Louisiana’s education policy-makers need to resist any changes at the federal level that may prompt foes of reforms in this area over the past few years to claim these as justifications for retreating down the long path of educational excellence, and embrace state-based school accountability alterations that will complement these reforms.
This week, the Board of Elementary
and Secondary Education’s committee dealing with school and district
accountability heard
a report it commissioned on potential improvements to its rating system for
schools. Currently,
while it varies among levels of schools, all scales used take as its major input,
at least half of the appropriate rating, achievement of students on tests and
then a letter grade gets assigned as a result to the school.
The study recommended that the
grade be computed at least half on aggregate student academic growth rather
than level of achievement, mimicking that component for assessment of many
teachers in schools, in that level of achievement has too many exogenous
factors such as socioeconomic background of students affecting it. Also
suggested was to create more gradations in the letter grades, such as awarding
plusses and minuses, because otherwise movement from one category to another
took such an amount of change that this could encourage staffs from satisficing
with a particular non-poor grade and discourage them from trying to move out of
it if much effort would not be rewarded with an incrementally higher grading.
These sensible conclusions merit
BESE’s approval, but it will face pressure from regressive elements trying to
undo reform efforts on one of the key elements, student academic growth, which
is how much better a student performs from one year to the next beginning in
the third grade. This may come by changes
coming from Congress that would remove, as a condition of federal education
aid, that annual testing of students from third to eighth grade be
discontinued.
Typically arguments against
requiring annual testing essentially third grade to graduation involve the
testing itself takes up potential instruction time and tends to focus on the
federally-mandated testing areas of mathematics and language at the expense of
other subject areas. Unions have resisted such a comprehensive testing regime because
that eases the identification of inferior teachers by overall lack of their students’
growth in learning, and one union boss in Louisiana said should take these
tests only once in elementary, junior high, and high school.
Which would constitute a backdoor
way of sabotaging the teacher accountability program, where for many the tests determine
the student academic growth portion of their evaluations. Without having
testing every year, the universe of teachers getting evaluated with this input
would fall significantly and almost guarantee reliance on far more subjective methods
that in the past proved largely ineffective in spurring quality in and improvement
from teachers.
If, as critics maintain, testing
eats into instruction time and at the expense of certain subject areas,
abandoning much testing takes a rather myopic view. Instead, the number of and/or
the length of instructional days should be increased, leaving room for adequate
subject coverage and testing intervals.
Just because the federal government
reduces its influence over testing does not mean that Louisiana should abandon
annual testing. As a linchpin of a teacher evaluation system that soon will
begin bearing fruit and as a component that has proven valuable and can
increase in that for school accountability, policy-makers would act unwisely to
reduce its role in any way.
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