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NY Education Department Revises Exam Policy Following Criticism From Free Expression Groups
June 06, 2002

NYSED Says It Will Cease Altering Literary Selections in Exams Responding to a firestorm of protests from numerous free expression advocacy groups and authors, New York State Education Commissioner Richard Mills has directed the State Education Department (NYSED) to change its procedures regarding altering literary selections in the state’s Regents exam. "We must ensure that the state tests are fair for all students," the commissioner said in a June 4 statement. "I also believe that it is
important that we use literature on the tests without changes in the passages. I looked carefully at the
Education Departments current practices and the concerns of the writers
and have directed that these changes be made."
As previously reported in BTW (click
here to read), a number of free speech advocacy groups documented that,
for at least the past three years, NYSED had been altering literary passages
by removing words and paragraphs that were considered potentially offensive.
This included changing words such as "fat" to "heavy" or
removing any reference to sex, race, age, or religion. On Friday, May 3, the
groups sent a letter to Mills demanding an end to the alterations.
According to NYSEDs statement, "The tests now being developed
will use literary passages without changing the authors words. Literature
will continue to be excerpted for length because entire works cannot appear
on a single test. All passages will cite the author and title of the work."
However, groups that protested the alterations late last week, such as the
National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC), American Booksellers Foundation
for Free Expression (ABFFE), and New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), are
taking Millss statement with a grain of salt, said Joan Bertin, executive
director of NCAC.
"Ive heard a lot of conflicting statements from [NYSED] since Monday,"
Bertin told BTW. "What are the real facts -- are they going to fix
the Regents by January, or June? Will they use ellipsis to take out sensitive
words, pick dumb-downed passages, or are they really taking this seriously and
looking at the impact of their sensitivity guidelines on curriculum and test
construction overall?"
Furthermore, the sensitivity guidelines dont just affect literary passages,
Bertin stressed, but other parts of the Regents, as well. "There is a need
for a public exploration of the subject," she said. The advocacy groups
are asking legislative leaders to conduct oversight hearings on the issue. --David
Grogan
Topics: Free Expression,
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