in New Mexico and New Jersey protested by walking out of their testing rooms or simply not coming to school that day&period; Some parents of younger students have instructed their children to either break the seal on their testing booklet prematurely&comma; invalidating their test&comma; or simply leave all answers blank&period; <&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>Parents are now standing up and resisting Common Core in states where it is in effect&period; Many are outraged by the difficulty&comma; length&comma; and frustrating set-up of the standardized testing mandated by Common Core&period; Last year&comma; students endured five hours and nine minutes of testing over the course of several days&period; This year&comma; in states where Common Core is accepted as-is&comma; students as young as seven will be expected to sit through over eleven hours of testing&period; <&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>Indiana Governor Mike Pence signed an executive order shortening the length of the test&comma; which he called &&num;8216&semi;unacceptable&period;&&num;8217&semi; Parents in other states will have to sign a document opting their children out of testing if they do not want them to go through the long exam&period; Several parent-run organizations have sprung up to raise awareness of what they feel are unfair standards and to protest the implementation of Common Core&period; The New York State Allies For Public Education advocate parents opting-out of testing for their child and are raising money for informational billboards&period; Ohioans Against Common Core was founded by a school financial administrator and it&&num;8217&semi;s mission is to advocate opting-out as a means of protecting children and protesting through civil disobediance&period; <&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>One New Jersey news station filmed parents attempting the Common Core standardized tests&period; Parents involved in the experiment were quick to complain first about the interace&period; The test is done entirely on a computer&comma; and parents found it difficult to navigate the program&period; Upon reaching the actual test&comma; parents complained that the wording was &&num;8216&semi;confusing&&num;8217&semi; and at times &&num;8216&semi;impossible to understand&period;&&num;8217&semi;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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