Peter Goodman writes about education policy in New York City and New York State.
In this post, he tries to figure out whether NYC is about to double down on a “test and punish” regime or to seek collaboration.
He covers the bizarre City Council hearing about over-testing, where a top official of the NYC Department of Education announced the city’s decision to add four new off-the-shelf standardized tests to the school year to track student progress and to create a data tracking program called EDUSTATS to monitor student scores citywide, class by class.
At the hearing, chaired by Mark Treyger, a high school teacher on leave, the city described its plan:
Laura Chin, the # 2 at the Department of Education testified at the hearing and mentioned Edustats, the new Department initiative; Treyger pressed her on the program. The Department will require periodic assessments, the Executive Superintendents will review the results with Superintendents, and Chin described the process as similar to the New York Police Department (NYPD) Comstat system. Borough commanders meet with precinct commanders and review data, detailed crime statistics, and grill the precinct commanders: what have they done to respond to statistical increases in the crime data? Why isn’t it working? The precinct commanders despise the process: public shaming with the threat of job removal. While the precinct commander can move patrol cops from one area to another schools can’t prevent evictions or provide food for families or more racially integrated schools.
The Police COMSTAT Program led to many complaints that officers were “juking the stats”—gaming the system— to improve ratings, for example, by classifying felonies as misdemeanors.

This what Edustats looks like in Florida.
https://edstats.fldoe.org/SASPortal/navigate.do?PortalPage=PortalPage%2Bomi%3A%2F%2FMETASERVER.Foundation%2Freposname%3DFoundation%2FPSPortalPage%3Bid%3DA5YWB4SY.BN00000A
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Ed reform only has two ideas- “choice” and “testing”.
Public school students only get “testing” because the other idea doesn’t apply to them.
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They get no choice about testing.
Funny that.
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Freedom is plutocrats, apparently.
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Beggars Can’t be choosers
Choice is for the choice
Elite among the crowd
Others have no voice
Simply ain’t allowed
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Fore: I skipped the word ‘for’.
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well said
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This seems to be another business approach being imposed on public schools. All of the statisticians in Edustats have experience in economics and business analytics. In Florida teachers all leaving in droves. This data collection system may be a contributing factor. How are New York City teachers supposed to have time for all this data entry, or is this a way to sneak in a blended or personalized learning? Perhaps the Chancellor Carranza seeks to impose a program with which he is familiar. It does sound like the education “Hunger Games.”http://www.edustats.com.my/expertise
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Correction: are leaving in droves.
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There are many questions parents should be asking. Where do the data go? Who owns it? What is the cost of this service? Is there any evidence that data collection helps students or teachers? How much time is given to this collection?
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New York should steer clear of anyone in leadership from Florida. They have nothing to offer, and it usually does not end well.
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The city has done a terrible job explaining what the heck “EduStat” is designed to do. So it deserves to have the worst possible inferences drawn against it.
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More bureaucracy, more mandates handed down from Tweed, more confusion in schools, more confused and frustrated parents. What’s not to love.
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exactly
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Testing doesn’t work, so let’s do more testing.
Some very stable geniuses here.
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It’s not that it didn’t work.
It’s just that they were not doing it enough to make it work.
If you bang your head against the wall and it is not having the desired effect (whatever that may be) you simply need to do it harder or more often.
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I feel like I’ve been doing that for a long time now, trying to explain to administrators and other test-addled idiots the 200+ reasons why these high-stakes standardized tests are a ridiculous idea. Very difficult to do with people who are paid not to think about these matters.
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I just found out today there’s a practice test for the practice test for the SAT. Seriously.
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Data-mining is the new gold. Kids are being used to create more and more profitable data under the guise of making them “college and career ready”. I’m sure many of the most ardent cheerleaders of over-testing have personal investments in the testing companies and associated industries.
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A“Double Down”
Double down on standards
Double down on test
Double down on man-years
Prepping for a mess
Double down on Duncan
Double down on Gates
Double down on sunken
Ships and broken fates
Double down on flailing
Double down on rot
Double down on failing
Failing’s all we got
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