Showing posts with label DCPS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DCPS. Show all posts

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Get Rid of Teachers or Encourage them To Stay -- What is Best for our Schools?

Guest post by Mark Simon.

After over a decade of "corporate reform" strategies in many places, we have a chance to compare the results of two drastically different approaches to improving public schools. In some places, such as Washington, DC, we have seen teacher turnover skyrocket, in line with the belief that lagging student performance is due to inferior teachers. In Montgomery County, Maryland, the teachers' union and District have been following a different path for the last fifteen years, and are seeing dramatic results.

"Corporate reform" is the moniker earned by the dominant paradigm in school turnarounds, the one promoted by the US Department of Education and championed by foundations established by successful corporate titans Bill Gates and Eli Broad. According to this approach, if students aren't performing, start by getting rid of the adults who must be, by definition, responsible. This blame, fire, and hire strategy is imported from the corporate world where Jack Welsh and Donald Trump are the archetypal heroes. The problem is that after over thirteen years of this approach there's little success to point to on a national scale. Cleaning house, what we used to call "reconstitution," has, at best, a mixed track record.

It seems that corporate reformers and reformers who actually work in schools instinctively disagree on the best first step to improve a low performing school. Now there's an excellent new study by Matthew Ronfeldt, Susanna Loeb, and Jim Wyckoff, "How Teacher Turnover Harms Student Achievement," which correlates high teacher turnover with lower student achievement. It's sad that we need a study by economists to give us permission to assert what to educators is self-evident. But it's time to look more closely at examples of where each approach is working, or isn't. Two districts next door to each other provide a contrast in approaches with lessons about what works, and what doesn't.

In Montgomery County, Maryland, the teachers union and the district have spent fifteen years building a collaborative approach to improving the quality of teaching and learning. In 2000, we decided to intervene, collaboratively, at Broad Acres Elementary, the school system's lowest performing, highest-poverty elementary school. The first decade of the intervention has been written up as a case study. The case study makes clear that all has not been smooth sailing. There were many missteps. But the key was working with the existing teaching staff and the collaboration between district and union. The first thing we did was to meet with the teachers to let them know that we wanted all of them to stay if they chose to. The union's vice president was assigned to meet with every teacher, individually, to get their ideas. The catch was that any teacher who chose to stay would have to remain at the school for at least three years. If we were going to invest in training and support we wanted the teachers we invested in to stick around. We knew that one of the problems at high poverty schools was teacher turnover and the last thing such a school needed was to get rid of the adults. About one third of the teachers were allowed to transfer out, but two thirds signed on to what they knew would be a hard but intensely rewarding effort.

At Broad Acres, 90% of the students are on free-and-reduced lunch, almost all are students of color, and the mobility and non-English speaking rates are high. We didn't blame the teachers. We knew that poverty and low test scores are highly correlated and that breaking that connection would take an unusual effort. The existing teaching staff re-focused the curriculum, met for long hours in grade level teams and vertical articulation teams, visited homes, and took responsibility for meeting the needs of their students. Principal Jody Leleck believed that the teachers should lead the reform. The partnership with the union was natural.

The intervention at Broad Acres was an undisputed success and has continued now for 12 years.
For the first time, in 2003, Broad Acres made AYP. In fact, they were the most improved school in the county for several years in a row. More broadly than this one school, Montgomery County is one of the few districts in the nation that has actually closed the student achievement gap significantly by race and class across the entire district.

We have done it not by focusing on standardized tests, but by putting resources in the neediest schools and by valuing high quality teaching.
We refused to make student test scores a factor in teacher evaluations, refusing to sign on to the state's Race to the Top application. We respectfully disagree with the strategies those efforts represent.

By contrast, just across the district line from Montgomery County in Washington, D.C., Michelle Rhee, who had never run a school, never mind a district, was handed control of the D.C. Public Schools by the Mayor in 2008. She set about to fire and hire her way to reform and her comment "collaboration is overrated" became a slogan. Her energies went into empowering principals to get rid of teachers. She herself famously invited a PBS camera crew to record a private meeting in which she intended to fire a principal. A local blog has tracked the Rhee/Henderson record.

Anyone who has followed reform efforts in DC knows that student achievement over the past five years, as measured by test scores, has been unimpressive under strategies begun by Rhee and continued by her successor, Kaya Henderson. There have been slight ups and downs in test scores, but little that's statistically significant. The achievement gap based on race and poverty has actually widened significantly. Additionally, a system-wide cheating scandal in 2009 under Rhee, that has yet to be investigated, has thrown a pall on all the data.

In DC, however, what has been stunning and undisputed is the change in the teacher turnover rate. For a district that used to have a relatively low turnover rate compared with the national average, now 50% of teachers don't make it beyond two years, 80% don't make it beyond 6 years. For principals, approximately 25% lose their jobs every year. It's not unusual for schools to have a new principal every year. So in the name of "reform," we now have churn. It can be said that teaching is no longer a career in DC. What has been accomplished as a result of the conscious policies of the current and immediate past chancellor is the creation of a teaching force of short timers. Gordon MacInnes summarized Rhee mistakes for the Century foundation here.

A recent Washington Post article about the rift between Democratic mayors and teachers' unions pointed to Montgomery County's teachers union as the exception, nationwide. The Post was half right. The union's shoulder to the wheel, collaboration with the district to make schools better has been exemplary. But this is not exceptional. There are lots of examples of attempts at that kind of collaboration all across the country. What makes Montgomery County an exception is that the politicians and school administration have not blindly adopted the corporate reform ideology. They haven't adopted mayoral control. They don't worship at the altar of student test scores. They recognize that reform led by educators will be more likely to succeed. The union is made a partner. Teacher longevity and commitment to the school and its community is valued. And respecting the complexity of the craft of teaching is considered a better approach than trying to improve education by making war on educators.

What do you think? Does Montgomery County offer a viable strategy for improving schools?


Mark Simon has had a bird's eye view of Montgomery County, where he worked professionally for 28 years and DC Public Schools where he has served as a parent representative at the elementary, middle and high school levels. His daughter is about to graduate from high school after 14 years in DCPS. Mark was a high school teacher for 16 years and then for 12 years the elected president of the Montgomery County Education Association (NEA). As president between 1985 and 2003 he helped create MCEA's progressive union vision in place today. He is now the national coordinator of the Tom Mooney Institute for Teacher and Union Leadership and an education policy analyst at theEconomic Policy Institute.


Sunday, March 25, 2012

Community Conversations about Public Schools- 2 dates

Panel Presentation and Public Discussion

http://bit.ly/GP7QTj

Thursday, March 29th, from 6 to 8 pm

Metropolitan Community Church

(474 Ridge Street NW, 20001, near 5th and M Sts. NW, 2

short blocks from the Convention Center)

Topics will cover:

  • DC history of race, class and public education
  • Where we are now
  • Perspectives from Chicago neighborhoods
  • Finding a path for our future

Save the Date

Community Conversation on the Future

of Community Schools in D.C.

Saturday, April 28th from 10-12noon

Location: TBD

Topics will cover:

  • Release of DC VOICE Ready Middle School Data
  • Presentations from Community Schools Advisory Committee

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Register NOW - Voice your concerns about the District's budget

Thursday – March 8, 2012 – Second Public Hearing on the District’s budget for public education, the mayor has added an additional date for input on the DCPS budget, this is a good opportunity for parents and community members to voice their priorities before the final budget is submitted to the council. The location for this hearing is to be determined but if you would like to register to testify contact Joshua Thompson from the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Education at 202-701-9289 or Joshua.thompson@dc.gov

Monday, February 6, 2012

D.C. schools: charter or public?

Posted in the Washington Post at
at 02:16 PM ET, 02/06/2012


Last week, I was talking to a couple planning to leave a D.C. charter school. They liked the school well enough. But the commute — from home, to school, to work — had reached two hours a day.

As the couple waited to close on a house in Virginia, they knew they would miss the District. But they looked forward to walking to their neighborhood school.

I thought about this family while digging into the new $100,000study of D.C. schools sponsored by the charitable arm of Wal-Mart. The study’s big takeaway: There are not enough “top-performing” schools in working-class D.C. neighborhoods. This is not exactly news. But their solution — close some neighborhood and charter schools and replace them with more charter schools — makes no sense given the rest of the study’s findings.

Given that there is already a network of neighborhood schools that is publicly owned, I can’t think of a more circuitous route to getting to better schools in every neighborhood.

The study’s most relevant finding is that, much like the couple I spoke to, two-thirds of D.C. families still choose a school within their neighborhood or adjacent cluster, despite nearly two decades of “choice.” (Some 74 percent of DCPS students and 57 percent of charters chose schools close to home.) The study shows that the traditional neighborhood system is both more racially and socioeconomically diverse and has a higher “current achievement,” judged by standardized tests. Charters, on the other hand, show “higher slopes of improvement” on the standardized tests, the report notes. (Click HERE to read the rest of the article)

Monday, January 30, 2012

Are second-graders already over-tested?

Posted in The Washington Post at 04:00 PM ET, 01/30/2012
By Michael Alison Chandler

Washington Post education blogger Valerie Strauss gave a shout-out to Montgomery County Superintendent Joshua Starr for proposing to eliminate a standardized test used in the second grade.

“At a time when many school systems around the country are — unfortunately — increasing the number of tests that students have to take so that teachers in all areas can be evaluated on the scores that students get on the exams, Starr’s decision is a move in the right direction,” Strauss wrote for the Answer Sheet.

Second-grade standardized test scores do not yet count for or against
(bigstock)
schools in the federal accountability system known as No Child Left Behind. The government requires schools to report scores from third through eighth grade and twice in high school. But school systems use additional standardized tests, such as the TerraNova2, that second-graders now take in Montgomery County, to gather information for other instructional decisions.

Students will continue taking a county-wide reading assessment. Montgomery schools are also developing a whole new set of assessments to correspond with the new Curriculum 2.0 that is rolling out in elementary grades. The new tests are being designed in collaboration with Pearson, an education company, to measure learning skills, such as collaboration and persistence, not just knowledge.

“Testing certainly has its place, but we must carefully consider every assessment we are giving our students and determine if the benefits outweigh the cost and the interruption to instruction,” Starr said when he announced his recommendation.

What do you think? Are second-graders already over-tested?

By | 04:00 PM ET, 01/30/2012

Friday, January 27, 2012

MoCo to drop standardized test for second graders

My son who is 7 and attends public school in DC is going to take 6 one-hour bubble tests throughout his next school year. Perhaps DC could reconsider this test for children this young as well. Great job MoCo!!

Posted in The Washington Post at 04:00 AM ET, 01/27/2012

By

Good for Montgomery County Public Schools Supt. Joshua Starr: He has decided to stop giving the TerraNova 2 standardized test to second graders in a move to save money and reduce the number of tests young children are forced to take.

Starr, who is in his first year at the helm of Montgomery County schools, one of the highest-achieving school systems in the country, said in a statement that there were other ways to get the information that the TerraNova provided to teachers.

“While the TerraNova does provide some useful information, I believe we can assess student progress with existing tools and use the money spent on the TN2 in a better way,” he said. “Testing certainly has its place, but we must carefully consider every assessment we are giving our students and determine if the benefits outweigh the cost and the interruption to instruction.”

At a time when many school systems around the country are — unfortunately — increasing the number of tests that students have to take so that teachers in all areas can be evaluated on the scores that students get on the exams, Starr’s decision is a move in the right direction. He announced the TerraNova 2 decision to the Board of Education on Thursday night. The statement did not say exactly how much the district would save by dropping the test.

In fact, in D.C. public schools, which neighbors Montgomery County, officials are gearing up to start giving second graders the D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System this spring, so they can join their schoolmates in grades 3 through 8.

It’s part of the District’s teacher assessment program, called IMPACT,that evaluates teachers in large part on test scores, a method that has become increasingly popular among school reformers even though many assessment experts said it is not reliable or fair to teachers.

Under the D.C. system’s IMPACT teacher evaluation system, the scores are injected into a “value added” formula that purports to tell how much “value” a teacher added to a student’s learning. There are different formulas and all kinds of problems with the formulas; how, for example, can a formula factor in exactly how much a child is affected by living in a homeless shelter and being hungry and exhausted the day of a big test? Still D.C. officials want to have 75 percent of classroom teachers evaluated by this system within five years.

California tests students from grades 2 to 11 in a range of subjects already, and the California Teachers Association has long complained that the second grade tests are a waste of money.

Teachers know that giving standardized tests to second graders is a bad idea because they are known to be unreliable test takers.

 Second graders in Montgomery County public schools currently take the TerraNova 2 in reading, language mechanics, mathematics, and mathematics computation. Though the TerraNova2 is being dropped, they will still take, along with students in kindergarten and first grade, the MCPS Assessment Program — Primary Reading (MCPS AP-PR) three times throughout each school year to measure reading ability and attainment.

According to a paper on second-grade testing from the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, or FairTest, an organization that aims to end the misuse of tests:

*Research clearly shows that for children below fourth grade, the mechanics of taking tests and answering on specialized answer sheets can prove more difficult than the cognitive tasks the tests are asking them to address. Thus the test results are too much influenced by children’s ability to fill in bubbles and handle pieces of paper; too little determined by their ability to read.

Standardized tests are scary for primary school children, bad for their morale and confidence. Overwhelmed by the test situation, they often don t show what they do know and can do. Instances of children breaking down, crying, unable to face school, becoming literally sick with anxiety in the face of standardized tests, are common. Most teachers in the early grades understand the importance of maintaining their students level of interest and high morale, both of which tend to be undone by tests. The National Association for the Education of Young Children has, for a number of years, come out against standardized testing of young children for some of these same reasons.

Also, differences in background show up vividly in the early years of schooling: some children arrive in school never having actually handled a book or in some cases seen one close up; others have had books read to them since infancy. These differences tend to diminish in the face of their common school experience. Narrowing the gap between the more and less advantaged students is one of the great potentials of the public school system. Premature testing, however, by highlighting differences, will reinforce them in the minds of children.

There are additional problems connected with this, including the amount of test preparation that teachers of young children feel compelled to give their students to try to make sure their scores are high enough, too often perverting the educational program.

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