Ed Notes Extended

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Julie Cavanagh: Test scores mean nothing - Daily News

Go Julie!

Here are some comments from Susan Ohanian
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1225
Reader Comment: BRAVO! The idiocracy in which the Bloomberg administration has injected into our educational system has done more damage than good. After ten years of this idiocracy I now realize the ultimate goal was to destroy in order to eventually open up public education to private enterprise. In addition, his agenda was to weaken the UFT. I am not a leftist, liberal who is anti-business. Quite the contrary. However, it is clear what the Bloomberg agenda is attempting to accomplish. I am tired of hearing all sides say, "We are doing it for the students." If you want to do it for the children then get your "butt" in a classroom and teach. The better students will have the opportunity to be chosen to be placed in charter schools-perhaps with the most effective teachers- leaving the rest in a public environment.

Ohanian Comment:I especially appreciate this statement: No formula can measure the value of the relationships at the heart of good teaching. My first teacher evaluation ever noted that although currently I had a way to go, in time I would be a good teacher because
1) I followed up on suggestions
2) I had a good heart.

Where's the section on 'good heart' in these value added measures?


Students are not created the same, even though the DOE seems to believe we can compare their teachers as if the classroom were nothing more than a repository of numerical data to be finessed and analyzed.

Test scores mean nothing A highly-rated teacher on the follies of using data to evaluate educators

By Julie Cavanagh

According to the numbers, I am a highly effective New York City public school teacher. But you won't see me jumping for joy over the news.

My teacher data report, along with those of 18,000 other teachers, was released last week by the Education Department after a lengthy legal battle. That report says I have a career rating that falls at or above the 95th percentile in both English and math (as measured through a complex formula that takes into account the gains my students made on standardized tests, compared with gains made by students in similar classrooms across the city).

In fact, plenty of teachers in my school also have average-to-high ratings. Every year, however, when test scores are released, we do not celebrate; instead, we exhale and then get back to the real work of teaching.

I imagine this attitude is shared by educators across the city, whether they are in the 90th percentile or the ninth.

Since the reports were released last week, the debate has been raging about whether a formula prone to as much as 53% in margin of error is the best way to judge the effectiveness of teachers. Self-proclaimed reformers say yes; those who understand teaching say otherwise.

There is no question that teachers are responsible for the learning and growth that take place inside of their classrooms. However, standardized tests are just not a reliable measure of learning. If we are truly interested in increasing the quality of education, the conversation surrounding accountability must shift.

Imagine if doctors were held accountable based on the death rate of their patients, regardless of environmental factors and whether prescribed treatment was followed.

Imagine if firefighters were held accountable based on fire injuries and deaths, even though they didn’t start the fires, their budgets had been cut and most of the homes in their district didn’t have fire alarms.

That would be unreasonable. So why do we only apply this impossible standard to teachers?

No standardized test score can quantify what we do. In fact, we succeed in spite of -- not because of -- the testing culture that has pervaded our classrooms since Mayor Bloomberg took office.

Students are not created the same, even though the DOE seems to believe we can compare their teachers as if the classroom were nothing more than a repository of numerical data to be finessed and analyzed.

I know countless teachers whose ratings were not as favorable as mine and my colleagues'. These teachers are no less successful with their students. In fact, many of these teachers serve children who actually outperform the children I serve. But because they didn’t show as much progress, their teacher’s "value" is lower.

In other cases, teachers serve children with more significant needs. For example, children who need English-language instruction or special education -- as well as students who fall below the poverty line. All these factors impact the validity of test scores.

In a democracy, our elected leaders are supposed to be responsive to the people they serve. As a teacher, I apply this same democratic principle to my work. And so the parents I serve know I am a good teacher not because of their child's test score, but because they come to our classroom, see their child's work and hear my estimation of that child's growth.

No formula can measure the value of the relationships at the heart of good teaching.

Regardless, some will continue to argue that there is a correlation between test scores and teacher effectiveness. But correlation does not equal causation.

We could be allocating the millions spent on testing on what research shows are actual causes of positively impacting student achievement: small classes and experienced educators. That's what our children truly need.

Cavanagh teaches special education at PS 15 in Red Hook, Brooklyn.

— Julie Cavanagh
New York Daily News

2012-03-04

http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/test-scores-article-1.1032155
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March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See Norms Notes for a variety of articles of interest: http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/. And make sure to check out the side panel on the right for important bits.

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