Thursday, September 10, 2015

The new Common Core test results: DON’T PLAY THE BLAME GAME!

 

“SBAC SCORES SHOULD NOT BE PUBLISHED IN THE UPCOMING SCHOOL REPORT CARDS. PUBLISHING THE SCHOOL’S SCORES IN THE REPORT CARDS WILL MAKE THE SCORES EVALUATIVE BY THE VERY NATURE OF DOING SO AND WILL MISINFORM PARENTS AND COMMUNITY MEMBERS.”

From the Associated Administrators of Los Angeles Weekly Update for the Week of September 14, 2015 | bit.ly/1UKiYUV

10 Sept 2015 :: The California Department of Education released the first year’s results of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) tests in English language arts/literacy and math on September 9, 2015. AALA understands that comparing SBAC scores to previous state assessments is like comparing the proverbial apples to oranges.

Moreover, it appears students did not fare well overall. This may be attributed to the newness of the test, the increased level of technology, the delayed arrival of the technology to many schools, the challenges of bandwidth infrastructure at many schools and because the professional development provided thus far lags behind the teaching and learning needed to parallel it with the California’s Common Core-aligned tests. Most importantly, the scores are baseline, not for stakes, nonevaluative and are meant to be used for the purpose of strengthening pedagogy.

To access the scores, please follow this link: CAASPP Results.

AALA is concerned that, in the public’s eye, the scores have quickly become evaluative for administrators and teachers. Teachers make a fair point when they tell principals that if the results are indeed intended to improve practice and alignment, why publish them? Therefore, context is of great importance in this matter to maintain a keen perspective and to provide administrators the appropriate, genuine and required levels of supports.

There has been a significant influx of new principals since the transition to and implementation of the Common Core State Standards began in earnest some three years ago. Since beginning their assignment, these principals have served TWO general superintendents, probably TWO local District Superintendents, TWO Deputy Superintendents of Instruction and more-than-likely, THREE Instructional Directors, THREE ELA and THREE math coordinators from the Educational Service Centers now known as Local Districts. In the process, freezes were imposed, and then lifted, no substitutes were allowed for professional development purposes on Mondays and Fridays, conference approvals required myriad approvals and scrutiny and the operational demands kept coming!

Thus, situational awareness, empathy and understanding are needed to ensure administrators are receiving the necessary supports to empower and facilitate the process of being the instructional leaders the District expects them to be. Herewith are some questions from AALA for the District’s Leadership:

● How is the District going to streamline the duties and responsibilities of administrators to optimize instructional leadership?

● How soon will District Leadership realize that additional assistant principals are a mandatory part of the equation to improve student achievement?

● How will the professional development provided by the District and the Local Districts be differentiated to meet the needs of English learners, standard English learners, students with disabilities, gifted and talented students?

● How is the District stabilizing leadership at every level of the organization to enhance a coherent, unified and articulated professional development plan?

● How are the District and the Local Districts differentiating professional development to meet the needs of the constituents served by the Local District?

● How is the District organizing for effort and allocating the required professional development funds to ensure Districtwide alignment with the California Common Core curriculum and the tests?

It is predictable that scores will rise as teachers and administrators become more familiar with the Common Core standards, and students become familiar with the more complex questions on the examinations. For example, in 2003, when the California Standards Tests were introduced, 30% of 3rd graders and 40% of 5th graders scored proficient and above in English/Language Arts. Ten years later, 45% percent of 3rd graders and 60% percent of 5th graders scored at a proficient level. Some of this improvement can be attributed to familiarity with testing structures and procedures.

It is AALA’s position that SBAC scores should NOT be published in the upcoming school report cards. Publishing the school’s scores in the report cards will make the scores evaluative by the very nature of doing so and will misinform parents and community members. There is no doubt transparency and accessibility to the public is important. Therefore, the school report card can link the public to the website repository with a CLEAR disclaimer that the scores are nonevaluative.

The new Common Core test results: NEW CALIFORNIA TESTS PRESENT SOBERING PICTURE OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT

By Howard Blume | LA Times | http://lat.ms/1Ke0z15

State testing

Students in 11th grade at Francisco Bravo Medical Magnet High School practice for new state standardized tests in February.(Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)

10 Sept 2015  ::  Echoing a nationwide downward trend, most California students are falling short of state learning targets and are not on track to succeed in college, according to the results of new, more rigorous standardized tests released Wednesday.

And the picture is even worse for L.A. Unified, the nation's second-largest school system, than it is for the state. Across California, 44% of students achieved targets for their grade in English, while 34% did so in math. In L.A. Unified, the figures were 33% and 25%.

“The results show our starting point,” state Supt. of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson said, “a window into where California students are in meeting tougher academic standards that emphasize critical thinking, problem solving and analytical writing.

“I am encouraged that many students are at or near achievement standards. However, just as we expected, many students need to make more progress.”

How did your school score?

How did your school score? >>

Indeed, officials said they were prepared for the low scores.

Questions based on the new “Common Core” standards, which have been adopted in 42 states, are more difficult than those on California's previous test. And students for the first time took the exam on computers.

The testing is designed to provide a more detailed and accurate snapshot of achievement.

Students are given questions that require deeper thinking about a theme in literature, for example, or about the concepts of algebra or geometry. They get more or less difficult based on which ones a student answers correctly, and in theory no two students will be presented with exactly the same test.

The new test also requires some written answers, in addition to the more familiar multiple-choice format.

The results are not as discouraging as they seem, former state schools Supt. Bill Honig said, because the bar is set so high: what students need to succeed at a four-year college.

An 11th-grader who scores below expectations, for example, would be considered unprepared for college. Younger students scoring below grade-level goals would be classified as not on track for college.

“Not everybody is going to attend a four-year college,” Honig said.

Even though student achievement needs to improve, he said, the scores would be higher if calibrated to the skills needed to attend a community college, get a two-year nursing certificate or pursue a career in manufacturing.

Still, the just-released results could prove disheartening to parents and school district officials who had thought, based on previous tests, that their students were doing better.

Students who met or exceeded the standards in English

Under the Common Core-linked test, 40% of California third-graders scored at grade level or better in math. That compares to 66% who did so on the former test. And in English, 38% of third-graders met expectations or better on the new test, compared to 45% previously.

“What's critical,” said state Deputy Supt. Keric Ashley, “is the communication that happens between teachers and parents” so that the results are not looked at in a vacuum.

In recent years, L.A. Unified had narrowed the gap between its test results and those in other districts, but that trend reversed this year.

“As we all expected, the overall results of these more rigorous assessments show that we still have more work to do,” Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said in a statement.

For some parents, such explanations are not enough.

“I don't understand how the new data compare to old data, when you take into account the shift to Common Core teaching standards,” Los Angeles parent Risa Morris said. “Is it possible that students actually really were doing better before and the new curriculum is causing students to fall behind?”

2cents_thumb smf: Risa Morris is right; she has a reasonable expectation that she can compare the old+new results. And The District and The State of California has done a piss-poor job of explaining why she cannot+should not. That poor job makes teachers, schools, administrators and the new standards and the new test look bad.

According to experts, the Common Core learning goals have changed both what is taught and how. The idea is to get students to think more deeply, solve problems and better express themselves in writing and speaking. Those objectives are reflected in the new test.

Going forward, the test-preparation package for schools includes a digital library of resources for teachers and periodic exams for students to sharpen their skills.

One area that will require attention is the substantial achievement gaps that separate the performance of Asian and white students from their black and Latino peers.

Students who met or exceeded the standards in Math

In English, 72% of Asian students and 51% of white students tested at grade level or better; 28% of black students and 32% of Latinos met those standards.

In addition, 21% of students from low-income families scored proficient or better in math; 53% of those from more affluent families did so.

Although scores generally were lower at all schools, the highest scoring campuses declined less. And those typically serve students from more affluent families or those with fewer educational challenges.

Canyon Elementary in L.A. Unified, for example, saw its English proficiency rate decline by only two percentage points, from 95% to 93% of students. The school has only five students classified as English learners.

“Addressing achievement gaps needs to be at the forefront of any conversation regarding preparing students for college and career,” said Ryan J. Smith. of Oakland-based Education Trust-West, a research and advocacy group.

By adopting a tougher test, the end result should be graduates who are better prepared for college and the work force, said David Rattray, a vice president with the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce.

“As far as we can tell, these are the highest standards we've ever established,” he said.

California has set four levels of achievement under the new system: standard exceeded, standard met, standard nearly met or standard not met. The objective was for students to land in the top two categories.

Although the scores were low, they were not a surprise. Students in California performed close to expectations based on a field test given in 21 states two years ago.

Political opposition to standardized testing and Common Core has emerged nationwide among parents and teachers.

In New York, the parents of 20% of students kept their children from taking their state's test, which also is based on Common Core standards. In California, parents of fewer than 1% of students refused to have their children tested.

Nearly 3.2 million Californians in grades 3 through 8 and grade 11 took the test.

  • Los Angeles Times staff writers Ryan Menezes, Sandra Poindexter and Ben Welsh conducted data analysis for this report.

Wednesday, September 09, 2015

Editorial: LAUSD WON A LAWSUIT — but lost the moral high ground

 

By The Times Editorial Boardhttp://lat.ms/1gawbbZ

LAUSD desk

Detail of a historical school desk on display at LAUSD headquarters in Los Angeles on March 11, 2014. (Los Angeles Times)

 

9 Sept 2015  ::  Defending against a lawsuit brought by a former middle school student who'd been sexually abused by a teacher, a lawyer for the Los Angeles Unified School District made the outrageous assertion that the girl — who was 14 at the time of the abuse — bore some responsibility for it because she had engaged in the encounters willingly.

Even more stunning, this was the second time the district used this odious line of reasoning. As L.A. Unified tries to teach its students, there's more to life than winning — such as acting with principles and recognizing one's larger mission.

Any expert on sexual abuse could tell the district's lawyers why a 14-year-old cannot be held responsible for a sexual relationship with an adult. The reason for laws protecting minors against sexual predators is that they lack the emotional and developmental maturity to make adult decisions. They are easily persuaded by adults. They are impulsive. And in the case of L.A. Unified in particular, too many of them come from lower-income communities that don't have the resources to ward off those who would take advantage of them.

Nevertheless, in response to the former middle schooler's lawsuit, the district's then attorney, W. Keith Wyatt, offered a defense last year that was based in part on the girl's sexual history and what he claimed was her consensual participation in the sexual incidents. After the public howled at his comments about the case, the district barred him, an outside attorney, from future work on its behalf. The district also won the case at trial — not because of the girl's actions but, reasonably enough, because it had no way of knowing about the relationship between the student and teacher, and so couldn't have intervened to protect her.

The girl's family appealed, and when the appeal was heard last week, the district's new lawyer made the same argument about the girl bearing responsibility.

Some lawyers may believe it's their job to win by whatever means possible, but that can't be true for the ones who represent L.A. Unified. The school board should have adopted a policy last year that it would not tolerate such legal arguments being made on its behalf. Instead, it has sent a terrible message to its students and their families.

Legislation signed into law this summer will bar such outrages in future civil trials involving alleged sexual abuse of minors. It prohibits defendants in such cases from arguing that the sex was consensual — an argument that already was not allowed in criminal trials. But L.A. Unified's lack of moral courage, when it was an option and not the law, will sting for a long time.

2 MORE ON THE WASHINGTON STATE SUPREME COURT DECISION ON CHARTER SCHOOLS

Charters Go "Sleepless in Seattle" While Teachers Strike

by Alan Singer | Social studies educator, Hofstra University, my opinions, of course, are my own | Huffington Post | http://huff.to/1Kb07AI

Why the Washington State Supreme Court Ruling Matters

Jennifer Berkshire (EduShyster) posted this message on Basecamp.

I just posted a piece by writer Martha Carey who explains the origins of the Supreme Court's recent ruling against charter schools. She sums it up this way: 

Posted: 09/09/2015 9:57 am EDT Updated: 09/09/2015 9:59 am EDT   ::  The charter school movement just took a big legal hit in Washington State. The state's highest court ruled that a 2012 law establishing charter schools in Washington, approved as the result of a Gates funded referendum campaign, violates the state constitution. According to the state Constitution, public funds can be used only to support "common schools." By a 6 to 3 vote, the court ruled that publicly funded but privately run charter schools are not "common schools" because their governing boards are appointed by the founders of the schools.

Voters in the state of Washington rejected charter school in 1996, 2000 and 2004. However a pro-charter referendum narrowly passed in 2012 after it received millions of dollars in financial support from wealthy business-related "charitable" foundations. According to a report in the Seattle Times, Bill Gates "donated" more than $3 million, Alice Walton of the Walmart family "contributed" about $1.7 million, and the parents of Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos kicked in $750,000. Seattle Entrepreneur Nicolas Hanauer with ties to both Microsoft and Amazon added another $1 million. Apparently the judges were not impressed.

In the court's opinion, delivered by Chief Justice Barbara Madsen, the case was not about the merits of charter schools but whether they were eligible for public funds. She cited precedents dating back to 1909 that established they were ineligible because they are run by private nonprofit organizations and not controlled by local voters.

The court case was brought by a coalition of civic groups including Washington Education Association, the League of Women Voters of Washington, El Centro de la Raza and the Washington Association of School Administrators. Washington Education Association is a union representing Washington state teachers.

Currently there are nine charter schools in Washington and eight new one's were expected to open this year. The court ruling goes into affect at the end of September, so there is still some time for legal maneuvering by charter school advocates. The Washington State Charter Schools Association is requesting the court reconsider its decision and announced place plans to hit up "donors" to keep them in operation for the year.

A Seattle Times editorial condemning the court ruling read as a virtual quote from statements made charter school advocates and the newspaper probably should be investigated for bias, if not for plagiarism. The State of Washington is currently embroiled in debate over a fairer school funding system and the newspaper's editorial writers were concerned it would undermine reform efforts. Washington state is being fined $100,000 a day by the state Supreme Court because lawmakers do not adequately pay to educate the state's one million school children.

The Seattle Times also published an op-ed by a charter school teacher bemoaning the impact of the decision on the 1,200 children who attend Washington State charter schools. This is a small fraction of the over 1 million children attending public schools in the state.

The Washington charter school case may have national repercussions. According to a report distributed by the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder most charter schools in the United States receive public funds and are defined as public schools under federal and state laws. However, ublic schools are subject to transparency laws while charter schools and their private operators frequently refuse to share information and data with the public. In addition, estimates are more than half of students attending charter schools are enrolled in schools owned and operated by private companies.

According to the New York State Constitution, "The legislature shall provide for the maintenance and support of a system of free common schools, wherein all the children of this state may be educated." If federal courts uphold the Washington State definition of "common school," New York charters will be challenged as well.

In New York State, the Charter Schools Act of 1998 authorized "a system of charter schools to provide opportunities for teachers, parents, and community members to establish and maintain schools that operate independently of existing schools and school districts." Charter schools must submit governance guidelines, but according to the law "charter school shall be exempt from all other state and local laws, rules, regulations or policies governing public or private schools, boards of education and school districts, including those relating to school personnel and students, except as specifically provided in the school's charter or in this article." The law mandates that "The school district of residence shall pay directly to the charter school for each student enrolled in the charter school who resides in the school district the charter school basic tuition." Opponents of charter schools argue these provisions leave the charters largely unregulated while sapping resources from public schools

Teacher unions are often hostile to charter schools because provisions of the law erode job protection. Employees of a New York State charter school are employees of the "education corporation formed to operate the charter school and not an employee of the local school district in which the charter school is located . . . The board of trustees of a charter school shall employ and contract with necessary teachers, administrators and other school personnel." In addition, "The employees of a charter school that is not a conversion from an existing public school shall not be deemed members of any existing collective bargaining unit representing employees of the school district in which the charter school is located, and the charter school and its employees shall not be subject to any existing collective bargaining agreement between the school district and its employees."

Meanwhile, Seattle teachers voted to strike and schools were closed on Wednesday, the nominal first full day of school. While pay is a major issue, the teachers are also demanding reduced high-stakes testing and teacher input in the selection of assessment material.

"But what the case in Washington underscores most is the elemental choice made by charter proponents all those years ago, as they crafted the Minnesota legislation, variations of which are now on the books in 42 states. The choice was:
  • do we work together as a community to best provide the state-mandated education of all our citizens and do so in a way that continues to be overseen by the electorate, which may mean re-allocating resources and (gasp) raising taxes,
  • or do we just let private groups of folks do their own thing, using our taxes, in the name of education?"

___________________________________

September 9, 2015 by edushyster2012

Why the Washington State Supreme Court Ruling Matters

The origins of a surprisingly simple decision that could have major implications…

By Martha Carey
Something unusual happened in Washington state late last week. Charter schools came out on the losing end of a lawsuit. In fact, charter schools, as they are currently defined, funded and organized, were actually ruled unconstitutional by that state’s Supreme Court.  And the basis of that decision was surprisingly simple. The charter school law that narrowly passed Washington in 2012 was found to be in violation of the state’s constitution precisely because charter schools have private boards.

uncommon history

Uncommon Schools ≠ common schools
The constitution in that state clearly defines public schools as schools that operate via taxpayer funds, and which are *under the control of the qualified voters of the school district.*The Supreme Court just ruled that *because charter schools [under the new charter law] are run by an appointed board of nonprofit organization and thus are not subject to local voter control, they cannot qualify* as public schools as defined in Washington’s constitution. Which means funding them violates the law – as noted in the ruling: *money that is dedicated to common schools is unconstitutionally diverted to charter schools.*

What happens next will be pretty fascinating. Several charter organizations and charter operators are calling for a special session of the state legislature to *fix* this pesky problem. Others, including the Washington State Education Association, are expressing vindication and are urging legislators to address the poor state of public school funding once and for all.

Each state’s charter school laws are distinct, and some are far vaguer than others. In Pennsylvania, where I live, the charter school law put into effect in 1997 allows for charter schools to be run as entirely independent entities within a school district, and allows for those charter schools to receive public funds from the state in order to operate.

Schools-as-franchises
The Pennsylvania model of loose policy regulation of charter schools and essentially no oversight by the electorate is in alignment with the language of minnesota-welcome-e1332613731772the earliest charter school law, passed in Minnesota in 1991. The premise there was that public school districts were restricting choice by their stranglehold on schools-as-franchises in the education *market.* And the 1991 law promoted the notion that groups of parents, businesses, cultural organizations, etc. could get together and start schools that would give parents and students more education options, and the state and local districts would, correspondingly, divest themselves of the core responsibilities (and rules and regulations) for these schools, essentially allowing the *franchise* to organize and govern itself.

I first worked with several charters schools in St. Paul in 1996; in the five years between the charter school law passing and then, not only did a cluster of pretty random, curricular-specific charters (arts, music, science) spring up around the Twin Cities, but several quickly developed negative public reputations, mostly due to poor fiscal management.

Each state’s approach to charter laws is distinct, but this case seems to make a clear and compelling case about an idea that should be unifying: taxes to fund schools come from taxpayers who elect representatives at the state, local, and district levels who are our proxies in providing oversight and regulation over where those funds go.

A unifying idea
The case in Washington should give both charter proponents and legislators pause, and hopefully will add fuel to cases now working their way up the legal numbers 2pipeline. Each state’s approach to charter laws is distinct, but this case seems to make a clear and compelling case about an idea that should be unifying: taxes to fund schools come from taxpayers who elect representatives at the state, local, and district levels who are our proxies in providing oversight and regulation over where those funds go. If the population of taxpayers is not content with that process, they can change the legislators, the funding structure, the tax structure, or all of the above, and this will directly and immediately impact schools.

But charter schools are actually exempt from this most democratic of processes, which is amazing when one considers that education is actually a property right (meaning students are both required to have an education and also cannot be denied an education without due process).

In most states, charters can put anyone they want to on their boards, can raise funds from anyone they want to, can be housed wherever they want to, can reject students whenever they want to, and can even opt out of giving accurate reporting on the most basic of items – including how many students they actually have – should they choose to. And the taxpayers whose money is being funneled to these charters do not have a say, an option, or a choice once these independently operated entities get up and running. The only hope is that there is some appointed or elected body that periodically reviews and, if they are found to be engaging in fraud, closes down charter schools. And then the students in those schools, of course, re-enter what remains of the public school system.

But what the case in Washington underscores most is the elemental choice made by charter proponents all those years ago, as they crafted the Minnesota legislation, variations of which are now on the books in 42 states.

And an elemental choice
But what the case in Washington underscores most is the elemental choice made by charter proponents all those years ago, as they crafted the Minnesota legislation, variations of which are now on the books in 42 states. The choice was: do we work together as a community to best provide the state-mandated education of all our citizens and do so in a way that continues to be overseen by the electorate, which may mean re-allocating resources and (gasp) raising taxes, or do we just let private groups of folks do their own thing, using our taxes, in the name of education?

Martha Hope Carey lives in the Philadelphia area and recently completed her PhD in Urban Education at Temple University. Her dissertation research on urban charter teachers can be found at careythinking.org. Contact Martha at marthahcarey@gmail.com.

DIANE RAVITCH+GERONIMO+F. SCOTT FITZGERALD’S THOUGHTS ON DEASY’S EXPENSE ACCOUNT

 

from Diane Ravitch’s blog | http://bit.ly/1OAtjRy

Diane Ravitch writes:

Living Large: A Glimpse of John Deasy’s Expense Account

September 8, 2015

John Deasy liked to dine in the best restaurants.

True, he didn’t bill for dinners at Per Se in Manhattan, where the average meal may cost $600 or more. (However, the list is just a small sampling of three years of expenses.)

Fortunately, Eli Broad and Casey Wasserman picked up many of these bills as a public service. Or maybe it was the taxpayers of Los Angeles.

It may be just a small sampling, but take a look at these swell meals.

Geronimo writes:

September 8, 2015 at 6:59 pm

Let me offer a different opinion.

I never thought John Deasy was motivated by money, although his entire career is all about the perks of connection and knowing the right people.

It was being in those circles of individuals that Deasy thrived on. His acceptance by the rich and powerful that he was “their” guy. He was the dutiful knight to the castles of political and economic institutions of power who would slay their dragons.

John Deasy fancied himself a tough guy. In his narcissistic autobiography of his mind, Deasy believes that he was anointed to “save the children”. Thus he would “stand up” to the powerful interests…the teachers, the unions, the progressives who held the kids down. I keep coming back to his incessant use of Civil Rights language that he used as a cudgel against anyone who challenged him.

Yes he was incredible at bullying and humiliating a substitute teacher whose class he walks into on the second day of school…

…but speak up to anyone above him in true positions of power and influence?

To Millionaires?

To the political power structure?

To Arne Duncan? To Obama?

To Eli Broad? To the Wassermans? To the Waltons? To Gates?

It was always, “Yes sir!”

It was “What do you need?”

It was “What’s my next job, boss?”

And hilariously, on occasion, it was “Can you scholarship me?”

Well, Deasy’s ENTIRE life was one of asking these people to scholarship him.

He got scholarshipped by convicted education felon Robert Felner when he was his only disciple and graduate student.

He was scholarshipped by all the above gazillionaires.

He was scholarshipped by Mayor Villaraigosa.

He was scholarshipped by the LA TIMES editorial board.

He was scholarshipped continuously (and tragically) by LA’s very own Board of Ed.

No. John Deasy isn’t in the education game for the money. He’s in it because the people who love him are the people he thinks matters.

The tender caress of Bill Gates or an Arne Duncan confirms Deasy’s self worth as a person. That extraordinary personal connection and closeness and sense of duty to Eli Broad is something akin to patriotism of one’s country–it’s the psychology of a good solider who has sworn a sacred allegiance–and it’s a privilege and duty that money can’t buy.

smf opines:

The past tense is premature.

The ‘Doctor’ is, was. and will continue to be a sociopath.

 

KrazyTA writes:

September 8, 2015 at 6:30 pm

Ah, the world of the heavyweights of self-styled “education reform” and their enablers and enforcers and hangers-on and the rest of that “diverse” group benefitting from the largesse called $tudent $ucce$$.

Where have I come across a vivid description of the crowd that John Deasy runs with?

Hmmmm…

Does the name “F. Scott Fitzgerald” ring a bell?

 

“Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me. They possess and enjoy early, and it does something to them, makes them soft where we are hard, and cynical where we are trustful, in a way that, unless you were born rich, it is very difficult to understand. They think, deep in their hearts, that they are better than we are because we had to discover the compensations and refuges of life for ourselves. Even when they enter deep into our world or sink below us, they still think that they are better than we are. They are different. ”       

- The Rich Boy is a short story by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. It was included in his 1926 collection All the Sad Young Men.

¡OMG! THE NEW TEST SCORES ARE LOWER THAN THE OLD TEST SCORES!

News Story: NEW COMMON CORE TEST RESULTS TO BE RELEASED TO THE PUBLIC THIS WEEK

By smf for 4LAKids- as a public service to Parents, Teachers and Administrators

STEP I. Whatever you do, don’t think about elephants.

Erase all thoughts about pachyderms.

Dumbo? Never happened.

The symbol of the GOP? Forgetabaoutit!

Once you have mastered not thinking about elephants go to Step II.

 

STEP II. Don’t think about the STAR Test.

Sure it used to be important and educators’ jobs and student progress and the entire future of public education as we knew it hinged on the STAR Test. The word “reconstitution” wasn’t just for orange juice anymore, taking on a whole dark new meaning.

But no more. STAR (Standardized Testing and Reporting) has been replaced by Smarter Balanced. The paradigm has shifted.

  • A STAR is a giant mass of plasma in the cosmos, a perpetual thermonuclear reaction.
  • Smarter Balanced sounds like a brand of margarine.

STAR determined student outcomes using measurements and a rubric based on No Child Left Behind and the previous California Standards; filling in the multiple-choice bubbles with a #2 pencil.

SMARTER BALANCED (which may well be neither) determines student outcomes using different measurements and a different rubric based on the vastly different California flavor of the Common Core Standards – on a digital device using an interactive online test.

The Los Angeles Times Editorial Board – which is the mouthpiece for about as traditional mainstream media as it gets – described comparing the STAR Test results to the Smarter Balanced Test Results as comparing Apples to Porcupines.* | see LAT Editorial: WHAT WILL COMMON CORE TEST RESULTS SHOW? http://bit.ly/1OvoWaf

 

 

clip_image002 clip_image004
Fig 1. An apple Fig 2. A porcupine

 

Don’t do it! One is a shiny fruit, distantly related to ornamental roses. The other is a prickly mammal, distantly related to elephants. (Do not dwell on elephants. If you do, return to STEP I.)

 All is not lost. One can still compare one school’s Smarter Balanced test scores to another’s. Or one student’s Smarter Balanced score to another’s. Or one state’s SB score to another’s. Unless they have the PARCC Test.

Next year we can compare this year’s Smarter Balanced test scores to next year’s. That’s the idea,

Yes, both tests measure stuff – but a ruler measures stuff and a measuring cup measures stuff and distance and volume are pretty hard to compare without getting into relativity, Space-time and quantum physics. There is no rule of thumb for comparing STAR and Smarter Balanced like there is for Fahrenheit and Celsius or miles and kilometers.

It’s Apples and Porcupines.

__________

*A Model A Ford to a pterodactyl works too. Or a Honda 50 to the Beaudry Building.

Tuesday, September 08, 2015

WASHINGTON STATE’S CHARTER LIMBO: More on that charter schools ruling.

from Politico Morning Ed | By Kimberly Hefling | by email

Sept 8, 2015  10:05 AM EDT ::  : More on that charter schools ruling. [http://politico.pro/1O9cX4a].

The Washington State Charter Schools Association and the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools have asked Gov. Jay Inslee to call a special session. One of his spokesmen told the News Tribune in Tacoma over the weekend that the governor still needs to discuss the ruling with the state attorney general and the commission that oversees charter schools [http://bit.ly/1ipkmQK]. “It’s all new,” the spokesman said. “The opinion needs to be analyzed. ... Nobody has an answer yet.”

The state charter school association says eight charters enrolling 1,200 students opened this fall, and all plan to have their doors open Tuesday [http://bit.ly/1M6Vlqg]. (The state’s first charter school opened in 2014-15.) The association notes that the court’s decision doesn’t specify what happens to charter schools already open, instead sending the case back to the King County Superior Court “for an appropriate order.” One other charter school opened last year. “If the governor does not call this session, he will be failing the Washington families who made the choice to enroll their children in public charter schools. We hope and expect the Governor will do the right thing for these students and families,” said Nina Rees, president and CEO of the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.

The ruling was praised by the Washington Education Association and other groups that sued over the law, saying it illegally robbed traditional public schools of taxpayer dollars.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/tipsheets/morning-education/2015/09/final-days-for-perkins-210099#ixzz3lBFQ3jGe

More Beutner: LA TIMES PUBLISHER+CEO TO BE REPLACED

by Jessica Hamlin and KPCC Staff | http://bit.ly/1NgmcyP

32702 full

File: Austin Beutner on stage during the preview of The Broad Stage 2010-2011 schedule at The Broad Stage on April 22, 2010 in Santa Monica. Mark Sullivan/Getty Images for The Broad Stage

 

8 September 2105 | 11:20 AM/updated 12 noon ::  The Los Angeles Times is replacing Austin Beutner, its Publisher and CEO.  The news comes as a surprise at the paper, where he had been in the post for a little over one year.

Beutner attended a senior leadership meeting this morning with a "business as usual" attitude, said one of the executives in the room. He thanked the group and left.

Beutner posted a farewell note to facebook Tuesday, confirming he was fired and emphasizing that his leaving is not the result of a mutual agreement.

In his note, Beutner touted the high points of his stint, including the relaunch of the Business and California sections and the Times' winning two Pulitzer Prizes.

"I agreed to become the Publisher and CEO of the Times because I believe in Los Angeles and recognize the unique role the Times plays in our community," Beutner wrote. "It is the civic conscience which holds accountable those with power in Los Angeles, helps celebrate what is good in our community, and provides news and information to help us better understand and engage with the world around us."

Former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa praised his former deputy for imbuing the newspaper with innovation and a “renewed civic commitment” in his short tenure as publisher.

“The coverage of the city as a whole, whether it was politics or the arts, was just more robust and diverse than it was in the past,” Villaraigosa told KPCC. “I think there was a real commitment to make it an L.A. newspaper again and not a Chicago-focus.”

Villaraigosa said Beautner's firing was the latest example of Tribune’s poor stewardship of the L.A. Times.

“They’ve sucked the blood out of the L.A. Times, taking the profits and destroying the newspaper in the process,” Villaraigosa said.

Villaraigosa said the paper had lost a “lot of great reporters” over the course of Tribune ownership and that Buetner had been doing his best to make the Times a destination for top-tier talent.

In 2014, Beutner was hired as publisher, after a career that included investment banking and a stint as deputy mayor under Villaraigosa. The Tribune had just split from its parent company and Beutner set out on an agenda to diversify the paper's platforms and coverage.

“We have to be very different in digital than we were in print,” Beutner said in December. "We will work through every section we have.”

During his time, Beutner started email newsletters and focused on in person events to spur community talks.

Beutner spoke with KPCC's Larry Mantle earlier this year to discuss why he wanted to facilitate that face-to-face interaction:

Two [hundred] or 300 people who come to each of those events, some of them aren't subscribers and become subscribers in the course of the event. But they'll go home and they'll tell their 10 best friends 'You wouldn't believe the conversation I was part of today.' So the 2 [hundred] or 300 people who are physically present multiply and we have to go back to our roots which is first and foremost to serve the community in which we live.

In his farewell note, Beutner echoed the need for a dramatic shift in the industry:

The newspaper industry will have to change more in the next five years than it has in the last 20.  The fat and redundancies bred over a generation by print monopolies with thick sections of classified ads and full-page print ads are gone.  Cost-cutting alone is not a path to survival in the face of continued declines in print revenue and fierce competition in the digital world.

The news about Beutner was first reported by media analyst Ken Doctor.  The Times and the Chicago Tribune both published stories saying Beutner was fired, saying Tribune Company executives were "unhappy with the financial performance of The Times and with Beutner’s high-profile hires."

Tim Ryan, publisher of the Baltimore Sun, will take over as Publisher at the L.A. Times.

Beutner spoke with KPCC’s Take Two in April about the future of the paper and his plans.

JOHN OLIVER’S GUIDE TO “EVERYTHING STUDENTS NEED TO KNOW FOR BACK TO SCHOOL”

Headshot of Ed Mazza

Ed Mazza Overnight Editor, The Huffington Post | http://huff.to/1Ob5TUD

 

  • Posted: 09/08/2015 04:12 AM EDT  ::  In many parts of the country, the conclusion of Labor Day weekend marks the start of the school year, and while "Last Week Tonight" was off for the holiday, host John Oliver recorded a video that has everything students really need to know.

    Sort of.

     

    In the four-minute YouTube clip, Oliver shares a bit of wisdom for each of the major subjects taught in school (and he tries to do it without swearing... but doesn't quite succeed). 

    For American history: "Google 'Warren G. Harding penis named Jerry' right now,” Oliver advises, referring to the 29th president. "And you will not be disappointed."

    Oliver also touches on world history, especially the European explorers and colonists.

    "Now, as adults, you will realize that these men were basically genocidal lunatics," he says. "But for now, enjoy thinking of them as thrilling adventurers and discoverers."

    Oliver manages to get around to math, biology, chemistry and English as well -- all within those four minutes -- and even has a "Guide To Who Dies At The End" for many of the books students will be assigned to read for class.

    Check it out in the clip above.

  • LA Times Editorial: WHAT WILL THE COMMON CORE TEST RESULTS SHOW? Comparing these results with the old ones would be like comparing apples and porcupines

    By The Times Editorial Board | http://lat.ms/1KZkdP9

    Yamarko Brown Common Core test

    Yamarko Brown, age 12, works on math problems as part of a trial run of a new Common Core assessment test. (Patrick Semansky / Associated Press)

    8 Sept 2015  ::  Californians have already been warned — and warned again — not to expect Tuesday to be pretty. That's when the state releases the results of the new standardized tests that go along with the controversial Common Core curriculum standards. Everything about this process has been new and different: a different set of academic expectations in English and math, a different curriculum based on those expectations, and a different style of teaching that aims to guide students toward better thinking, problem-solving and writing rather than regurgitation of information.

    And, of course, markedly different tests, taken by computer, that shift as the student completes each question. Got it right? The next question will be tougher. Got it wrong? The next will be easier.

    New York, which leaped into high-stakes Common Core testing faster than most other states, botched the rollout. The scores released two years ago were so bad that parents rebelled against the entire set of curriculum standards, and tens of thousands of them started opting out of the tests.

    Other states have seen less of a backlash. Their test scores this year have been decidedly lower than they were before Common Core, but not as bad as officials had feared. Overall, about half of students have been testing as proficient in English, but the numbers in math have been much lower.

    It would be a mistake to compare these new results with the old ones; that would be like comparing apples and porcupines. - 

    Where will California — and especially the gargantuan L.A. Unified School District — fall? School officials have had the results for weeks but have said little except that parents and the public need to be realistic about their expectations. That doesn't bode well. At this point, at least, no schools or teachers in the state will face consequences as a result of the scores. The more important question, though, is whether the test results will show that students are mastering the standards.

    It would be a mistake to compare these new results with the old ones; that would be like comparing apples and porcupines. And it'll be years before it becomes clear whether the new tests and the new curriculum live up to their promise. We cheer any effort to shift pedagogy from rote memorization to teaching students how to research, analyze and write, and it's supposed to be more difficult to “teach to the test” in Common Core, both because the test shifts with each student and because it requires students to demonstrate their problem-solving skills by showing how they arrived at an answer.

    This may be only the start, the baseline for future improvement, but California will get an immediate sense of how it's doing, because it belongs to a consortium of more than a dozen states that gave similar Common Core tests. If indeed California's test results are significantly worse than the others', state education officials should waste no time figuring out why.

    “DON’T PANIC”, OFFICIALS SAY AS CALIFORNIA BRACES FOR LOWER STUDENT TEST RESULTS …but “Thanks for all the fish?”

    By Howard Blume, LA Times | http://lat.ms/1NgadBg

    State test scores are expected to be lower than in previous years, but officials say the public shouldn't be discouraged. The new test is more difficult, and how the test is scored makes it more difficult for students to be considered academically proficient.

    (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)

     

    Sept 8, 2015| 3AM  ::  Even before new state test scores are released this week, one thing is already clear: Results will be lower than in years past. Probably much lower.

    In other words, a much smaller percentage of students will be regarded as academically proficient for their grade level.

    California on Wednesday rejoins the national debate over standardized testing, including what students should learn and how teachers and schools should be held accountable.

    State by state, the results of these tests, or similar ones, have shown a clear, downward pattern.

    Previous standardized tests were based on California's learning goals for each grade. Now, the test is gauging students' knowledge against new learning standards, called the Common Core, which has been adopted by 42 states.

    Previous tests should not be compared to this test. These are totally different tests and totally different standards. - Luci Willits, deputy director of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium

    Critics of public schools call the test results evidence of a failing system. Critics of testing say the low scores are causing unnecessary anxiety and advise against attaching too much importance to them. Some also express concern about using results as grounds to dismiss teachers, while others applaud that possibility.

    But with the expectation of low scores comes another message from most officials: Don't panic.

    "No one should be discouraged by the scores," state Supt. of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson said in a statement. "They can help guide discussions among parents and teachers and help schools adjust instruction to meet student needs."

    Others cautioned the same: "Previous tests should not be compared to this test," said Luci Willits, deputy director of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, the group overseeing the test, which also is being given in other states. "These are totally different tests and totally different standards."

    The new results should be considered a baseline for student achievement, said Willits, whose group is now headquartered at UCLA.

    The test itself is more difficult, and how the test is scored makes it more difficult for students to be considered academically proficient. Students by the end of high school must now show they are prepared for college-level work, a higher bar than under the old test.

    A governing board for the test set four levels of achievement, and then let each state decide how to identify them. In California, the four levels are: standard exceeded, standard met, standard nearly met or standard not met.

    "Standard exceeded" can be roughly compared to the former rating of "advanced." "Standard met" is similar to the former "proficient."

    What will the Common Core test results show?

    What will the Common Core test results show? >>

    The objective is for students to land in the top two categories. But fewer students will do so based on how the categories are now defined, educators say.

    In third-grade math, for example, analysts have predicted that 39% of students will rate in the top two tiers. This compares with 66% of California third-graders who did so under the old test.

    In third-grade English, 38% are expected to be in the top tiers; 45% were for the old test.

    The new test is designed to provide a more detailed snapshot of achievement. Questions get more or less difficult based on which ones a student answers correctly. No two students are supposed to encounter exactly the same questions.

    The test also has progressed beyond a simple multiple choice format to include written responses of various lengths. Students are given more complex questions, requiring deeper thinking about a theme in literature, for example, or about the concepts of algebra or geometry, say experts who laud the new approach.

    "This is a better way of assessing students," said Cynthia Lim, head of data and accountability for L.A. Unified School District. "It shows a lot of promise. This has great potential for instruction because the tests are more tailored to individual students."

    The performance estimates are based on the outcome of field tests in 21 states two years ago.

    As in other states, there has been intense disagreement in California over standardized tests and how they should be used. But so far, Common Core and the new tests have proved less controversial in this state than elsewhere, where opponents have emerged from the left and right, as well as among parents and other members of the public.

    Parents face a test of their own: making sense of a new flood of data, jargon and acronyms.

    The new test is called the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress, or CAASPP.

    English and math tests were administered last spring to students in grades 3 through 8 and grade 11. They were given on desktop computers, tablets and laptops.

    The old testing system is still being used for science exams given in grades 5, 8 and 10.

    California is among a group of states that joined to create a test, under the name Smarter Balanced. As many as 22 states took part, but five have dropped out. Even so, for the first time, it will be possible to make a direct comparison between the scores in participating states.

    Other states are part of another group using a different test and others are opting for different exams, with or without the Common Core learning standards.

    The Smarter Balanced test was developed with assistance from a $185-million federal grant.

    What California parents won't see is the familiar Academic Performance Index for each school. The index, which was based solely on test scores, profoundly influenced public perception of individual schools and affected whether they received plaudits or penalties. State lawmakers and experts still are debating what to include in a new index.

    In addition, California districts cannot yet use the new test scores in teachers' performance evaluations.

    CHARTER SCHOOLS SHOULDN’T BE LITMUS TEST FOR NEW CHIEF

    Charter schools shouldn't be a litmus test for new chief

    BY Sandy Banks, LA Times Columnist | http://lat.ms/1K67Q2V

     

     

     

    John Deasy
    Former L.A. Unified Supt. John E. Deasy was a champion of the options that charter schools offered. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)  ●●smf: Will the day ever come when The Times photo editor doesn’t drop a photo of “Dr.” John into every LAUSD story?

    8 Sept 2015 | 4AM  ::  The hunt for the next Los Angeles Unified schools superintendent is on; the battle lines are being drawn. I hope the issue of charter schools doesn't become a competent candidate's Waterloo.

    On the battlefield the issue tidily divides opposing camps: Are you for public accountability or private control?

    But in real life, that's a false dichotomy — one that plays to adult fears and discounts student needs.

    It paints charter schools as the tool of business interests, intent on undermining public education. Indeed, privately funded reformers do seem a tad too eager to wade into troubled neighborhoods and create the equivalent of pop-up schools.

    But that fear-mongering hasn't made much of an impression on parents who consider public charters a worthy alternative to struggling local schools. Los Angeles has more children attending charter schools — 1 in 6 district students — than any school system in the country.

    Their defection has created a parallel universe of taxpayer-funded privately run schools, with freedoms most district-run schools don't enjoy. That's stoked resentment at schools forced to share space with the interlopers and alarmed union leaders because many charters operate outside out of their protection and control.

    Former Supt. John Deasy was a champion of the options alternative schools offered. He was determined to challenge the status quo.

    The next few months will let us know whether that push will continue — or whether Deasy's high-profile feuds and failures will give business-as-usual forces a toehold.

    ::

    Last week the school board settled on a search firm and spelled out what it's looking for.

    The list sounds to me like candidate Deasy — a visionary with a sense of urgency and the skills to attract outside funding — except for the part about being able to work well with power-hungry unions, a fractious school board and a public impatient with the pace of change.

    It's hard for me to imagine why anyone worthy would want the job this time around. The politics are toxic, the problems intractable, the scrutiny relentless.

    Get the essential California headlines delivered free >>

    Deasy's intentions were good and his commitment to students unquestioned, but his intransigence was his undoing. His arrogance fueled critics and isolated him from folks in the trenches doing the grunt work that reform requires.

    What we need now is not someone whose goal is "to lift youth out of poverty," as Deasy often proclaimed. A noble goal without a realistic plan — beyond don't suspend students, just give them all iPads — is destined to dissolve. And the plan in this district has to involve input from teachers, parents and school board bosses.

    It's easy to fall for the guy with the savior complex. And just as easy to wind up disillusioned.

    The outsider before Deasy was retired Navy Vice Admiral David Brewer, who was fired midway through his four-year contract because he never managed to get beyond declaring himself "a champion for the children, teachers and staff" — all of whom floundered under his regime.

    ::

    I hope Mayor Eric Garcetti starts paying closer attention to what's going on in the city's schools. We need more than silence from the sidelines. There may even be a lesson in Deasy's departure for the mayor: Big plans that flop when you don't attend to detail get counted as a "fail."

    And I hope Supt. Ramon Cortines will be involved in the selection process. He's smart, steady and understands what teachers, parents and students need. During a previous stint in the top job five years ago, he championed public school choice, allowing outside groups to run new schools and put charter programs on traditional campuses. He wasn't afraid of change.

    I understand the knock on charters: They siphon students and money from district schools and can leave behind the most expensive and difficult to educate. They have a competitive advantage because they're freed from limits and rules that hamstring regular campuses.

    But I don't believe they represent some dark conspiracy by "a powerful coalition of billionaires, libertarians and religious zealots" who aim to destabilize public education, as historian Diane Ravitch wrote in a Times op-ed piece this summer, urging the next superintendent to close the door on charters.

    I've visited enough charter schools and talked with enough parents to understand the draw.

    Some want small classes or accelerated standards they don't think the district offers. Some are drawn to themes — dance, science, social justice — their children enjoy. Some seek a sense of community, where teachers care, boundaries are clear and students feel safe. Some want a more integrated setting than their neighborhood schools provide. And some are trying to carve out a middle-class niche in neighborhoods heavy with poor and minority kids.

    The academic record of charters is mixed, but their popularity keeps growing because some things matter more to parents than test scores; they want their children — and their own contributions — to be valued and supported. The district can learn from that.

    Charter schools are not the enemy, nor are they a panacea. But the heated philosophical battle needs to stop; that's what turns parents off.

    Critics may blast charter schools as pawns of corporate reform. But parents see them as a safety valve in a school district that just keeps bumbling along.

    Ed Week: TEACHER EVALUATION – AN ISSUE OVERVIEW

    Teacher evaluations matter a lot—both to teachers and to those holding them accountable. But how can schools measure the performance of all teachers fairly? And what should they do with the results?

    By Stephen Sawchuk | Education Week | http://bit.ly/1ERRMla

    Published Online: September 3, 2015In general, teacher evaluation refers to the formal process a school uses to review and rate teachers’ performance and effectiveness in the classroom. Ideally, the findings from these evaluations are used to provide feedback to teachers and guide their professional development.

    While governed by state laws, teacher-evaluation systems are generally designed and operated at the district level, and they vary widely in their details and requirements. Traditionally, teacher evaluation systems relied heavily on classroom observations conducted by principals or other school administrators, sometimes with the help of rubrics or checklists. Samples of students’ work, teachers’ records and lesson plans, and other relevant factors were also often taken into account.

    But many evaluation systems have undergone significant changes in recent years. Indeed, by the end of the 2000s, teacher evaluation, long an ignored and obscure policy element, had become one of the most prominent and contentious topics in K-12 education.

    Jump to a Section

    > Evolution of the Issue

    > How Evaluations Work

    > Union Response

    > Are New Evaluations Better?

    > Terms to Know

    > Research and Resources

    > Education Week Resources

    That surprise reversal can be attributed to at least four factors: a wave of new research on teacher quality, philanthropic interest in boosting teacher effectiveness, efforts by advocacy groups and policymakers to revamp state laws on evaluation, and political pressure to dismiss poorly performing teachers.

    All that momentum aside, the results of recent changes to teacher-evaluation systems are, as yet, difficult to quantify. Most of the new data show that a great majority of teachers score just as highly on the new evaluations as they did on the previous ones, and it is unclear whether the reforms have systematically—or broadly—led to teachers to receiving better feedback that is translating to better teaching.

    Why has teacher-performance evaluation become such a central education issue?

    Beginning in the 1990s and through the 2000s, analyses of year-to-year student-test data consistently showed that some teachers helped their students learn significantly more than did other teachers. One widely cited paper, by Stanford University economist Eric A. Hanushek, estimated that the top-performing teachers helped students gain more than a grade’s worth of learning; students taught by the worst achieved just half a year of learning.

    Advocacy groups argued that current quality-control systems for teachers were ineffectual. In an influential 2009 report, TNTP (formerly the New Teacher Project), found that more than 99 percent of teachers in the 12 districts it studied were ranked satisfactory on evaluations and that the firing of tenured teachers almost never occurred. The analysis suggested that most of the reviews were perfunctory, and did not distinguish between skilled and low-performing teachers.

    Traditionally, teacher evaluation systems relied heavily on classroom observations conducted by principals or other school administrators. But many systems have undergone significant changes in recent years.

    For some advocates, such findings opened an opportunity to strengthen the profession. Revamping teacher evaluation, they argued, would help to give teachers better information on strengths and weaknesses and help districts tailor ongoing supports. Some policymakers, though, focused more closely on the prospect of identifying and removing bad teachers quickly and efficiently.

    Federal intervention gave muscle to the focus on teacher evaluations. Using $4.3 billion provided through the 2009 American Reinvestment and Recovery Act, the U.S. Department of Education began the Race to the Top competition, offering grants to states that agreed to make certain policy changes. Among the prescribed changes was the requirement to develop and implement new teacher-evaluation systems that differentiated among at least three levels of performance and took student achievement into account.

    Major philanthropies also helped to fuel activity around teacher evaluation. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, for instance, spent some $700 million on teacher-quality initiatives alone, much of it on attempts to set up improved teacher-evaluation systems in a handful of school districts.

    Prodded by those incentives, states rushed to rewrite laws governing teacher evaluation.

    By 2013, 28 states had moved to require teachers to be evaluated annually, up from 15 in 2009, and 41 states required consideration of student-achievement data, up from 15 in 2009, according to one tally. (Because teacher evaluation remains a state and local priority, all of the policies are drafted at those levels. District collective bargaining agreements can add additional nuances. Consequently, what constitutes, say, a “proficient” teacher in one state may not be the same as in other states, or in the district next door, for that matter.)

    What constitutes, say, a “proficient” teacher in one state may not be the same as in other states, or in the district next door, for that matter.

    As legislators overhauled the systems, some states also took steps to connect the new evaluation systems to other policies, including teacher compensation, promotion, and dismissal.

    A 2010 Colorado law, for instance, permits schools to return tenured teachers who receive several poor evaluations to probationary status. Florida’s law requires districts to pay more to teachers who score well on the state’s new evaluations. Rhode Island prohibits a student from being instructed for two consecutive years by a teacher deemed “ineffective.” In other states, evaluation results can be used as evidence for dismissing a tenured teacher for poor performance.

    How do the new teacher-evaluation systems work?

    The new evaluation systems are far more complex than previously used checklists. They consist of several components, each scored individually. Most of them heavily weigh periodic observations of teachers keyed to teaching standards, such as the well-known Framework for Teaching developed by consultant Charlotte Danielson. Districts and states differ in how frequently they require teachers to be observed, whether the observations must be announced beforehand, and who conducts them.

    Policymakers also sought more objective measures in the system because of concerns that personal relationships made it more difficult for principals to grade them accurately. The inclusion of student test scores was a requirement under the federal initiatives, for example.

    The most sophisticated approach uses a statistical technique known as a value-added model, which attempts to filter out sources of bias in the test-score growth so as to arrive at an estimate of how much each teacher contributed to student learning. Critics of the approach point to studies showing that the estimates are, in the words of one U.S. Department of Education publication, “subject to a considerable degree of random error.” (States without the capacity to use value-added have adopted simpler—and potentially even more problematic—growth measures.)

    States and districts use a predetermined weighting formula to compile results from the components and arrive at a teacher’s final score. Many states initially based half of each teacher’s review on student achievement, but some have scaled back that proportion since.

    How have teachers' unions responded to new evaluations?

    By 2011, the governing bodies of both the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers had issued new policy statements on teacher evaluation. In general, the teachers’ unions highlighted the potential of better evaluations to provide valuable feedback on teachers’ skills. But they remain wary about connecting the systems to teacher pay and tenure, and adamantly oppose the inclusion of students’ standardized-test scores in the systems.

    <<In this 2014 photo, Nimra Mian and other 7th graders at Marshall Simonds Middle School in Burlington, Mass., field test a common-core exam. New teacher evaluations were rolled out alongside the Common Core State Standards and related exams, leaving teachers concerned about how the harder tests will affect their performance evaluations in the future. —Gretchen Ertl for Education Week-File

    In challenging the use of value-added models as part of evaluation systems, the teachers’ unions cite concerns about the volatility of test scores in the systems, the fact that some teachers have far more students with special needs or challenging home circumstances than others, and the potential for teachers facing performance pressure to warp instruction in unproductive ways, such as via “test prep.”

    They also argue that it is unfair for teachers in nontested subjects to be judged by the scores of students they don’t even teach, as some states’ evaluation systems require. Concerns over the use of test scores in evaluations have fueled more than a dozen lawsuits targeting the new evaluation systems.

    The pressure to use students’ standardized-test scores has also contributed to a recent wave of anti-testing sentiment, including the “opt out” movement. And indeed, standardized testing appears to have become more frequent as a result of evaluation pressures. Because only about 15 percent to 30 percent of teachers instruct in grades and subjects in which standardized-test-score data are available, some states and districts have devised or added additional tests.

    The new evaluations were also rolled out alongside the Common Core State Standards and related exams, leaving teachers concerned about how the harder tests will affect their performance evaluations in the future. As a result of such concerns, some states, with federal approval, have pushed back the dates for attaching consequences to the reviews.

    Is there evidence that new teacher-evaluation strategies are working?

    The teachers’ unions also frequently view teacher evaluation as part of a concurrent trend of outright attacks on educators livelihood. Lawmakers, mainly Republicans, have made progress in scaling back collective bargaining rights, “fair share” fee arrangements, and automatic deduction of dues from members' paychecks. But Democrats, typically champions of labor priorities, have been among the supporters of the new teacher-evaluation systems.

    For all the energy spent on putting the new systems into place, the dividends paid by the them aren’t yet clear. A few studies do show some preliminary evidence that teachers who receive high-quality feedback subsequently go on to boost student performance. One study on the District of Columbia’s IMPACT teacher-evaluation system found that teachers on the cusp of dismissal, or of receiving a bonus, generally went on to pull up their evaluation scores the following year.

    Many of the states’ new systems continue to be in a process of testing and refinement, with their scoring mechanisms facing challenges both from those who think they are too lenient or incompletely implemented and from those who feel they are unfair or counterproductive. For that reason, teacher evaluation is likely remain a contentious and central topic in K-12 education.


    Terms to Know

    Collective Bargaining: The process by which a district and a union representing teachers arrive at a contract spelling out work hours and conditions, salary, benefits, and processes for handling grievances. Often, contracts also set out details on professional development and other school initiatives, or supplement state law governing teachers. Contracts are legally binding.

    “Last In, First Out” (LIFO): Many states and districts use seniority in making layoff decisions, despite pressure from some advocacy groups to base those decisions on performance, instead. Often, this process is referred to as “last in, first out.”

    Teacher Observations: Most teacher-evaluation systems require teachers to be observed several times. State and local policies determine such details as the length of the observations, the mix of formal and informal visits, whether they must be accompanied by pre- or post-observation conferences, and who conducts them. Though generally principals and administrators are responsible for teacher evaluation, some districts include other teachers and even independent consultants or “validators.”

    Teacher Tenure: When a teacher has completed his or her state’s probationary period successfully, he or she receives career status, sometimes known as tenure. (Most states have probationary periods of three years.) In general, tenured teachers can be fired only for a reason listed in state law. Districts must prove that they have met this standard during a due-process hearing. Due-process procedures typically differ based on whether the charges deal with misconduct or poor performance.

    Value-Added Model (VAM): In the context of teacher evaluation, value-added modeling is a statistical method of analyzing growth in student-test scores to estimate how much a teacher has contributed to student-achievement growth. In general, VAMs factor in the gains the student was expected to make based on past performance, and in some cases, control for elements such as peer characteristics and background, including poverty level and family education.


    Teacher-Evaluation Research and Resources

    Education Week Resources

    Credits: Reporting and Writing: Stephen Sawchuk | Design & Visualization: Stacey Decker

    LA Times: AUSTIN BEUTNER OUT AS L.A. TIMES PUBLISHER - Broad connection suggested

    By Marc Duvoisin, LA Times | http://lat.ms/1JQ2c1m

    Austin Beutner

    Austin Beutner was named publisher of The Times in August 2014.

     

    Sept 8, 2105  6:15AM  ::  Tribune Publishing Co., parent of the Los Angeles Times, has decided to fire Austin Beutner, the civic leader and former Wall Street investment banker who became publisher and chief executive of the newspaper last year.

    Tribune executives were to meet with Beutner on Tuesday morning.

    A Tribune spokesman declined to comment on the firing or on who would succeed Beutner.

    Within the past few weeks, Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad approached Tribune with an offer to purchase the Los Angeles Times and the San Diego Union-Tribune and operate the two papers as a separate company. The proposal was rejected.

    Beutner had engineered Tribune’s purchase of the San Diego paper in May, part of a strategy to consolidate Southern California newspapers under common ownership as a way to reduce production and distribution costs and generate revenue for digital initiatives. The two papers comprised the newly formed California News Group under Beutner.

    Beutner, 55, was named publisher of The Times in August 2014. In seeking to offset the decline of print advertising revenue, he launched multiple initiatives: email newsletters on topics such as the California drought, public events centered on Times journalism and coverage initiatives known as “verticals,” narrowly focused on such subjects as public education and California politics.

    Beutner said these ventures were intended to develop an audience of regular, deeply engaged visitors to latimes.com, the paper’s website, in the belief that advertisers would pay more to reach passionate “communities of interest.”

    Beutner surrounded himself with outside talent, often from the world of Los Angeles and national politics. His hires included Benjamin Chang, a former U.S. Foreign Service officer who had worked at the National Security Council; Johanna Maska, who served in the White House Press Office under President Obama; and Nicco Mele, an Internet strategist and entrepreneur who served as the digital advisor to former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean’s 2004 presidential campaign.

    Chang was brought in to organize public events for The Times, Maska is vice president for communications and Mele is deputy publisher, responsible for various digital initiatives.

    The Chicago Tribune, one of the newspapers within Tribune Publishing, reported Tuesday morning that leaders of the company were unhappy with the financial performance of The Times and with Beutner’s high-profile hires.

    During Beutner’s 13 months as publisher, The Times won two Pulitzer Prizes — for cultural criticism and for feature writing — along with other national journalism awards for coverage of the California drought, the plight of Mexican farm workers and other stories. The California Newspaper Publishers Assn. awarded The Times its 2015 general excellence award.

    Beutner, a New York native who grew up in Michigan, graduated from Dartmouth College in 1982 with a degree in economics and went to work as a financial analyst for Smith Barney. He later joined the Blackstone Group in New York, one of the world’s largest private equity firms, and at 29 became its youngest partner.

    In the mid-1990s, he co-founded the New York investment banking firm Evercore Partners. He moved to Los Angeles in 2000 in conjunction with the company’s expansion.

    When Evercore went public in 2006, Beutner reportedly made more than $100 million — a figure he did not dispute but declined to confirm.

    In 2007, Beutner broke his neck after misjudging a turn while bicycling in the Santa Monica Mountains and was airlifted to a hospital. It took him a year to make a full recovery. He left Evercore and poured his energies into civic and philanthropic pursuits.

    In 2010, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa appointed Beutner deputy mayor of economic development, or “jobs czar,” overseeing 13 city departments and the Port of Los Angeles. He helped to streamline the business-permitting process and led the effort to pass a tax break to lure companies to Los Angeles.

    Beutner accepted a $1-a-year salary and held the job for 15 months. In April 2011, he filed papers to explore a run for mayor. Espousing a business-friendly platform, he was critical of City Hall, at one point calling it a “barnyard.”

    He dropped out of the race after a year, saying he wanted to spend more time with his wife, Virginia, and their four children.

    Beutner served as co-chairman of the Los Angeles 2020 Commission, a panel of business, labor and civic leaders created to propose solutions to the city’s budget problems and ways to spur job growth.

    In 2013, Beutner explored a possible purchase of The Times.

    He was appointed publisher a week after Tribune Co. spun off the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune and eight other daily papers into a stand-alone company, Tribune Publishing Co.

    Beutner was the 14th publisher in the newspaper's history.