Carol Burris, who was recently named to the honor roll as a hero of public education, wrote a letter to President Obama. Carol understands how excessive testing is harming students and demoralizing teachers. She warns the President how this policy–at the heart of Race to the Top–will do increasing damage as it is institutionalized.
Dear Mr. President:
First, thank you for all you do.
I am writing because as the principal of South Side High School, an integrated high school in New York, I am deeply concerned about the inclusion of test scores to rate teachers that is a mandated part of Race to the Top and in the waivers. Because of this mandate, my state New York, has implemented an evaluation plan which is not respected by the majority of principals and teachers, and excessive testing against which parents are rebelling
Our high school’s philosophy has been “kids, it’s you and your teacher against the test.” If students fail an exam, we prepare them to try again. The goal is for students to take the most challenging courses they can, even if their scores are not the best. Our results have been great, with the school selected consistently as one of the top 100 high schools in the United States by Newsweek, and last year by US News and World Report.
But this student-centered, healthy approach to testing is changing now that we are forced to use student scores to evaluate teachers. In classrooms all over New York State, it is no longer “teacher and student against the test” but rather “teacher and test against the student.” How students do on the test will play a key role in deciding whether or not teachers and principals keep their jobs. Not only that, because parents are allowed by law to see the teacher’s score, it will shortly result in the public embarrassment of some teachers, based on measures of dubious value.
This approach is trumpeted as judging educators by their performance, which may resonate with some people who are not immersed in the daily labor of reaching a wide variety of students in a wide variety of ways. Although the New York model technically allows educators to earn up to 60 points for measures other than student achievement, the system is rigged so that it is nearly impossible to be rated effective or even “developing” if the test-score components are low. In short, test scores trump all.
The biggest losers of these new evaluation policies, in my school and beyond, will be students. A teacher will look at each student as potential “value added” or “value decreased” – that is as a potential increase or decrease on the score the teacher is ultimately assigned. With his or her job dependent on those students’ test scores, this teacher will now have a set of incentives and disincentives very different than in the past.
For teachers with young families and college debt to pay, the student who comes late to class, or who does not do his homework will become a threat to her job security. The troubled child who transfers in will be nervously welcomed. The student with disruptive behavior will be a threat to the scores of the rest of the class instead of a person to be understood and whose needs should be met. The score, not the well-educated child, will become the focus. The pressures will build to engage in exclusionary and non-educative practices designed to improve numbers at the cost of learning. Instead of pushing students to take physics and advanced algebra, schools will discourage weaker students so that the aggregate score for the teacher and principal does not go down.
This isn’t an argument against holding teachers accountable; it’s an argument against holding them accountable for the wrong things and in a way that will result in very negative unintended consequences. I wouldn’t want to teach in that environment, and I wouldn’t want my children or the students at my school to try to learn in that environment; but the incentives for teachers to teach to the test and teach to the best will be unavoidable.
And to what end, Mr. President? For over a decade we have engaged in increased testing with punitive consequences under No Child Left Behind. There is no evidence that the massive outlay in tax dollars and learning time has produced increased learning. SAT scores have not gone up. NAEP scores have remained flat. Remediation rates at community colleges have not gone down. Our students have not improved on international assessments. Rather than acknowledging that testing is not the lever for increased learning, the plan is now to increase the pressure. There will be consequences, but better learning outcomes will not be one of them.
There will also likely be endless lawsuits brought by principals and teachers questioning the fairness and legality of the use of test scores and these unproven evaluation systems for termination of employment. Yes, the New York State Board of Regents and others will certainly attempt to include all important factors that impact learning in their test-score-based “growth models.” But these models have serious weaknesses. The recent score that was issued was characterized as a “first attempt” at being fair by the research firm that generated them. Not a “good attempt”, not even our “best attempt”, but a first attempt. Nevertheless, the scores were disseminated by the New York State Education Department and teachers were labeled “ineffective”.
Models are intended to be simplified versions of reality, but they can be manipulated – and they will invariably leave out important unmeasured (and immeasurable) elements. Some factors beyond a teacher’s control depress students’ test scores (think here of behavioral issues, traumatic life experiences, drug involvement, or lack of home supervision). Other factors beyond a teacher’s control increase students’ test scores (think here of summer enrichment activities, private tutors, and simple parental help with schoolwork and other learning). These are nonrandom student characteristics, and the growth model’s assignment of students to teachers can be complex and problematic. Similarly, the practical decisions about these assignments are troubling. Should I continue to assign my best teachers the most challenging students, knowing that those students might pull down those teacher’s scores?
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If teachers have a choice between working in a district with high wealth and college-educated parents or a struggling district with high numbers of students of poverty, and they know that their employment is dependent upon test scores, which should they choose? Which are most of them likely to choose? While growth models do minimize the effects of poverty on outcomes, those effects remain substantial. Accordingly, one of the many unintended consequences of the new evaluation system will be even less incentive for good teachers and principals to work with the students that need them the most.
I had hoped that your administration’s educational leader, Mr. Duncan, and you might rethink this policy. But it appears that you are going “full steam ahead”. That makes me feel sad. Last election, my husband and I gave you considerable support. This year, we are unsure who we will vote for or if we will vote for president at all.
I hope that you will rethink this misguided policy and recommend an evaluation system not based on test scores but on the encouragement of approaches to teaching that are associated with increased learning. We need policies that work to reduce racial isolation in schools and in classrooms and that encourage schools to include all students in excellent curriculum, regardless of test scores.
Great leaders have the courage to change course when they realize that their policies are misguided.
I thank you for reading. I cannot tell you how discouraged teachers and principals are across this nation. I am a 59 year old grandmother who will retire in 3 years. This policy will not negatively impact me personally. However, for the sake of our public schools and our public school children, especially our students of color and poverty, I ask that you rethink the Race to the Top requirements before horrible damage is done.
Sincerely,
Carol Burris, Ed. D.
cburris@rvcschools.org
Not many people bring up the issue of gender. Most K-8 teachers are women. It is disappointed that the men of this administration are showing such disrespect to women in addition to the harm of high stakes testing to children.
Even charter school operators [so loved by the Democratic and Republican party hierarchies, point out the damage of high stakes testing:
I got stuck on the part stating that in most schools they are prohibited from holding teachers accountable by law. Huh?
Thorough, simple, convincing. Another confounding aspect for all New Yorkers is that the evaluation syatem within which test scores are embedded is so complex, bound by regs and demanding of time for observations that many districts are hiring more administrators just to handle compliance and procedures. The process pf collective bargaining and data reporting is costing big bucks that could be used to rehire teachers whose positions were cut for this year.
Dr. Ravitch,
I just came from a meeting where we were criticized for our poor TVAAS scores. We were reminded once again that if we didn’t improve that no one else in Tennessee would want us. I work at one of those high poverty schools and it’s getting harder and harder to go into work each day. After you hear about how bad you are for a while, you start to internalize the message. That’s why I appreciate it when I open my inbox and it is flooded with posts from this blog. I appreciate so much knowing that while I am at work teaching that there are people out there watching our backs and keeping me informed. It really does help.
Stay strong. I know from personal experience how hard it is to be labeled as “failing” all the time. Neither you, nor your students, are failures!
That sound so familiar. I haul myself in every day, 50 miles one way, 30 of it cross country by motorcycle, no road. I am there early, I leave late, I teach English and G.E.D. classes to the parents for free. Helping the parents helps the kids. For years they thanked me, wrote letters that warm my heart, over a hundred of these are in my file at work. Now all we hear from our new superintendent and principal is what scum we are, how a TFA er can be brought in to take our place….It is heard. You know who you are and what you make. You make a difference in the lives of children. No one else will do what you do. We work for the kids, not the bureaucrats.
I am so happy to see someone mention what has been a concern of mine. We are constantly pushing kids to take these higher level courses, AP for example, because the experience is good for them. In fact, in Florida, our school grade depends on getting a higher percentage of kids taking these types of courses each year. I have worked with students in AP Literature who want to improve their analytical ability, even if there is no way they will ever pass the extremely difficult AP Lit exam. (This exam, btw, is harder than anything I ever did in college, and I just graduated in 2004.) Now I feel like I only want the kids that are “ringers” to start — of which there are few, being a Title 1 school.
Every time I hear someone mention using AP scores for teacher evaluation, I cringe. They have no clue what they are talking about. This year I have added AICE Literature to my workload, and I have the same concern there. The tests students take for these college level courses are to determine eligibility for college credit. That is an entirely different ball game than just a level of proficiency that are found in end of course or other standardized tests.
Another great letter by Carol Burris, Thanks for all you do.
Here’s mine
http://rlratto.wordpress.com/
Do you need more evidence that NCLB is advancing a corporate reform agenda. How about this?
Impact of NCLB waiver on poor schools challenged
from the Answer Sheet at the Washington Post
“Below is a letter sent today to Education Secretary Arne Duncan from a coalition of organizations, researchers, activists and government officials who are questioning the racial and economic impacts of the No Child Left Behind waiver granted to New Jersey.
The letter says that the “accountability” system put in place by the state’s Education Department as a result of the waiver rewards schools that serve majority white students while it is more punitive toward school districts serving low-income students of color.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/10/15/impact-of-nclb-waiver-on-poor-schools-challenged/
Dr. Burris,
Thank you for speaking up. A great number of educators share your view but are not comfortable speaking out.
I suggest another “side effect” of these mistaken accountability efforts is inevitable. Just as NCLB and high stakes testing brought “teaching to the test”, we will surely soon get “teaching to the rubric”.
Gates, Coleman and others be gone with that but it will slowly suck the life out of good teachers, good teaching and honorable administrators.
Thank you again, perhaps others will one day find a way to match your courage.