Community Corner
Atlanta Teacher Had Test 'Changing Party' at Douglas County Home
The Atlanta CRCT scandal report cites Douglas resident Bernadine Macon.
An Atlanta elementary school teacher who lives in Douglas County was one of the players revealed this week in a report on the Atlanta cheating scandal.
The governor’s office report says Bernadine Macon, a fifth grade teacher at Gideons Elementary, had a weekend test “changing party” in 2009 at her house in Douglas County. She and four other fifth grade teachers snuck the CRCT tests off campus, the report says. The year before, the group had changed answers at the school.
Altering public records is a felony under Georgia law with a maximum of 10 years in prison, according to a report in the AJC. Douglas County District Attorney David McDade was not available today for comment.
Find out what's happening in Douglasvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
It will be up to his office to decide whether anyone is prosecuted.
The "changing party" was just one of numerous accusations in the report from Gov. Nathan Deal’s office. School officials across the Atlanta Public School system changed answers on the CRCT tests and went to great lengths to cover up their trail and silence any whistle blowers, according to the report.
Find out what's happening in Douglasvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Cheating was “an open secret” at Gideons Elementary, the report says.
The testing coordinator handed out answer-key transparencies to place over answer sheets so the job would go faster, according to the AJC report.
When investigators began questioning educators, now-retired principal Armstead Salters obstructed their efforts by telling teachers not to cooperate, the report said.
“If anyone asks you anything about this just tell them you don’t know,” the report quotes Salters as saying.
He told teachers to “just stick to the story and it will all go away.”
Salters eventually confessed to knowing cheating was occurring, the report said.
Macon also admitted to investigators that she and others changed CRCT answers at her home in Douglas County.
The report says Principal Salters called during the investigation to tell Macon to "hang in there" and that she would be "ok because she didn't do anything."
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.