Standardized
test season is open.
As American school children gear up for the annual battery of examinations, school districts scramble to find computers and rejigger the daily schedule to accommodate the serial rounds of testing that will span 6 weeks or more.
As American school children gear up for the annual battery of examinations, school districts scramble to find computers and rejigger the daily schedule to accommodate the serial rounds of testing that will span 6 weeks or more.
With this
also comes “get rid of the bad teachers” season. In New York, which leads the way in adopting
every new wrinkle in education reform, Governor Andrew Cuomo noted that only 38 % of New
York State high-schoolers achieve “college readiness,” according to their
standardized test scores, while 98.7 % of New York’s teachers are rated
“effective.” “How can that be?” he mused. “Who are we kidding, my friends? The
problem is clear and the solution is clear. We need real, accurate, fair
teacher evaluations.”
This week, the Washington state Senate embraced
this view, passing a bill mandating that student test scores constitute at
least part of teacher evaluations. Doing
so, it is hoped, would allow Washington to retrieve its lost No Child Left Behind
waiver and reclaim $40 million in federal money.
Unfortunately, the problem and solution are far
from clear. The reasoning implied by
Cuomo and our Senate strains credulity, because it neglects the strange
incentives already emerging from the implementation of this thinking.
As the emphasis in education shifts towards
standards-meeting, teaching energy and focus likewise moves toward the level of
the standards. Students who are comfortably above the standards needn’t be
worried over or engaged educationally. Students far below the standards...well,
they can likely get special services.
In
such a climate, schools increasingly target the so-called bubble kids (those
just below the passing mark) in order to get them up and over the top, into
passing. Accomplishing this makes the
school’s pass rate go up, and the school is deemed more successful. High
scoring kids scoring even higher means nothing under this incentive structure.
Neither does fantastic improvement that falls just short of passing.
The
scores-evaluations connection also indulges bad logic. Using test scores to
demonstrate teacher quality is a claim badly constructed, as it does what’s
called sampling on the dependent variable by using one measurement for both the
cause and effect. In other words, the
hypothesized connection between teacher performance and student scores is tautological,
and therefore reveals nothing. Here’s why.
The
claim implied by Cuomo and our Senate is that Effective Teachers cause Passing
Students, or Teachers cause Test Score changes. Seems clear
enough...bad teachers generate lower test scores; good teachers generate higher
test scores. But notice that the outcome—Test Score—actually provides the measure
of both the teacher and the student--one piece of data measures both the cause
and effect.
To
make this plausibly valid we must define measures of Teacher Impact—or “Good”
and “Bad” Teacher—prior to and separate from Test Scores. In other words, creating a fair and logically valid assessment of
teachers’ impacts on students requires that we define and measure Good and
Effective teaching prior to looking at student test scores. Unfortunately, this
is not how the analysis proceeds, because it's far too easy to simply define
Teacher Quality by Test Score results.
This
kind of slack thinking allows all manner of strange things. Take, for instance, the growing movement to
deem Advanced Placement course participation (not AP test score performance) as
an indicator of college readiness for a high school student. Tacoma, among others, lauds itself for how
these more rigorous courses motivate students to greater success.
They
are, for instance, only the second district in Washington to implement Academic
Acceleration—automatically enrolling all students in advanced courses. This may appear to meet the needs of the
neglected high achieving students, but that’s not the stated intent of the program.
Rather,
this will better prepare formerly lower achieving students for college, and so
on. But here, meeting standard (passing
at 3) doesn't seem to matter as much. Of
the nearly 1800 AP exams taken last year by Tacoma students, only 31% earned a
passing score. Two schools had pass rates below 15%.
So, test scores are the Holy Grail in one case, irrelevant in the
other. Is this good educational policy,
or merely ideology?
2 comments:
Interesting to read The News Tribune's editorial on this topic today. http://www.thenewstribune.com/2015/03/17/3693099/will-house-drop-its-cowardice.html
I sent this piece to them last week. They declined, saying, in part, that I hadn't addressed the counter argument--the desire to get the money back.
Undertake an irrelevant idea just to get the money...is it all a sham?
The News Tribune did run my letter to the editor... http://blog.thenewstribune.com/letters/2015/03/18/tnt-panders-on-nclb-waiver/
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