Rochester Teachers Sue State Over Teacher Evaluations
by dianeravitch
The Rochester Teachers Association is suing the state over its teacher evaluation system, alleging that it does not take into account the impact of poverty on classroom performance.
RTA says the evaluations are "junk science."
"ALBANY,
N.Y. March 10, 2014 – The Rochester Teachers Association today filed a
lawsuit alleging that the Regents and State Education Department failed
to adequately account for the effects of severe poverty and, as a
result, unfairly penalized Rochester teachers on their APPR (Annual
Professional Performance Review) evaluations.
"The
suit, filed in state Supreme Court in Albany by New York State United
Teachers on behalf of the RTA and more than 100 Rochester teachers,
argues the State Education Department did not adequately account for
student poverty in setting student growth scores on state tests in
grades 4-8 math and English language arts. In addition, SED imposed
rules for Student Learning Objectives and implemented evaluations in a
way that made it more difficult for teachers of economically
disadvantaged students to achieve a score of “effective” or better. As a
result, the lawsuit alleges the Regents and SED violated teachers’
rights to fair evaluations and equal protection under the law.
"SED
computes a growth score based on student performance on state
standardized tests, which is then used in teacher evaluations.
"Nearly
90 percent of Rochester students live in poverty. The lawsuit says
SED’s failure to appropriately compensate for student poverty when
calculating student growth scores resulted in about one-third of
Rochester’s teachers receiving overall ratings of “developing” or
“ineffective” in 2012-13, even though 98 percent were rated “highly
effective” or “effective” by their principals on the 60 points tied to
their instructional classroom practices. Statewide, just 5 percent of
teachers received “developing” or “ineffective” ratings.
“The
State Education Department’s failure to properly factor in the
devastating impact of Rochester’s poverty in setting growth scores and
providing guidance for developing SLOs resulted in city teachers being
unfairly rated in their evaluations,” Iannuzzi said. “Rochester teachers
work with some of the most disadvantaged students in the state. They
should not face stigmatizing labels based on discredited tests and the
state’s inability to adequately account for the impact of extreme
poverty when measuring growth.”
"RTA
President Adam Urbanski said an analysis of Rochester teachers’
evaluations for 2012-13 demonstrated clearly the effects of poverty and
student attendance, for example, were not properly factored in for
teachers’ evaluations. As a result, “dedicated and effective teachers
received unfair ratings based on student outcomes that were beyond their
control. The way the State Education Department implemented the state
testing portion of APPR adds up to nothing more than junk science.”
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