Nicklaus Eyes Oheka
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Nicklaus Eyes Oheka
WISCONSIN CRUZ, SANDERS WIN PRIMARIES A4-5 SPORTS FINAL newsday.com $2.00 | LI EDITION Wednesday April 6, 2016 HI 43° LO 42° MOSTLY SUNNY T H E L O N G I S L A N D N E W S PA P E R PHILLIP ENNIS REVOLT CONTINUES GETTY IMAGES / DAVID CANNON Nicklaus Eyes Oheka Would lease castle, redesign golf course in 99-year deal A6-7 WAVE OF OPT-OUTS Tens of thousands of LI students refuse to take Common Core tests A2-3 | VIDEO AT NEWSDAY COM ● DISTRICT-BY-DISTRICT NUMBERS A19 COPYRIGHT 2016, NEWSDAY LLC, LONG ISLAND, VOL. 76, NO. 216 GET $50 TODAY ON A SERVE® CARD AFTER WE FILE YOUR TAXES. ©AMEX Minimum tax prep fee required. Valid at participating locations. Terms and conditions apply. $50 provided on an American Express Serve ® Card. No other promotion, coupons, or discount valid with Gift. Ask a Tax Pro or see JacksonHewitt.com for details. American Express Serve: Eligibility, fees and restrictions apply. See the Consumer User Agreement at serve.com/jacksonhewitt/legal for details. American Express Serve prepaid cards are issued by American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc., 200 Vesey Street, New York, NY 10285. All trademarks are property of their respective owners. 1-800-234-1040 2113628901 TOP STORIES A2 O PT-OUT REVOLT CONTINUES NEWSDAY, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2016 newsday.com LI parents keep tens of thousands of kids from taking Common Core exams Long Island appeared on the threshold of cementing its place as the epicenter of the opt-out movement statewide, with tens of thousands of students refusing to take the state’s English language arts exam yesterday on the first day of Common Core testing, a Newsday survey showed. With 74 of the Island’s 124 districts responding, nearly 58,000 of about 115,000 eligible students in grades three through eight had opted out of the test, marking a 50.3 percent refusal rate Islandwide. In Nassau districts that responded, 44.6 percent opted out, while responses from Suffolk districts showed 56.7 percent boycotting the exam. Anti-testing activists said the opt-outs sent a clear message to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, the Board of Regents and the state Education Department: The tests and curricula aligned with the Common Core academic standards must be wholly reconsidered. “The message is, ‘Fix it in its entirety and fix it now,’ ” said Jeanette Deutermann, a North Bellmore parent and founder of This story was reported by Michael R. Ebert, Candice Ferrette, Víctor Manuel Ramos, Joie Tyrrell and Olivia Winslow. It was written by Tyrrell. the Long Island Opt Out network. “Clearly, parents have made the decision that these tests are not what they want for their children.” Educators predicted the refusal numbers will increase as the English exams, commonly known as the ELA, continue tomorrow and Thursday. Next, week, students face three days of state math assessments, from Wednesday through Friday. “The numbers . . . send a thunderclap to Albany,” said Patchogue-Medford superintendent Michael J. Hynes. “The tests are not in the best interest of our children.” In that Suffolk district, more than 71 percent of eligible students in grades three through eight refused to take the examyesterday — an increase from the 66 percent who opted out last year. OO Nassau HIGHEST OPT-OUTS This is the fourth Bellmore-Merrick year of test refusals Top five school districts in each linked to county, by percentage of students state-driven educaBellmore who refused to take the state’s tion reforms. English language arts test yesterday In spring 2015, Levittown an estimated 200,000 students North Bellmore statewide — more than 70,000 of them Comsewogue on Long Island — reEast Rockaway fused to take state tests in English and Lindenhurst math, the largest such boycott in the nation. The year Rocky Point prior, nearly 9,500 students moratoopted out, according to the four-year Connetquot Newsday survey on the final rium was put in place day of ELA testing in April that means scores canEastport2014. The year before that, a not be used punitively South Manor small group of a few hundred against students or teachstudents, mainly in Rockville ers, whose performance Centre, declined to take the evaluations are by law linked to the test results. tests. In addition, the Education DeThe Education Department said it did not plan to issue a partment hired a new company Opt-outs, statement yesterday on the re- — Questar Assessment Inc., a A19 by district Minneapolis-based firm — to fusals. The boycott surged from help create new tests. This Merrick to Montauk, despite year’s exams still use material emergency regulations the Re- from the former company, Pear- tests are the only objective measure available to compare gents approved and the Educa- son Education. Commissioner MaryEllen progress between schools and tion Department began to carry out in response to the contro- Elia had urged parents in re- districts. Yesterday, all of those efforts versy. The number of exam cent days to have their chilquestions were lessened and a dren participate, saying the did not appear to have made 70.4% 68.8% 68.5% 68.0% 65.4% Suffolk 85.6% 80.9% 78.5% 74.1% 72.6% TOP STORIES A3 Students at Saxton Middle School in Patchogue who refused to take the English language arts test yesterday study in a cafeteria instead. Sixth-graders who opted out yesterday do other work at Saxton Middle School in Patchogue. ] Watch test explainer: newsday.com/education land of those replying to Newsday’s survey, with 86 percent of eligible students refusing the exam. “The parents have spoken, and what’s the message? ‘Listen to the parents. Listen to us,’ ” Comsewogue superintendent Joseph Rella said. “Parents have made their minds up, and the attempt by the state saying ‘Everything’s changed and it’s better’ — the parents are not buying In Hempstead, school board president LaMont Johnson said yesterday that most eligible students in the district were taking the test, as was the case last year, though he could not provide specifics. He said he supports the push to improve performance through testing and said he had not heard many complaints about it from parents or students. “I just think that our students are ready for the challenge of whatever test is put before them, and they are not frightened by the standards,” Johnson said. New York State rolled out its first tests based on national Common Core academic standards in spring 2013. Soon after implementation, dozens of teachers complained the state Education Department had not INTERACTIVE See the 2016 Common Core debate, photos and latest stories. newsday.com/commoncore2016 supplied adequate guides of the brand-new curricula, and many parents expressed deep concern about age-inappropriate test questions and plunging passage rates. The linkage of students’ test scores to teachers’ and principals’ performance evaluations fueled the opposition. That intensified after Cuomo pushed a law through the legislature in spring 2015 requiring districts to base up to 50 percent of the job ratings on student exam scores. After the record test boycott last spring, Cuomo backtracked, convening an advisory panel that suggested a four-year moratorium on use of students’ test scores. William Johnson, superintendent of the Rockville Centre school district, where some of the first refusals linked to Common Core tests occurred in spring 2013, said the boycotts send a clear message to the state. “Abandon this whole testing protocol,” he said. “It’s anachronistic, it’s unnecessary, it could be easily replaced and it makes no sense in the current environment.” NEWSDAY, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2016 much of a dent in the boycott numbers. In the Buffalo area, boycotts in local districts ranged from 49 percent to 71 percent, and in Rochester the refusal rate was about 31 percent, according to news reports. Of the Long Island districts that responded yesterday, 36 reported that more than half their eligible students boycotted the test. Comsewogue led the Is- it.” Parents in the opt-out movement charge the exams are harmful and have developmentally inappropriate questions, that extensive test-prep time detracts from instruction in other subjects, and that the assessments put undue pressure on students and teachers. Medford parent Diana Andrade was among those in the Patchogue-Medford district whose children did not take the exam yesterday. Her kids are in the fifth and seventh grades. “What has happened in the last three to four years since this has rolled out is there has been much less time spent on social studies, science and even field trips and the arts,” said Andrade, who has served on the district’s school board for the past two years. On Monday, Douglas Mayers, president of the NAACP’s Freeport/Roosevelt branch, cautioned parents that opting out of the tests “cannot be an option for our children” because of the role the exams play in identifying academic need in schools and districts with a high proportion of students of color. newsday.com JEFFREY BASINGER JEFFERY BASINGER Opt-out revolt continues OUR TOWNS County Department of Real Estate to knock down a dilapidated Medford home. Town officials were alerted to the distressed county-owned house on Cedar Lane in February when a nearby homeowner reported that the home’s roof and part of the rear had collapsed in a storm, town officials said. Brookhaven’s law department investigated and secured the house, and is now working with county officials to demolish it. Supervisor Edward P. Romaine, in a Feb. 29 letter to Suffolk Legis. Robert Calarco (D-Patchogue) asking for assistance, called the structure a “dangerous building.” The town also is moving toward tearing down a vacant Center Moriches house on Mickel Ave. It has been boarded up by town authorities three times since 2012. An abandoned in-ground pool is not properly fenced in, and the house is infested with fleas and animal feces, officials said. Residents can report a vacant house by calling 451-TOWN. — DEON J. HAMPTON N . HE M PSTE A D Summer programs at Clark Botanic Garden Chart shows responses of 74 of Long Island’s 124 school districts on the number of students in grades 3-8 eligible to take the state English language arts test and the number who refused to take the exam on April 5, the first of three days it is administered statewide. # of students # who eligible to refused to take test take test District NASSAU Baldwin Bellmore Bellmore-Merrick Carle Place East Meadow East Rockaway Floral Park-Bellerose Freeport Glen Cove Great Neck Herricks Hewlett-Woodmere Hicksville Island Trees Jericho Lawrence Levittown Lynbrook Malverne Manhasset Massapequa Merrick New Hyde ParkGarden City Park North Bellmore North Merrick North Shore Oceanside Oyster Bay-East Norwich Plainview-Old Bethpage Rockville Centre Roosevelt Roslyn Syosset Valley Stream 24 Valley Stream 30 Valley Stream Central Wantagh West Hempstead Westbury % who refused 2,144 590 1,796 620 3,296 563 895 2,966 1,429 2,827 1,753 1,333 2,319 1,090 1,404 1,138 3,266 1,298 765 1,530 3,296 854 1,086 406 1,265 334 1,612 368 242 856 613 517 267 802 798 598 281 286 2,237 807 337 187 2,113 479 50.7% 68.8 70.4 53.9 48.9 65.4 27.0 28.9 42.9 18.3 15.2 60.2 34.4 54.9 20.0 25.1 68.5 62.2 44.1 12.2 64.1 56.1 1,004 259 25.8 1,243 693 1,297 2,531 709 2,313 1,656 1,355 1,463 2,912 650 906 1,365 1,356 873 1,862 845 432 552 1,224 286 1,322 986 106 566 1,359 366 163 686 820 277 628 68.0 62.3 42.6 48.4 40.3 57.2 59.5 7.8 38.7 46.7 56.3 18.0 50.3 60.5 31.7 33.7 # of students # who eligible to refused to take test take test District % who refused SUFFOLK Bayport-Blue Point 1,083 782 Brentwood 8,391 4,648 55.4 Central Islip 3,212 373 11.6 Cold Spring Harbor 72.2% 848 165 19.5 Comsewogue 1,704 1,458 85.6 Connetquot 74.1 2,735 2,026 East Hampton 659 86 13.1 East Quogue 248 156 62.9 1,622 1,178 72.6 37 0 0.0 278 181 65.1 Eastport-South Manor Fishers Island Greenport Hauppauge 1,675 1,198 71.5 Kings Park 1,549 916 59.1 Lindenhurst 2,227 1,801 80.9 506 211 41.7 Middle Country 4,321 2,978 68.9 Miller Place 1,306 868 66.5 211 36 17.1 Mattituck-Cutchogue Montauk New Suffolk 5 0 0.0 Oysterponds 38 13 34.2 3,460 2,476 71.6 496 299 60.3 52 10 19.2 Riverhead 2,050 805 39.3 Rocky Point 1,490 1,169 78.5 89 41 46.1 Patchogue-Medford Port Jefferson Quogue Shelter Island Smithtown 4,390 2,582 58.8 Southampton 645 219 34.0 Southold 361 199 55.1 456 103 22.6 2,902 1,615 55.7 Tuckahoe 231 83 35.9 Wainscott 1 0 0.0 632 298 47.2 William Floyd 3,996 1,595 39.9 Nassau Suffolk Long Island 61,360 53,906 115,266 27,368 30,568 57,936 44.6 56.7 50.3 Springs Three Village Westhampton Beach Amagansett Amityville Babylon Bay Shore Bethpage Bridgehampton Center Moriches Commack Copiague SOURCE: SCHOOL DISTRICTS Deer Park East Islip East Moriches East Williston Elwood Elmont Farmingdale Fire Island Franklin Square Garden City Half Hollow Hills Hampton Bays Harborfields Hempstead Huntington Island Park Islip Locust Valley Long Beach Longwood Mineola Mount Sinai North Babylon Northport-East Northport Plainedge Port Washington Remsenburg-Speonk Sachem Sag Harbor Sayville Seaford Sewanhaka Shoreham-Wading River South Country South Huntington Uniondale Valley Stream 13 West Babylon West Islip Wyandanch Sagaponack declined to provide data due to small school population that would result in inadvertent identification of children COMPILED BY MICHAEL R. EBERT NEWSDAY, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2016 DID NOT RESPOND newsday.com North Hempstead residents can sign up for summer programming at Clark Botanic Garden in Albertson. There are three programs, with classes offered from May through September, covering composting, rainwater recycling, and creating a rain garden. In the composting cooperative program, residents will learn how to compost kitchen waste to create organic material ideal for gardening. After the class, residents will be required to purchase a $50 composter. Another program, called “Recycle the Rain,” will cover water conservation. Students will learn how to use rain barrels, which can recycle up to 1,800 gallons of stormwater in just one summer season. During the class, 50-gallon rain barrels will be used and students will be asked to purchase one for $50. Residents can also sign up to learn how to create a rain garden, which is situated near a source of water runoff to collect rainwater and diverts it from the sewer system. At the end of the class, which costs $25, students will take home a selection of plants ideal for a rain garden. All classes are held at 193 I. U. Willets Rd.. To register, call 311 or 516-869-6311. Classes begin May 12. — CHRISTINE CHUNG WHO OPTED OUT A19