Sarah Becker, a parent in the Houston Independent School District, is thrilled with her child’s public school. It has exceeded her expectations. Yet the state claims it is failing. How can this be? Could it be that the ratings system is wrong? What do you think? Sarah says she will ignore the rating system but the state won’t. They might close her child’s school or even take over the entire school district for failing to do something dramatic to her school. Accountability hawks are no doubt eager to see Sarah’s school closed and handed off to a charter operator. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Gov. Greg Abbott would be happy to see the school closed and hand out vouchers to the students to attend a religious school. Sarah Becker says they are wrong.
A couple of weeks ago the Texas Education Agency (TEA) released their ratings of schools and school districts. I am the mother of two children at a school in Houston Independent School District, the state’s largest school district and the seventh largest district in the country. How did my kids’ school fare in this year’s accountability system? The school failed, receiving an “Improvement Required” rating.
Does that give me pause about sending my kids there? Not one bit and I’ll tell you why.
This past year was the first one my children spent at their elementary school. From the moment they set foot on campus, my children were accepted and loved. The physical environment of the school is welcoming, and they have a nice, new building with lots of natural light. And in a time when public school budgets are incredibly austere, my kids’ elementary school found a way to hire a PE teacher, an art teacher, a music teacher, a nurse and a social worker last year. To have all of those is incredibly rare in HISD-in fact, this elementary school was the only one within driving range of our home to offer those. It has a rooftop garden and a makerspace. And finally most amazingly, my children learned AN ENTIRE SECOND LANGUAGE last year. We literally dropped them into new classes having had almost zero exposure to Spanish and they ended the year speaking, reading and writing two languages. The progression has been amazing to watch. Their worlds are bigger and more beautiful because of their new school.
So how did such a great school end up being on the “improvement required” list? The system used to identify “failing” schools is unsound and inaccurate. It is based solely on how certain students perform on a single standardized test on a single day.
You have probably seen the meme floating around social media with the following quote: “Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.” As cliché as that quote is, I find much truth in it when applied to our “accountability” system. If you judge every school by the standards of the TEA, some very successful schools will receive failing ratings not because they fail to educate, but because the accountability system demands that fish ride bicycles by making children conform to tests.
Which brings us back to my family’s experiences-no part of my kids’ experience at our school last year was a part of any accountability data.
I think it’s important to acknowledge that our school is not perfect—there is always room to grow—but how long do Texas students and teachers have to wait for an accountability system that is fair and looks at something other than narrow, flawed test scores which seem aimed to punish school communities that serve students in poverty? And, in an environment where the state legislature seems hellbent on increasing the stakes around standardized testing (see: state takeover of democratically elected school boards), schools are being asked to sacrifice increasingly more each year in the name of raising said test scores.
Lest I be accused of glossing over real problems, I am not suggesting that all public schools are perfect or even that our district has served all communities well. Quite the opposite. But if we focus only on bringing up test scores, we miss addressing the very real issues that are in front of us because test scores take up all the space.
Until this system is overhauled, I will continue to pay no mind to it and pay attention to the very clear evidence in front of me: my kids are excited to show up to school every morning and love their school. Their teachers are caring professionals. That is enough accountability for me.

I certainly believe that public schools, like any public enterprise, must be held accountable to the citizens, who are paying the bills and utilizing the services (of the enterprise).
School ratings are a mix of objective and subjective criteria. And there are no national standards. With each state (properly) running their own system, the standards in Wyoming and the standards in New Hampshire will of course, vary.
This individual seems to be satisfied with the school that her children attend. If she chooses to disagree, with the evaluation presented to the school, that is her right.
What and where is the problem?
LikeLike
Funny, I live in an area where the schools are rated very high by test scores. Yes, we have art, music, PE etc, but the curriculum (the meat and potatoes of the education) is awful. It is common core aligned and it’s clearly spelled out for any parent who wishes to read from the county website…”the curriculum is aligned to the test”. Parents here are crazy over test scores and it doesn’t matter that their kids aren’t getting the education that they deserve.
LikeLiked by 1 person
”it’s clearly spelled out for any parent who wishes to read from the county website…’the curriculum is aligned to the test’”
They actually admit that? Holy frijoles! What a great example of adminimal speak and behavior, eh!
LikeLike
yep…and we are ALWAYS rated highly in US News and World Report for our excellent education system! That’s why child #2 started private high school today! Not looking back….even though he has to say a morning prayer before school starts and he has to take a religion class. He’ll get real math, real science with (microscopes, chemicals, and freeze dried frogs!), real reading of classic literature (without having to annotate or “close read”), PE, arts, music etc…..and NO PARCC testing! Yes….paying for this out of our own pocket.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Keep paying for it out of your own pocket.
LikeLike
I understand what you are doing as a parent for your children. I wish all parents were as involved and knowledgeable as you!
LikeLike
@Diane….Yes we will continue to pay out of pocket or use our 529 funds (if that legislation in our state passes). We looked very carefully to make sure that the school wasn’t accepting voucher funds (Hogan’s BOOST program). When schools start taking money from the state, the state always wants something in return……data via testing, common core etc. Hogan held a press conference today and it is likely that he will be doubling down on the testing madness (“accountability” was used a lot). Hogan needs to go and then they need to remove Finn and Smarick from the Board…along with our test friendly Super, Karen Salmon.
LikeLike
@ Lisa: I am delighted, that you are delighted with the school you have chosen for your child(ren). I have a couple of questions:
-Do you think it is fair for you to pay school taxes, and pay for tuition/costs at the private school, both?
-Would you like to have at least some of your school taxes, rebated to you, to assist you in making your choice, and meeting the costs of the non-public school?
-Obviously, you are aware, that the public school in your area of residence, cannot offer the education that your child(ren) is/are entitled to.
-How do you feel about people who do not have the financial resources that you do, being compelled to attend public schools, that do not deliver the education that their children are entitled to?
-Do you think that only people of higher income, should have the option of selecting quality schools for their children?
LikeLike
OH Charles…..you are such a wretched individual. Why don’t you take your Libertarian self out to the front lawn and bury yourself under a rock. Spare us the misery every time you post. NO VOUCHERS. NO EDUCATION TAX INCENTIVES. If you don’t care to live in a democracy, please feel free to move yourself to say….Russia? You always show up for the voucher argument…..and it gets old.
LikeLike
Charles knows that I delete many of his pro-voucher comments. He is entitled to his opinion, but not to say the same things over and over and over and over. Not here. He should tweet.
LikeLike
Q If you don’t care to live in a democracy, please feel free to move yourself to say….Russia? END Q
I resent this remark. I am a veteran, and I swore an oath to protect the constitution. I have lived under communism, and Islamic sharia law. I cherish our freedom, and our way of life.
I speak Russian, and I married a Russian, and I have travelled extensively in Russia. Although I love and respect the land of my wife’s birth, it is not for me.
Where did you ever get the insane idea, that I do not care to live in the USA?
I let most of the hurtful remarks here, just slide off. But this type of comment really makes me burn.
LikeLike
the Drone/Manager no-creative-thinking-allowed process completed when parents care more about test scores than actual education
LikeLike
Charles: it is the privatization proponents who refuse to fund LisaM’s school that have created her problems. These are people you support. Figure it out.
LikeLike
This post hits close to home. My grandson is entering third grade in a high poverty school in the Houston area. The K-2 the school he attended was very child centered with a good balance of hands-on learning, paper and pencil academics and technology. The school was safe, clean and well resourced.
Starting third grade has been almost like trip to East Berlin. The entire school program is devoted to making the grade on the STAAR test. My grandson is no longer excited about going to school. He keeps asking my daughter to pick him up early. Each night he receives an hour of CCSS worksheets for homework on topics not yet taught. My daughter is beside herself trying to deal with this stupidity. This test driven mentality is a killer of the enthusiasm and joy of learning. Test mania is damaging the spirit of young people and frustrating families. I gave my daughter the information on Texas opt-out, which looks like a exercise in resisting intimidation.
Politicians in the pocket of the charter lobby are doing everything possible to make public schools hideous boot camps of oppression under the guise of “accountability.” What is happening in many public schools is targeted educational malpractice to forward the interests of privatization.
LikeLike
“Each night he receives an hour of CCSS worksheets for homework on topics not yet taught.”
WOW! How insane is that? Who the F even begins to think that that is appropriate much less pedagogically sound? Can you say bullying?
I’d be in the office the next day after that shit happened letting them know it wasn’t going to happen to my child that way. And I’d be on the phone and emailing each and every board member letting them know just how wrong that crap is.
LikeLike
My daughter has met with the teacher and principal, but not the board. I agree with you, but my daughter does not have your chutzpah or even mine. She is a timid soul with anxiety issues. She also has a strong sense of justice, and she’s a loving mother which I hope will enable her to complain to the board. I am willing make a trip to Texas to go with her for support or to ride shotgun, if necessary.
LikeLiked by 1 person
And, yes, it is very intimidating for most folks, especially those not familiar with the public schools, to deal with the supposed “experts”. I wish her courage and you all luck and skill in dealing with those who should know better than to be doing what they are doing to the children.
LikeLike
& then, if given a hard time, report the adminimals to Child Protective Services on the grounds of child abuse.
(&, retired, talk to other parents, grandparents & feel them out. If they’re talking your talk, go in together–strength in numbers, cause a whole lotta stink & you all might make the papers or the 6 o’clock news, bringing attention to this horrendous scourge upon the kids {I hear the same thing from my ILL-Annoy friends who pick up & babysit their grandkids.) ENOUGH already!!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
If I had it to do all over again, I would homeschool /homeschool coop both of my children and then put them both in private HS. Child #1 had it good until 3rd grade when the testing started. Two years later with child #2, he was sitting at a desk for a great part of the day in kindergarten. Child #1 is always on the cusp of the next reform while child #2 gets the brunt of it all. Child #1 finds school tolerable…child #2 absolutely hates school. It’s sad and it’s child abuse. I don’t know why teachers won’t just say NO, shut their doors and do what is right for the children they are supposed to teach.
LikeLike
I have the same feeling as what you state in your last sentence.
You’ve probably read my feelings on GAGA Good German teachers, and that isn’t a compliment. Most live in fear, as do most Americans, those who are in the bottom two-thirds of income/wealth. They fear losing what little they have. And yes the economic system has been set up that way so that those at the top can continue their avaricious ways and lifestyles (think DeVos and 10 yachts). It is not a natural or normal economic system at all. Those with the gold make the rules so that they can hoard more gold. It’s that plain and simple.
Unfortunately the only way those people will be pried away from their avaricious ways and material goods is through a violent revolution which I don’t ever see happening in this country with the vast majority of the population being stupified on a 24/7 basis by the media, marketing and propaganda. “Soma, we don’t need no stinkin Soma-we got the boob tube.”
LikeLike
Duane: History suggests that violent revolutions are often the result of rising expectations. Right now, insofar as teachers are concerned, there might be less GAGA and more hunkered down peasants than you imagine. In Tennessee, teachers earn about 50 to 60 percent of the median income for those in the state with a bachelors degree. Any single teacher with a kid qualifies for public assistance, although I know few who get it. No revolution coming from this group. Rather, you will get what you see, which is rapid attrition. This attrition is exactly what education reformers want, because it creates young and inexperienced staff who will be less likely to be confrontational.
LikeLike
“Could it be that the ratings system is wrong?
NAH, especially if it is modeled after the Jebster’s Florida school grading system!
LikeLike
I worked in a pineapple canning factory. It was a horror. Working conditions were awful, just not as awful as an automobile factory.
Kids are not canned goods or auto parts. . Treating kids and teachers liked canned goods and auto body parts is plain backwards and wrong.
LikeLike
But, but…the (non) “education” being provided by Common Core & “standardized” testing is the design of the oligarchs/1%/ALEC (i.e., Koch bros., Waltons, Gates, etc.) leading our kids to careers in…pineapple canning & automobile factories.
Oh, & also as Walmart “Associates.”
LikeLike
Also from Texas—
Texas Teachers Unions Sue Education Agency Over Charter Partnership Law
Two teacher associations sued Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath and the Texas Education Agency on Wednesday, arguing they rolled out a law incentivizing partnerships with school districts and charter schools in a way that weakened protections for public school employees.
More here:
http://www.keranews.org/post/texas-teachers-unions-sue-education-agency-over-charter-partnership-law
LikeLike
The Chronicle reports today that Houston ISD is considering Antonio Villaraigosa/Marshall Tuck’s controversial Partnership for Los Angeles Schools as a model of reform for low performing schools.
“The nonprofit would partner with HISD through a recently passed state law commonly known as SB 1882. Under the law, school districts temporarily can surrender control over campuses to an outside organization — including a nonprofit — in exchange for a two-year reprieve from state sanctions tied to low academic performance, an extra $1,200 in per-student funding and some regulatory breaks. If HISD does not engage in an outside partnership this academic year at four chronically low-performing schools this year, the district risks state sanctions in 2019 if any of the campuses fail to meet state academic standards.”
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Houston-civic-leaders-exploring-new-nonprofit-to-13197885.php?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=HoustonChronicle_MorningReport
LikeLike
I read the link and looked up the law. The mayor of Houston is wise enough to insist on local governance of any partnerships. If a public school partners with a legitimate university, they might be able to create something helpful as long as “entity” as defined in the law does not include for profit businesses. This may also be a backdoor way to privatize eventually.https://tea.texas.gov/Texas_Schools/District_Initiatives/SB_1882_Turnaround_Partnerships/
LikeLike
I agree with your last sentence. The partnerships in Los Angeles Unified are nonprofit. That hasn’t protected the students or the teachers.
LikeLike
I suggest we abolish certain words from our vocabulary. The first and most important would be “failing schools.” I am not interested in what someone else describes as a failing school. The second would be “metrics.” The third is “high standards.” These too fail to interest me. Most of these words are related to test scores, but the people who use the words are trying to divert attention from things they can really measure.
Here are some real measurable items related to school that indicate whether the school is functioning properly:
Tenure of teachers: Is a large portion of the faculty experienced and holds higher degrees?
Numbers of students: Class size matters, but also total numbers of students seen by a teacher matter as well
Access to reading material: Wars were fought over books in classical times. Education requires that the participants have access to high quality reading material. How many books are in the library? Is there access to high quality reading material on line?
There are more real things to indicate a good school, none of which are even in the mix in this day in time. We should reject the language of evasion that characterizes modern education debate. Let the proponents of testing call it what they will, but make them say that their evaluation is all testing. The Orwellian double speak that hides behind letter grades for schools and such needs to be called out.
LikeLike
“Failing schools” is reform jargon that implies low standardized test scores. Some low scoring schools may be decent schools, and they may also include students that get higher test scores than the school average. “Failing schools” is a term of propaganda to hasten privatization.
LikeLike
Exactly.
LikeLike
Ultimately, School environment is more important than test scores, but you’d never know it.
I worked at a neighborhood school (only two buses, everybody else walked) that had a large number of special ed classes, some with an entire class of low functioning students (meaning low test scores) who needed to learn life skills (including the acquisition of speech). It was a marvelous school full of field trips, assemblies, all sorts of enrichment with loving teachers and a caring staff there to provide support for all the students, the majority from a high poverty area. It was a well integrated school, but with the high proportion of special needs students, the testing statistics were very low. Since the parents did not have the wherewithal to shout their objections, the School was closed (ignoring the fact it was one of the newer schools in Buffalo, built in 1975).
There is a lot of politicking involved in school closures, but the true quality of the school is a minor consideration.
LikeLike
“Standardized” testing is SUCH a goldmine–not only for Pear$on–always earning & NO child learning–but for the privatization industry. The purpose, all along, was to use the ridiculous tests (w/??? no one can answer, & absolutely NO quality control; where’s the accountability for the test publishers–?) to label schools as “failing”…& close them, sending the kids, & the public school money, to the charters.
LikeLike
Why does test-based accountability persist? In large measure it’s the result of the mental formations voters have based on their experience in school where they were conditioned to believe “success” was solely based on how they performed on tests given by teachers in class and national standardized tests. Didn’t the valedictorian at their school achieve that ranking because they did well on a succession of tests administered by teachers? Didn’t the National Merit Scholars in their school achieve that distinction because they did well on a single test? Didn’t their classmates get into a prestigious college and win a scholarship there because they did well on the SAT and a succession of tests administered by teachers?
And because voters are conditioned to believe that tests determined the personal “successes” in school based on their own personal experience it seems reasonable to them that tests should be used to judge schools. In the meantime, politicians LOVE using tests to judge schools! They are relatively cheap and fast to administer and they provide seemingly precise results that can be used to rank schools the same way schools rank students. Part of the challenge in getting rid of test-based accountability is getting voters to buy into the idea that tests only measure a portion of a child’s experience in schools. As Ms. Becker noted at the end of her blog post, her ultimate metric was whether her kids were excited to show up to school every morning and love their school and whether her teachers were caring professionals. That cannot be captured in any test.
LikeLike
Exactly, wgersen. And that is why–as everyone is always saying here, politicians have to TALK about preserving public education in an educated manner & TALK TO TEACHERS (not talk AT them, ala Chris Christie {well, rather, yell & finger-point, in his case}) as so stated in an earlier post (easy to reach, guys–they’re at your kids’ school {well, in the sense that they don’t attend an elite private school}, & you might see them on a daily basis but, if not, they’re easy to reach!). Or–how about those legislators who are always saying, “My (insert relative here) is/was a teacher” (& they ALL have one! So–hell, servant of the people–don’t you talk to your mom, your uncle, your cousin, etc.–?).
Our public servants (hah!) will immediately find out more than they ever wanted to know (& haven’t to date) about the uselessness of the “standardized” tests & their meaninglessness.
This is why, w/elections upon us, we visit our representatives in droves for the purpose of explaining all of this to them &, if they fail to address this issue well, then, they’ll be toast.
& yes, in an earlier (or later post so titled here), it is time for this charade to STOP.
Actually, beyond the time.
LikeLike