No Student Left Untested
Diane Ravitch
Last week, the New York State Education Department and the teachers’
unions reached an agreement to allow the state to use student test
scores to evaluate teachers. The pact was brought to a conclusion after
Governor Andrew Cuomo warned the parties that if they didn’t come to an
agreement quickly, he would impose his own solution (though he did not
explain what that would be). He further told school districts that they
would lose future state aid if they didn’t promptly implement the
agreement after it was released to the public. The reason for this
urgency was to secure $700 million promised to the state by the Obama
administration’s Race to the Top program, contingent on the state’s
creating a plan to evaluate teachers in relation to their students’ test
scores.
The new evaluation system pretends to be balanced, but it is not.
Teachers will be ranked on a scale of 1-100. Teachers will be rated as
“ineffective, developing, effective, or highly effective.” Forty percent
of their grade will be based on the rise or fall of student test
scores; the other sixty percent will be based on other measures, such as
classroom observations by principals, independent evaluators, and
peers, plus feedback from students and parents.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
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