Peter Greene thinks that we should use this respite from the pressure of high-stakes testing to rethink accountability.
Our current accountability system was cobbled together hastily in 2001 during the writing of George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind law. The NCLB law was based on a hoax, a fallacious claim that there had been a Texas miracle, all due to testing every child every year. Congress bought the lie and enacted the law. Since then, Congress has been unwilling to review the creaky and ineffective accountability system that it mandated.
No high-performing nation in the world tests every child every year. But we do. We have done it for 20 years and have little or nothing to show for it. The students who were left behind in 2001 are still left behind. Then Obama-Duncan brought in their “Race to the Top,” doubling down on standardized testing, and spent more than $5 billion without reaching “the top” or closing gaps or raising test scores.
Greene says: Let’s think about what happens next.
The defining question for any accountability system is this:
Accountable to whom, for what?
The “to whom” part is the hard part of educational accountability, because classroom teachers serve a thousand different masters.
Teachers need to be accountable to their administration, to their school board, to their students, to the parents of their students, to the taxpayers who fund the school and pay their salaries, to the state, to the students’ future employers, and to their own colleagues. School administrators also need to be accountable to those various stakeholders, but in different ways. Each set of stakeholders also has a wide variety of concerns; some parents are primarily concerned with academic issues, while others give priority to their child’s emotional health and happiness.
Parents may want to know if their children are on track for future success, or how their children’s progress compares to others. Those are two different measures, just as “How tall is my child” and “Is my child the tallest in class” are two different questions, each of which can be answered without answering the other.
Taxpayers want to know if they’re getting their money’s worth. State and federal politicians may want to see if benchmarks they have imposed on schools are being met. Teachers want to know how well their students are learning the various content the teachers have been delivering. Administrators may want to identify their “best” and “worst” teachers. School boards may want to know if their new hires are on track.
Answers to every single one of these questions require different measures collected with different tools. Some questions can’t be answered at all (there is no reliable way to rank teachers best-to-worst). One of the biggest fallacies of the ed reform movement has been the notion that a single multiple-choice math and reading test can somehow measure everything.
The reform dream was to be able to reduce school quality to a simple data point, a score or letter grade that tells us whether a school is any good or not. This is foolish. Ask any number of people to describe their idea of an “A” school; no two descriptions will match. A single grade system must by definition be reductive and useless for anything except as a crude tool for punishing some schools and marketing others.
Teachers and their unions are not opposed to accountability; they are opposed to accountability measures that are random and invalid. Meanwhile, accountability discussions never seem to include measures that would hold politicians accountable for getting schools the support and resources that they need. A good example would be the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), a law that Congress passed to hold schools accountable for properly educating students with specials needs, and also a law that Congress has never come close to fully funding.
My view: Accountability starts at the top, not the bottom. Congress has never been willing to hold itself accountable for the mandates it imposes. State legislatures have been unaccountable as well, never having provided the funding that schools require to provide the resources that schools need.
Yes, let’s have that conversation about who should be accountable and how will it be measured and what matters most.

Good effort! I like when people on my side offer alternatives to the ed reform echo chamber approach. I don’t think it’s enough to oppose them- we have to have our own set of ideas.
One thing I think public school advocates don’t adequately address is the NATIONAL part of the picture. I don’t think we can say each state should go their own way on K-12 education because students grow up and move and while it’s very nice and ideologically “federalist” to insist there’s a Nebraska K-12 education or an Ohio K-12 education hopefully public school graduates will be moving around when they grow up and they’ll need to be prepared to a national standard, not a state standard.
I really DO want to know how Ohio K-12 public ed compares with Illinois public ed, because I know from my own grown children that they don’t necessarily stay here in Ohio, so “national” makes sense to me.
I’m not ideologically attached to state or local. I’m fine with a national test every couple of years. I don’t have to accept it like ed reformers do, as gospel. I can just use it as one measure.
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Important thinking: It is not enough to oppose them, we have to have new sets of ideas.
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Since education is a state responsibility, the only way you get any agreement on a national level is through bribery. They tried that with CCSS and have unbalanced any semblance of sane budgets with their machinations. We can’t even get people in one school district to agree on exactly how and what their children are learning. I look back on my own schooling and I don’t think I was running on all eight cylinders until sometime in graduate school ( that I did a course at a time).
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Maybe accountability should start at the root, inequity. Let’s start by holding the folks hell-bent on maintaining inequity in order to maintain their own wealth and power for the destruction, damage, and death they cause.
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We can start by paying workers a living wage and passing some type of universal health care. If families could afford to live better, their children would do better in school and life. Students do not need more or better tests. They need more support for working families.
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It’s worth mentioning that ed reformers never, ever hold themselves accountable:
“Of course we got carried away, particularly in clumsy efforts to use kids’ test scores to evaluate teacher performance. Of course we neglected other important elements of learning besides what’s readily tested and important elements of good schools besides academic achievement. Of course we muddled—and still do—the balance between achievement and growth. Of course we didn’t pay enough attention to the seemingly Sisyphean quest for tests that would be both “formative” and “summative.”
All true, all culpable. Perhaps still all fixable. But I submit that the “peril” in which state assessments find themselves, according to Olson and Jerald, is not fundamentally about testing burden or the distortions it causes in curriculum, pedagogy, calendars, etc. It’s about results-based accountability for a system that’s producing unsatisfactory results. Educators trying to escape the accountability have resorted to a war on tests themselves and convinced many, many others—especially parents—that tests are the problem.”
They always take this circular approach and it always leads them back to blaming teachers and public schools.
They haven’t changed anything about their approach to standardized tests. They spent a couple of months pretending they were “debating” it and then, lo and behold, here they are right back where they started from- blaming teachers and schools.
Hell, they don’t even really USE the tests if the tests reveal their approach isn’t working. Test scores have been stagnant for a decade. Has ANY ed reformer been fired as a result of that? God no- they’re all still churning out the same stuff and getting hired.
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I’ve been an advocate for disabled students well over 20 years (now retired – only consultation). and remember when the No Child Left Behind bandwagon started to roll. Parents of disabled students jokingly called it “My Child Left Behind”. I remember one jaded nonpublic administrator telling me that as long as he is “exposing” the student to required academic content, he’s done his job. If the student doesn’t understand it, that wasn’t his problem – he did his job by placing the book in front of the child. This is an extreme example, but shows how NCLB started twisting special education into a numbers game. One charter school special day class teacher told one of my clients that her daughter didn’t “test” well (had anxiety during testing and performed poorly) and advised her to keep the child at home on the testing day. Yes – that school had great scores because the teachers were instructed to have the kids with IEPs stay home.
Accountability has been a struggle ever since IDEA was passed, and has especially been lacking with special education services – well before the coronavirus. Now that teaching has become a remote activity, the gaps in the system of service for these children has widened to the point that more general education folks are realizing just how bad things were all along. Now it’s even worse.
Districts are still scrambling to figure out HOW to provide equitable education to all students NOW in this current situation. Before any thoughts of opening campuses occur, there should be time taken to figure out a better immediate delivery system in the upcoming 2020-2021 school year. Disabled students have fallen through the cracks before the pandemic, now with those cracks widening to show just how badly our children are being served, it’s more important to step back, assess what does and doesn’t work.
There’s still problems with getting remote access to those who have no computers or wifi. Reach out to families and provide PARENT Training before starting a new school year so they can truly partner with teachers.
As a disability advocate, I’ve heard from a disability aide currently participating in zoom classrooms. She is frustrated and does not see how she can be helpful. The disabled student does not have the 1:1 support needed to fully participate in the home, the student does not know to ASK for help (nor does the parent) and the district has no plan on how to receive individual assistance during a zoom class (or for the aide to provide it if the student did ask). One mom told me her autistic son refuses to do the online work because he’s not in school. His 1:1 aide tries to communicate with skype/facetime/zoom in-between classes, but the student doesn’t want his help if he’s at home. He’s not physically at school so does not want to do school work. Teachers are not giving any ideas on how to help her. Another mom in a nonpublic school had not been given ANY syllabus or work plan for her autistic son. When asking for help, the school does not return calls. I advised her to contact the neighborhood school district as they provide the service through the Individual Education Plan (IEP). Nothing from them, either. These are just a few anecdotal stories I’ve heard and just the tip of the iceberg.
I am advising families to file compliance and Office of Civil Rights (OCR) complaints during the crisis just to have problems documented. I understand that it will be extremely difficult to be compliant during the pandemic, but many schools are having great difficulty with just serving regular education needs. Special education is more a concept than a fully functioning program, especially during these remote classes. Don’t get me started on the Designated Instructional Services like OT, Speech, etc. With many students who have these supports in their IEPs, but not receiving them remotely (or the remote provision is ineffective), parents justifiably worry they are slipping behind. I understand it’s impossible to provide the 1:1 support in person during a pandemic, but what is the plan for the upcoming school year?
Accountability? Families of disabled students are used to being pushed into the background, but the pandemic is putting a spotlight on just how big the problems really are with special education and delivering services related to IEPs.
That being said, teachers are trying their monumental best with little guidance. Many are making it up on their own, are exhausted and need more support. They’re not getting it.
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The sad fact is that a lot of IEP services REQUIRE face to face contact either because of the nature of the service or the needs of the student. If nothing else, it points out the importance of parental involvement . There is no one else. It might be of more help to have the parent working with a teacher or teachers to come up with things the parent can do rather than trying to engage the child remotely. Maybe a teacher can watch a parent work with the child via Skype and make suggestions or provide support. There are no easy solutions. That much has become obvious.
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Hate to tell you, the “I exposed the special needs child to the curriculum, so I did my job” philosophy isn’t as rare as you think. I am a gen ed teacher, and special ed teachers have been telling me that for years as I beg for more support for the kids with special needs in my gen ed classroom.
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You are not wrong. There are poor teachers in all specialties, but they are not the majority by far. My problem with that assertion is that sometimes more support is impossible without physically being present. The “I’m doing what I can” dismissal is an expression of frustration and/or defeat wrapped in anger. I went into as many classes as I could to get a feel for the curriculum and the teaching, to act as a teacher assistant (co-teaching was a joke), and to observe how my students navigated the mainstream classroom. Unfortunately, it wasn’t always an option as I had resource classes scheduled during some of those periods where my presence would have been helpful. Some of the special ed teachers had TAs they could send. I didn’t and with no common planning time coordination wasn’t always easy. Too often administration hasn’t planned for integrating special ed delivery beyond throwing kids in the mainstream with teachers who have too much on their plate without having to handle students they have little training to support.
I hate the word differentiation as if teachers never had made accommodations for individual students. What it seemed to devolve into was multiple presentations and assignments covering the same material to make sure everyone’s preferences for demonstrating their understanding were covered. Sometimes it seemed like orchestrating/directing/coordinating a stage production all on their own with no stage manager or crew. The idea was good in that it did create an awareness that there were different ways to present and demonstrate learning, but it got carried to unrealistic extremes. No one got more planning time or resources, just a mandate. I was amazed at what some of the mainstream teachers were able to do with their menus of options, but sometimes there is nothing that will substitute for individual face to face support that is hard to do in a class of 30 or even 20. What I liked about special ed was the chance to work with individual students. The curriculum took second seat to figuring out how that student could best access the material. I wasn’t trying to engineer that individual access for a class of 30, just one at a time. At the most my self contained classes were never larger than 15 (high school) and I had a TA. In the middle schools in which I taught my biggest class topped out at 6-8 students with a talented TA.
I hope the relationship between special ed teachers and mainstream teachers has continued to improve over the years. I got back in the classroom late and watched attitudes change slowly especially as special ed teachers got integrated into the grade teams of the general population. I hope the respect between specialties has continued to grow. There is so much to learn from each other.
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