Ask Mulgrew if his "Our hard work has paid
dividends" statement still holds? Oh where oh where are our Unity trolls?
http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/albany/2015/03/8565148/state-ed-aid-increase-tied-new-evaluation-plans
ALBANY—
In the apparently still-fluid state budget, Governor Andrew Cuomo and lawmakers are considering making an increase of at least $1.4 billion
 in school aid contingent on state approval of locally negotiated 
evaluation plans for teachers and principals by a mid-November deadline.
 The structure would be similar to 2013, when districts first 
implemented the current evaluation system.
That year, the New York
 City Department of Education and the United Federation of Teachers 
missed the state-imposed mid-January deadline, prompting officials to withhold $250 million from the state's largest school district.
According
 to budget language that has not yet been finalized, the department 
would craft—subject to approval of the Board of Regents—regulations 
outlining a new evaluation system by June 30, deputy senior education 
commissioner Ken Wagner t
Some aspects of the rating system would be optional, so they would 
require negotiations between school districts, teachers and principals’ 
unions.
“Theoretically, all districts would have to review their 
contracts and see whether their contracts have to be modified,” Wagner 
said. “They would have to renegotiate their contracts, and all of the 
plans would have to be submitted and approved by November 15 to get 
their increase in state aid.
“They would still get their base 
state aid, but they wouldn’t get their increase,” he continued. 
“Statewide, we’ve seen numbers from 5 to 6 percent. Let’s just say it’s a
 5 percent increase in state aid; that 5 percent would be removed from 
their aid allocation from the entire year.”
Education stakeholder
 groups warned that creating a new evaluation system under the same 
conditions as the last one likely won’t lead to better results.
“If
 we rewind back to the first year of implementation, districts had to 
put these plans in place under threat of losing a state aid increase,” 
said David Albert, spokesman for the New York State School Boards 
Association. “Why would we do the same thing again? Why not give 
districts the time they need so they can take the time to negotiate 
agreements that make sense?”
Robert Lowry, deputy director of the
 New York State Council of School Superintendents, said a threat of 
losing state aid is more detrimental to districts than unions, so it 
puts school administrators at a disadvantage during negotiations.
Representatives
 from Cuomo’s office and leaders of the Legislature’s majority 
conferences did not immediately return a request for comment.
Cuomo
 has often touted his first-term strategy of tying state aid to 
implementation of the evaluation system, arguing it forced school 
districts to comply where they had previously resisted.
Members of both the Senate Republican and Assembly Democratic
 conferences have said in recent weeks that they opposed making a state 
aid increase contingent on the enactment of Cuomo's education reform 
proposals.
The budget’s changes to the tenure process would be 
the following, according to Wagner: The probationary period before a 
teacher is offered the traditional job protections would be extended 
from three years to four years, and teachers would have to get three 
“effective” ratings in those four years, but not necessarily 
consecutively. A teacher would not be able to get an “ineffective” 
rating in the fourth year and be offered tenure.
Wagner’s version
 of the language is different than what both the Cuomo administration 
and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie told reporters late Sunday.
Under
 the budget language, the department would be required to develop a new 
evaluation system based on a “matrix” model, which would include student
 performance on state exams as well as observations but differs from the
 current model in that it is not based on percentages.
The student
 performance component would be based on state standardized tests, 
although there might be options to include additional tests. The 
observations component would require administrators to evaluate 
teachers’ performance but also include the option of peer evaluations.
The
 state education department would be charged with determining some 
technical aspects of the model, such as how to weight the required and 
optional tests and observations in each component.
One detail that is still “in flux,” Wagner said, is whether the education depar
department will be required to design an additional standardized test
 for use in the evaluation system; the Cuomo administration said on 
Sunday that would be included in the budget. 
State education officials think that “isn’t a good idea,” Wagner said, frankly.
“We
 went into this whole process hoping that there would be a way to 
decrease the reliance on traditional standardized assessments, and 
anything that would prompt or encourage people to increase their 
reliance on traditional standardized assessments is not of interest to 
us,” he said.
Not only would the proposal increase testing, which
 would be widly unpopular, especially among parents, it would also be 
costly. The education department is currently near the end of a 
five-year, $32 million contract with Pearson for the Common Core-aligned
 English and math exams that third through eighth graders are federally 
required to take.
Stakeholder groups questioned whether there 
would be any demand from districts for an additional test, given the 
heated opposition to standardized testing, especially in some areas.
Wagner
 said the “matrix” model might not achieve Cuomo and education reform 
groups’ stated goal of further differentiating teacher performance. In 
other words, it might not actually lead to a more varied distribution of
 educators across the scale of “ineffective,” “developing,” “effective” 
and “highly effective.” Cuomo has criticized the current system
because, in his opinion, too many educators are receiving high ratings, and too few are receiving low ones. 
Wagner
 said because the scale only include four ratings, the evaluation system
 already provides less information than if it was based on a scale of 0 
to 20 or 0 to 60, for example.
Also, he said, when two ratings 
are combined under the “matrix” model, a higher score is almost always 
the result. For example, if a teacher gets an “effective” on one 
component of the system and “highly effective” on the other, the result 
will be “highly effective.” If the component scores are “developing” and
 “highly effective,” the overall score will be the middle option, 
“effective.”
But in the situation where “ineffective” and 
“developing” are combined, the overall score will be the lower option, 
“ineffective,” Wagner said.
The budget bill containing education funding and policy has not yet been introduced.
Cuomo
 has said he will waive a three-day waiting period that would otherwise 
prevent lawmakers from voting on the bill by the March 31 budget 
deadline.
Written and edited by Norm Scott: EDUCATE! ORGANIZE!! MOBILIZE!!! Three pillars of The Resistance – providing information on current ed issues, organizing activities around fighting for public education in NYC and beyond and exposing the motives behind the education deformers. We link up with bands of resisters. Nothing will change unless WE ALL GET INVOLVED IN THE STRUGGLE!
Ed Notes Extended
▼
Monday, March 30, 2015
Breaking: School funding and teacher evaluations are linked after all, a top official with the state education department said late Monday.
2 comments:
Comments are welcome. Irrelevant and abusive comments will be deleted, as will all commercial links. Comment moderation is on, so if your comment does not appear it is because I have not been at my computer (I do not do cell phone moderating). Or because your comment is irrelevant or idiotic.
Norm, so what does this mean? Is it Pre APPR as it was in the city two years ago where the union can negotiate an evaluation and then send it to the state for approval? If no approval is given or the union can't agree then we are stuck with the Regents comes up with as with the King evaluation? Am I on track here or way off?
ReplyDeleteWho exactly are these "peer evaluators"? I thought Cuomo wants "outside evaluators". Peers sound like our fellow teachers. Thoughts or clarification on this would be appreciated.
ReplyDelete