In 2010, I was in Denver the day that the Legislature was debating S. 10-191, a bill sponsored by young Senator Michael Johnston. It was a bill to base 50% of teachers’ evaluation on test scores, a new, untried, and very controversial idea. Teachers were strongly opposed, and the Legislature was deeply divided but the bill passed. I was supposed to debate Johnston at a lunch in downtown Denver, but the debate didn’t work as planned. There were about 60 civic leaders in the room, and we waited patiently for Johnston. We finished lunch and still no Johnston. So I got up and gave my talk and explained why it was wrong to evaluate teachers and principals by test scores (at that time, I was working with Richard Rothstein on a statement against test-based evaluation that was signed by a bevy of testing experts). No sooner did I finish, then presto-change-o, young Senator Johnston strides through the doors in the back of the room. He had carefully managed not to hear anything I said.
He then proceeded to talk for 20 minutes or more about the glories of using test scores to judge teachers, principals, and schools. He predicted that the passage of his bill would bring about miraculous improvements in education across the state of Colorado. He praised his legislation as the dawn of a new day. Michael Johnston is an alum of Teach for America (were you surprised to hear that?). The title of his bill was something grandiose and completely fraudulent, something like “Great Schools and Great Teachers Act of 2010.” Gosh, it is six years later, and almost everyone except Michael Johnston knows that test-based accountability flopped. It flopped in Colorado and it flopped everywhere else, despite the billions pumped into by the federal government, the Gates Foundation, states and local districts.
Just in the past few days, both John Merrow and the team of Checker Finn and Michael Petrilli independently agreed that teacher evaluation by test scores was Arne Duncan’s worst mistake. John Merrow said, “Tying teacher evaluations to testing was a mistake, probably Arne Duncan’s biggest mistake.” Petrilli and Finn said that the federal mandate for teacher evaluations was “politically poisonous.” But not in Colorado, it seems.
A group of legislators proposed revising his bill to eliminate evaluation by test scores, and it appeared to have the support it needed. But at the last minute, two of the Republicans changed their minds about dropping the teacher evaluation by test scores, and Michael Johnston’s failed idea survived by a vote of 6-3. So Johnston and five Republican Senators managed to preserve this program, which has not worked in Colorado nor anywhere else in America. Six years after passage, there is not a whit of evidence that it improves teaching and learning.
Do you think Michael Johnston read the statement by the American Statistical Association in 2014 warning that using test scores to evaluate individual teachers is not a reasonable idea, because teachers influence between 1-14% of the variation in student test scores? I don’t think so. Do you think he saw the statement by the American Educational Research Association last fall against the use of this method? I don’t think so. Do you think he read the statement by Edward Haertel, the Stanford University testing expert, on the flaws of value-added assessment? Do you think he knows that it has been dropped by district after district because it costs millions and it has failed everywhere to identify the best or the worst teachers? Apparently not.
Michael Johnston doesn’t know what he doesn’t know. With this last-ditch effort to preserve the bad idea he sponsored, he has proved that he neither reads nor thinks.
Message to Colorado parents: Opt out. Resist. Do not let the state impose bad policies on your children or their teachers.

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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And to show how horrible all of this is. Two of the Republicans that sponsored the bill ended up opposing it. That shows how dysfunctional this state is. Our republican representatives are messed up too!
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Read please!
http://garnpress.com/2016/monica-taylor-speaks-out-against-unjust-and-unacceptable-testing-regime/
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Thank you for providing the history of this failed idea. I would love to know the back story of why the two Republican sponsors changed their minds. Wonder what was promised or threatened. Not that I am cynical! And we in Colorado should not forget, DPS is, I believe, the only district to still be trying to implement this garbage bill as originally passed.
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Jeannie , see my comment, here, today!
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I agree. Ms. Woods was against using VAM and then voted for it? This is also disheartening because they are screaming there is not enough money for education. They seem to have enough to keep up useless programs and link everything to work force.
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As a veteran low-income school teacher who suffered the vicious “evaluation” processes put into place by this very man; as a long-term experienced (and thus “bad”) teacher no longer wanted by his state, I can only say that I am overwhelmed, saddened and frightened by your post — but not at all surprised in days of his endlessly argued let’s-get-rid-of-bad-teachers policies. He is, in fact, a powerful reason why I spent my last years of teaching being school-score-labeled as a “bad” teacher when the very poor, language-learning students I worked with couldn’t magically produce test scores comparable to their non-poor, English-speaking peers. It is Michael Johnston, along with the forever shifting parade of “reformers” who have blindly invaded our district, who led me to try to write a book about what his humiliating policies did to me, and to so many other teachers like me.
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Fall of 2013 Bill Gates says: “It would be great if our education stuff worked, but that we won’t know for probably a decade.” [see WaPo, Valerie Strauss, 9-27-2013]
And that’s just his current round of self-proclaimed “education reform”—he spent years and years before that funding other “stuff.”
Other rheephormsters have created and/or had varying time lines. Michael Johnston, e.g., has had six years to work his magic.
The one common thread: whether past due or due to come, they claim they never have enough time to make their “stuff” work.
Their assurances are like a promissory note that never comes due.
Except, of course, for the $tudent $ucce$$ that comes rolling their way.
Because their paydays are, dontchaknow, “all about the kids.”
😎
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I suggest that you people in Denver, create a test for each and every legislator who voted “yes”
I say you teachers and parents in Denver investigate and EVALUATE THESE CLOWNS,- by examiing their performance— by seeing how many BILLS THEY PASSED which the PEOPLE NEEDED & WANTED. What is their scores for making things BETER in Denver. How much funding has been wasted or misspent?
I say we score these lawmakers, too, and evaluate them by the conditions of their schools, their roads and the number of people who live in utter poverty. Give them a score if noting they do helps middle class workers, who’ve lost jobs and must choose between rent and food…forget medication.
False evaluations are fine with these ‘legislators’ who march to the drum of big money, and sing their song of: ” ‘Bad Teachers’ mean failing schools! Chorus: “test, “test, Test!!”
How can these legislators do this at a time when opt-out is finally moving forward, as parents say, “Enough,” and REAL teachers disappear.
What more evidence is needed of the conspiracy that we face, then the passage of that ODIOUS bill AT A TIME WHEN testing has been proven to do one thing– turn kids off to learning and end the authority of the professional in the conversation.
At a time when it is clear that tests do NOT EVALUATE EITHER CHILDREN’s PERFORMANCE, NOR that of TEACHERS, the only reason to do this, is to ensure that schools fail and can be privitized. Hey it worked in NYC!
I am astonished and astounded that these ‘critters’ dare pass that bill, but then it is open season on teachers who’ve no voice — and we ALL KNOW WHY.
A teacher under assault no matter what success or intentions they have, knows there is no mechanism to be heard… altoough once upon a time, there was. We called that collective bargaining, and we had contracts. I have one on the desk next to me. I was gonna bring it to the NPE, but I will scan some pertinent parts to prove that not to long ago no one could accuse me, THE PROFESSIONAL PRACTITIONER of ANYTHING without PROOF of what they allege.
. It is America after all.
The irony of such charlatans calling the shots on professionals is not lost. But then, they know that ‘anyone can teach’! Just give them 5 weeks of training like a Walmart employee, and they can master complex strategies for learning by the young human BRAIN! Give them a copy of the CC and say “TEACH!” and in 3 years, replace them with another novice.
VAM is considered OK by these numbness, because you see –IN THE NINETIES,THEY LEARNED THEY COULD DO OR SAY ANYTHING TO RID THE SCHOOL OF A VETERAN TEACHER. turn kids off to learning and end the authority of the professional in the conversation.
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
VAM CAME ALONG my friends, because teachers were humiliated and harassed out by MORE THAN poor student performance. When the EIC saw that it worked, that no administrators (like the banksters) ever lost their jobs or were prosecuted for the most egregious, lawless behaviors, they went the next step and said: “let’s get a tool to document their incompetence.” Presto! VAM and the CCcrap and a media that never tells the truth!
Here’s truth!
.
At this link you can see the video about her experience, as Lorna Stremcha tells the tale of extraordinary workplace bullying that was never punished so she sued and lost her savings and years of her life.
http://blog.ebosswatch.com/2013/05/one-womans-legal-fight-against-workplace-bullying/
My series at Oped News has the most crucial information that Diane posts; who else is following with up to date evidence of the enormous plot to privatize American Public schools. I speak to ordinary folks at this wonderful progressive news site, and explain how fast this is happening. I have series on testing, to which I will add today’s post!
http://www.opednews.com/author/series/author40790.html
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I love what you say here; I have the same desire to see each and every one of those who have so abused teachers and students in our district take our state’s 10th grade exam and then have the results published, with names very publicly attached, in the newspaper…
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Ohio originally went with 50%. Wow, was the system gamed. Clueless state legislators have been fumbling and bumbling ever since. The law now is an optional 42.5% – no kidding. They threw in student surveys which were vague and utterly useless, plus completely ignored by students. They started with PARCC and now we think are on AIR. No one is quite sure anymore so we just ignore the entire Ohio Teacher Evaluation System as another mindless state mandate and busy work. Now, if I didn’t know better, I’d swear these Kasich-loving’ Republicans are TRYING to make it more difficult. But they care about education, right?
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This simple fact of teacher quality or “effectiveness” has few exceptions:
Any school, at any given point in time will have a very similar mix. A very small handful of excellent teachers – one or two of which might be considered super-stars, a very small handful of weak, less than mediocre teachers, one or two of which might be considered incompetent, and the vast majority are good to passable. And almost every principal can identify them without any pre and post test scores.
A tremendous amount of time, energy, and money is being wasted on this fool’s errand.
Just add test-based-teacher-evaluations to the long list of FAILED policies.
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Same is so true in any organization. And this varies over time. Not everyone can be a superstar every day. It is why this dog eat dog, teacher v teacher VAM process is a Randian fantasy but self destructive. It is also why collaborative teams work for us fundamentally flawed human life forms.
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The value of evaluation by test scores has been totally refuted and yet some small-minded people who are inexplicably in positions to make decisions for others continue to hold on to their mythology! Sad!
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I wonder how Senator Johnston would like it if his re-election depended on the number of votes cast for fellow Senator Guzman?
When a teacher’s evaluation is based on the scores of students that they don’t teach or on content that they don’t teach, the already ridiculous 50% policy enters the Evaluation Zone.
That’s the scene where Arne Duncan says,
“There is a fifth dimension beyond that which is known to educators. It is a dimension as logical as a trip down the rabbit hole and as rational as a vacation inside the looking glass. It is the middle ground between stupid and insanity, between unicorn farms and tooth fairy plantations, and it lies between the pit of a teacher’s fears and the summit of their career. This is the dimension of black-is-white and up-is-down. It is an area which we call the Evaluation Zone.”
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Colorado, where TFA doesn’t care where its scabs come from.
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Diane, how did you read that article from Fordham and come to that conclusion? The authors said:
1. The new CC standards are good and worked in raising the bar in the states
2. There is now research demonstrating PARCC and SBAC are well matched to the CC standards
3. That value added measurements should continue to be used to measure educational effectiveness
4. That tying teacher evals to the bad OLD tests prior to CC tests was unwise and hurt support for tying teacher evals to the good new tests (which it implies is wise)
Talk about differences in reading comprehension.
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Virginia, read the comments.
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The new CC standards and tests are flawed. Period. They have done nothing but enriched Pearson and caused the desired chaos of reformer idiots.
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Donna, what “desired chaos”? As Perilli mentions, the tests have been validated. The fact that the passing rates are much lower doesn’t mean student knowledge dropped off a cliff. It simply means that knowledge relative to what a college applicant needs to know is missing in most of our kids.
All kids cannot go to college (we need to end that myth). The results also show gradations in the results below proficient. How does having a rigorous but honest assessment of where we stand hurt? You will never see me say that 80% of our kids should be proficient on the PARCC or SBAC. But maybe we can get to 45% or 50% like Massachusetts, no?
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Virginia, the tests were designed to align with Common Core. Shouldn’t students be able to pass any test if the Common Core actually educated them? Apparently not.
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Diane, so let me get this straight. You are claiming that if students are “actually educated” then they should be able to “pass any test”. Given that so many students were NOT passing the NAEP under the old curriculum, it must follow that the old curriculum was a failure too?!
And I disagree with the premise. We could teach linear algebra in high school. It’s not beyond the reach of the students, we just choose to teach calculus instead. If another curriculum taught linear algebra and its tested measured that, then no, Common Core curricula would not prepare a student to answer questions on linear algebra.
The same goes for specific skills within a subject. If Common Core’s standards contain (or do not contain) certain skills or content within a subject, its tests must contain (or not contain) those skills or content.
Generally speaking you are correct. Students under a Common Core curriculum should be able to perform on an Algebra or Writing test from nearly any set of reasonable K-12 standards. But that doesn’t mean students will get 100% correct. As we raise the standards of the tests to include asking students to apply the information they learned, the scores will initially drop based on the rigor of the new tests. The effectiveness of the new standards can only be determined as we see how these CC test scores change over time.
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VirginiA, there is no such thing as “passing NAEP.” The only negative score is “below basic” and that’s about 20-25% of students.
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So you would admit that there is no such thing as “passing PARCC” or “passing SBAC”? Just a percentage who score “proficient”, “advanced”, etc.?
So there’s no reason to get upset that PARCC/SBAC simply identify the % of students ready for college then?
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Virginia, it is BS. Wake up.
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I like that response Diane. I’ve said the same thing about many a’ VDOE responses as well.
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Diane, I didn’t follow. Are you referring to the comments in the WaPo article by Petrilli? Or the comments on this blog post?
On another note, we had our final hearing in my case against the Virginia Dept of Education. Interesting day. We ended early and owe the court final briefs within 2 weeks. After that, the court will issue an order directing the release of SGP scores and likely to include teacher names. Virginia has stopped using SGPs as of 2015-2016, so we can only get the data through the 2015 school year. But that should include an overwhelming number of current teachers in Virginia.
Some things that were undisputed in the hearing:
1. Districts did not use SGPs in teacher evals even though VDOE reported to the US DoE that districts were complying with ESEA.
2. VDOE knew about this and possibly directed districts that they could blow off those reqts. I filed a False Claims Act against 7 different Virginia districts in Oct-2015. It was just unsealed this past week. The judge was very interested in that. Of the ~8 counties I FOIA’d, only 1 district in Virginia used SGPs. The others blatantly said “No”, they didn’t use them despite ESEA requirements.
3. VDOE could easily produce SOL and SGP data at the students, teacher, or school level with it’s existing application that is currently only available to schools.
Shouldn’t be long now. Should I post the teacher scores up on your blog site first?
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Virginia, I have done my best to inform you that SGP and VAM are junk. The American Statistical Association said so. The American Educational Research said so. You and Arne Duncan are the only two people in America to cling to those failed measures. Please post your praise for SGP and VAM elsewhere.
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“As Perilli mentions, the tests have been validated.”
No they haven’t. No one has ever refuted or rebutted Noel Wilson’s work that has proven the whole educational standards and standardized testing malpractices to be COMPLETELY INVALID. Until that is done, i.e., when pigs fly, those tests are still and forever will be COMPLETELY INVALID.
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