Several months ago, U.S. News & World Report announced that it planned to rank the nation’s schools of education and that it would do so with the assistance of the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ).
Since then, many institutions announced that they would not collaborate. Some felt that they had already been evaluated by other accrediting institutions like NCATE or TEAC; others objected to NCTQ’s methodology. As the debate raged, NCTQ told the dissenters that they would be rated whether they agreed or not, and if they didn’t cooperate, they would get a zero. The latest information that I have seen is that the ratings will appear this fall.
To its credit, NCTQ posted on its website the letters of the college presidents and deans who refused to be rated by NCTQ. They make for interesting reading, as it is always surprising (at least to me) to see the leaders of big institutions take a stand on issues.
U.S. News defended the project, saying that it had been endorsed by leading educators. The specific endorsement to which it referred came from Chiefs for Change, the conservative state superintendents associated with former Governor Jeb Bush. This article, by the way, has good links to NCTQ’s website, describing the project and its methods. Two of the conservative Chiefs for Change are on NCTQ’s technical advisory panel.
Just this week, NCTQ released a new report about how teachers’ colleges prepare students for assessment responsibilities. The theme of this report is that “data-driven instruction” is the key to success in education. The best districts are those that are “obsessive about using data to drive instruction.” The Broad Prize is taken as the acme of academic excellence in urban education because it focuses on data, data, data. The report acknowledges that the data it prizes in this report is “data derived from student assessments–ranging from classwork practice to state tests–to improve instruction.”
Data-driven decision making is now a national priority, it says, thanks to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who required states “to improve their data systems and create high-quality assessments” if they wanted a crack at his $5 billion Race to the Top.
Unfortunately despite a massive investment in data collection by states and the federal government, the report says, teachers don’t value data enough. Reference is made to the report sponsored by Gates and Scholastic, which found that most teachers do not value the state tests. I wrote about that report here. How in the world can our nation drive instruction with data if the teachers hold data in such low regard?
The balance of the report reviews teacher training institutions by reviewing their course syllabi. The goal is to judge whether the institutions are preparing future teachers to be obsessed with data.
Now, to be candid, I am fed up with our nation’s obsession with data-driven instruction, so I don’t share the premises of the report. The authors of this report have more respect for standardized tests than I do. I fear that they are pushing data-worship and data-mania of a sort that will cause teaching to the test, narrowing of the curriculum, and other negative behaviors (like cheating). I don’t think any of this will lead to the improvement of education. It might promote higher test scores, but it will undermine genuine education. By genuine education, I refer to a love of learning, a readiness to immerse oneself in study of a subject, an engagement with ideas, a willingness to ask questions and to take risks. I don’t know how to assess the qualities I value, but I feel certain that there is no standardized, data-driven instruction that will produce what I respect.
And then there is the question that is the title of this blog: What is NCTQ?
NCTQ was created by the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation in 2000. I was on the board of TBF at the time. Conservatives, and I was one, did not like teacher training institutions. We thought they were too touchy-feely, too concerned about self-esteem and social justice and not concerned enough with basic skills and academics. In 1997, we had commissioned a Public Agenda study called “Different Drummers”; this study chided professors of education because they didn’t care much about discipline and safety and were more concerned with how children learn rather than what they learned. TBF established NCTQ as a new entity to promote alternative certification and to break the power of the hated ed schools.
For a time, it was not clear how this fledgling organization would make waves or if it would survive. But in late 2001, Secretary of Education Rod Paige gave NCTQ a grant of $5 million to start a national teacher certification program called the American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence (see p. 16 of the link). ABCTE has since become an online teacher preparation program, where someone can become a teacher for $1995.00.
Today, NCTQ is the partner of U.S. News & World Report and will rank the nation’s schools of education. It received funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to review teacher quality in Los Angeles. It is now often cited as the nation’s leading authority on teacher quality issues. Its report has a star-studded technical advisory committee of corporate reform leaders like Joel Klein and Michelle Rhee.
And I was there at the creation.
An hour after this blog was published, a reader told me that NCTQ was cited as one of the organizations that received funding from the Bush administration to get positive media attention for NCLB. I checked his sources, which took me to a 2005 report of the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Education (a link in this article leads to the Inspector General report), and he was right. This practice was suspended because the U.S. Department of Education is not allowed to expend funds for propaganda, and the grantees are required to make full disclosure of their funding. At the time, the media focused on payments to commentator Armstrong Williams. According to the investigation, NCTQ and another organization received a grant of $677,318 to promote NCLB. The product of this grant was three op-eds written by Kate Walsh, the head of NCTQ; the funding of these articles by the Department of Education was not disclosed.
Diane
It’s amazing how the media is now being sponsored by Gates, Pearson and ALEC. It’s no longer about quality journalism, but who is the highest bidder. MSNBC comes to mind when they have a (so-called) forum on education and are sponsored by the organizations with a specific agenda.
I’ve written a bit on the NCTQ before:
NCTQ’s LAUSD report’s highly questionable veracity shows Bill Gates’ pervasiveness and perniciousness
http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2011/06/nctqs-lausd-reports-highly-questionable.html
Isn’t this analogous to standardized testing in kindergarten? Like you, I think it’s absurd for schools to be held accountable by NCTQ (of all organizations) for producing test-based results. All that’s going to do is drive colleges towards teaching teachers how to teach to the test. It’s a recursive loop that, if it wasn’t actually happening, I’d laugh all day about.
They gave us (William and Mary) a grade of “D” and rated us as “uncooperative.” Then they’d FOIA’d us for the full syllabus for EVERY course we offer. Then, when they had trouble with that, they started offering students $100 for a copy of a syllabus. They were caught red-handed at North Carolina State, so we need to be vigilant about our intellectual property! Congrats for starting to tell the whole story of these so-called objective measures. Keep them coming!
This is sad. Industries (like education) not typically used to dealing with “data” are handling this new “data mining” culture so incorrectly and inefficiently. Just because everyone can use Microsoft Excel now doesn’t mean it’s going to add value to apply it to everything.
As someone who used to work in finance prior to teaching in the classroom, I can see how those who haven’t taught a day in the classroom, yet make education policy decisions can grow obsessed with data – they erroneously believe raw numbers can summarize human “intellectual” growth; they use faulty/bad test scores to guide their decision-making process in an area they themselves do not truly understand. You wouldn’t put a high school student in charge of Bain Capital’s company portfolio, so why vice versa?
I teach math to over-age, under-credited students in NYC and as tempting as it is to measure my students’ growth by the numbers, I know better. Will I teach my kids how to take a test I don’t believe is applicable in life, or would I rather spend that time doing something more productive and meaningful?.. Depends on my principal and policy, I guess…
Diane, you wrote, ” By genuine education, I refer to a love of learning, a readiness to immerse oneself in study of a subject, an engagement with ideas, a willingness to ask questions and to take risks. I don’t know how to assess the qualities I respect, but I feel certain that there is no standardized, data-driven instruction that will produce what I respect.”
I’d take it further. Standardized, data-driven instruction (and the drill and kill approach it generally entails) stultifies students’ educational experience. Sadly, with so much riding on test scores, schools disappointed in their students’ scores tend to double down on nausea-inducing data collection rather than looking for ways to foster the qualities that define a genuine education.
When NCLB became law, in 2001, NCATE Colleges of Education and Schools of Education in NCAT partnered states were first required to hire people to work as “data miners” and “assessment coordinators”, so they could collect and analyze a wealth of data to meet accreditation and state requirements. This includes linking student teachers with child outcomes to determine effectiveness. So, it’s been going on for over a decade. Is it being promoted as the new sliced bread now because standardized tests have not been used exclusively? For example, in preprimary education, student teachers often use pre-test/post-test measures they create with faculty approve. This looks to me like a push to use standardized tests sold by for-profits like Pearson and ETS for kids of ALL ages.
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What’s deeply concerning is the move from three dimensional living to two dimensional reacting. That’s the difference between a true education, and an “assessment” education.
Read Tom Friedman’s column today if you want to gnash your teeth about “reform”:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/opinion/friedman-its-pq-and-cq-as-much-as-iq.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130130
Friedman is a big advocate of the “reform” movement, but at the same time his columns about the future contend that our students need to show initiative and develop skills that are “complementary to technology”. Your readers know better… RTTT and the reform agenda are only preparing students to take tests, they aren’t preparing students for a future where initiative and creativity are crucial skills.
Diane, I ran across this post while researching NCTQ for a blog post on their new report (www.frontlinek12.com/absencereport). Thank you for sharing the background of their organization. It’s good to know this and consider the source of the report.
“ABCTE has since become an online teacher preparation program, where someone can become a teacher for $1995.00.”
And to think of the thousands and thousands I spent on my daughter’s college education to become a qualified, certified, teacher~! And, what of the hours of observing, clinical teaching, etc. that she performed when all we had to do was pay $1995.00. Imagine that.
Is the ABCTE the reason why all the Rheeformers have a boner for alternative route teachers like the 5-weeks-of-training, fast-tracked back door deal “certification” process the TFAs get, and that of the vile Broad Supe’s Academy?
My daughter is right; I’m going to have to stay away from this website; it does nothing good for my blood pressure and is creating deep-seated anger in me.
AND, why does anyone with a brain put trust in these a-holes and buy their bullshit? How does this not widely get exposed as fronts? Who the hell do these people think they are? What gives these think tanks and foundations and bogus organizations any validity whatsoever? Are we really that frigging stupid as to revere them?
Donna, The reason this is not widely reported is because those who are behind it own the media. It’s all part of the business plan to privatize public education across America. For more info, read Diane’s last two books, as well as virtually anything about corporate education “reform” by David Sirota: