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MEDICAL PRIVACY
Psychological Testing in
Schools
Excerpts from Cloning of the
American Mind a 573-page book by B.K. Eakman,
Huntington House Publishers, 1998
Quote: "It is very desirable that no child escape inspection, because of the importance of discovering every individual of exceptional ability or inability."
Paul Popenoe, editor of the Journal of Heredity, Board member of the American Eugenics Society,
and his colleague Roswell Hill Johnson, professor at the University of Pittsburgh, Applied Eugenics, 1926, 370.
Referring to a 1986 newspaper expose': "It took four years, an
audit of Pennsylvania's federal funding links to the EQA
[Educational Quality Assessment], and a series of threats and
counterthreats between federal and Pennsylvania education officials
over the particulars of the funding, before state testing authorities
finally admitted to the public that the EQA was, in fact, a
psychological testing instrument and that it violated several of the
seven protected areas under the Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment,
passed in 1978, sponsored by Senator Orrin Hatch." (page 11)
"Meanwhile, sophisticated surveys encompassing a wide variety of
personality and opinion data were proliferating at a dizzying rate in
classrooms nationwide, covering everything from sexual topics to
political proclivities and social attitutes -- drug and alcohol
surveys, university studies involving self-reports, health (sex)
questionnaires, and so on. A typical example is a 149-item
questionnaire for sixth-, ninth-, and twelfth-graders in
Minnesota which...encourages children to report on their
parents:
- Has drinking by any family member repeatedly cause family,
health, job or legal problems? If so, who?...
- How often do you get drunk?" (Page 13)
On February 9, 1996,, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Riview's
Harrisburg correspondent reported on a plan to do illicit
psychological testing on students in three school districts (Shaaler,
Gateway, and Duquesne) The National Institutes of Mental Health had
made a grant to Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic (affiliated
with the University of Pittsburgh) for a study of treatments for
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. "Parents, including one MIT
nuclear engineer, Richard Lopiccolo, produced the documentation,
including a protocol summary, showing that a combination of drugs and
psychosocial treatments were planned. Neither parents nor school
boards had been fully apprised of the scope of this effort; they had
to find out for themselves....
...Among the significant aspects of the case was the revelation
that psychological data was being mixed not only with students'
education records but with medical
records....There was no informed consent...Moreover[in the
future] there exists a record of a child having been seen and/or
treated by a psychiatrist. Insurance companies,
potential employers, or even a political candidate might find such
information useful, especially considering the content of some
of the 60 personally identifiable questions the children had to
answer as part of the project." (page 27)
"A now fortunately defunct Baltimore, Maryland, health
class survey for seventh-graders boasted multiple choice questions
that included every conceivable aspect of sex...arrest record, drug
use history; parent's rules and disciplinary methods; and all the old
stand-bys about parents' age, work, history, salary, health plan,
number of hours spent at home, and education levels." (pages 29-30)
[A testing contract between CTB MacMillan/McGraw-Hill and the
State of Maryland] "not only reveals how tests are pre-slugged
for identification, but how data tapes are made from the information
collected. The contract goes on to describe how 'research studies'
are 'embedded' within the tests. Page 3-3 of
the document makes clear that the test developers, analysts, and so
on, are psychologists. No mention is made of any experts in
English or math, science, history, or any other academic subject."
(page 65)
"...'[D]istribution' sometimes means (but not always) that a
representative from the contracting agency goes to the local school
to disseminate, proctor, and collect the tests--which is one reason
why teachers frequently are not aware of administrative directions
that allude to student identifiers, nor are teachers always aware of
the exact contents of the test itself." (page 65)
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