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Strategies for Enhancing Education and Accountability of Schools in the U.S.

Strategies for Enhancing Education and Accountability of Schools in the U.S. Examples From CRESST Eva L. Baker UCLA CRESST, USA International Conference by Presidential Committee September 4, 2006. Goals for Today. To describe the theory and background of No Child Left Behind (NCLB)

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Strategies for Enhancing Education and Accountability of Schools in the U.S.

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  1. Strategies for Enhancing Education and Accountability of Schools in the U.S. Examples From CRESST Eva L. Baker UCLA CRESST, USA International Conference by Presidential Committee September 4, 2006

  2. Goals for Today • To describe the theory and background of No Child Left Behind (NCLB) • To describe the key goals and provisions of NCLB • To discuss NCLB impact, areas of continuing challenge and short-term change

  3. NCLB Context • In the U.S., Federal programs enacted to close the gap for disadvantaged students (1966) led to a two-tier system. Only disadvantaged children were systematically tested. Local and State funds depended on numbers of continuing disadvantaged students • 1983 A Nation at Risk published • In 1989, Governors of States decided they needed a system of goals and linked assessments to improve performance

  4. NCLB Context: Theory of Action for Standards-Based Reform • Theory of action (Tyler, systems theory, training) • Identifying goals and standards and targets • Building concomitant capacity • Designing and delivering instruction • Collecting performance data • Analyzing strengths and weaknesses • Selecting or determining and using re-teaching strategies • Repeating until success attained • Sanctions for failure to meet targets • Sanctions unless “all” children are the focus

  5. NCLB Context: Legal • In a law suit about tests brought by a teachers’ union, the State of Arkansas prevailed. In an earlier court case (Florida 1974), the State lost on the premise that they did not provide all children with opportunity to learn the test material

  6. NCLB Context: National Council • In 1991, the President appointed a Council (I was a member) of Federal and State politicians (Senators and Congressmen, Governors), educators, and researchers

  7. NCLB Context: National Council (Cont’d) • The Council report supported the idea of national standards if they were voluntary. Assessments were to be the prerogative of each State • A new organization was to review State efforts

  8. NCLB Context: National Council (Cont’d) • New methodological work was to address disparities among standards, tests, and results for States • Examples included validity of cut scores, sensitivity to instruction, measures of opportunity to learn, stability of performance, value-added models

  9. NCLB Context: Council Questions • Will States accept common provisions of standards-based reform? • Will the system be nationally or State developed? • Will standards be national? Or will standards be unique to States with a common process used in each State? • How will quality or comparability of standards in State systems be determined? • Who approves the standards? • Will there be national tests?

  10. NCLB Context: IASA • New laws were enacted in 1992 based on the Council report. In 1994, Improving America’s Schools Act (IASA) required new policies: All children were to be tested in 4th, 8th, and 10th grades. States were to first develop content standards (curriculum goals) and then to develop tests, both with government assistance and quality oversight • Great efforts were made in preparing national standards by professional groups in mathematics, science, history, etc., to give the States help

  11. NCLB Context: IASA (Cont’d) • In IASA, standards, tests, targets and methods of improvement were State options • No actual quality review of standards or tests occurred, nor were there consequences for States that did not comply or meet standards (because of change in Congress)

  12. NCLB Context: IASA and Tests • Financial support was available to help States prepare tests. Performance tests (open-ended measures) were advocated by many. Most tests used a matrix sampling approach so individual scores were rare • In 1997, President Clinton proposed voluntary national tests, and work began on them and an evaluation by the National Research Council (NRC). These tests were prohibited subsequently by Congress

  13. NCLB Context: Assessment Use • In 1999, the Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing and the NRC reviews about voluntary national testing made clear that high-stakes student decisions should not be based on one measure. Validity rested on purpose and use of inferences from results • Cost and technical issues slowed down performance-based testing

  14. NCLB Enactment and Goals • Signed into law 2002 • Major education focus for improvement • Builds on IASA: standards, tests, and accountability • Goals: • By 2014, all students will meet States’ standards of proficiency in math, language, and science • Gaps among different subgroups will close

  15. NCLB Provisions: Flexibility • Choice of academic standards • Choice and difficulty of test (buy, make, contract) • Choice of proficiency level • Pattern of Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) over the years from 2005-2014 • Choice of professional development • Choice of commercial curriculum materials • Type of English language development test and rules for deciding students have acquired English • Implementation of teacher quality provisions

  16. NCLB Provisions: Minimums for Teacher Quality • Have a Bachelor’s degree • Be State certified or pass State licensing exam (alternative routes, outside of education schools) • Not teaching on temporary waiver • Demonstrate competency in subject matter

  17. NCLB Provisions: Testing • Individual level testing for all children Grades 3-8 and once during high school in reading and math by the 2005-2006 school year • Science tests must be administered once in grades 3-5, 6-9, and 10-12 by the 2007-2008 school year • Tests are to meet validity and reliability standards

  18. NCLB Provisions: Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) • States prepare plan so that an increased percentage of students achieve a proficient level for every cycle. This level is usually set by school, based upon its initial level. May be separate for each subject or a composite • Proficiency levels usually below basic, basic, proficient, and advanced

  19. Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) • Subgroups in a school (disadvantaged, ethnic and language subgroups) must each reach school’s AYP target • 95% of the whole school and 95% of each subgroup must take required tests • Data may be true longitudinal (following a child) or cross-sectional year to year (3rd grade 06—3rd grade 07) comparisons

  20. Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 “Watch list” Needs improvement: technical assistance from State; intra-District transfers; District pays for transportation Eligible students tutoring Corrective action: replace staff, new curriculum, professional development, decrease management authority, add outside expert, extend school day or year, restructure Restructure: charter school, replace all staff, contract with private management, or turn over to State Consequences of Missing AYP

  21. Why NCLB Happened • Built on a consensus of politicians • 10+ years of prior discussion and statutes • U.S. unhappy with quality • Something for everyone • Difficult to be against improving performance • Emphasis on closing the gap • Administration did not deviate from message

  22. NCLB Concerns • Standards and tests are without a standard curriculum or syllabus and tests are often secret • So most teachers use test practice exercises • States vary in number and clarity of standards, quality of tests, and stringency of cut scores • Too many standards, inadequately measured

  23. NCLB Concerns (Cont’d) • Focus on AYP has wrongly become main issue • Research on stability of classification and AYP options, including value-added • No comparability measures except National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) among States

  24. NCLB Concerns (Cont’d) • Methods of “aligning” State standards, instruction and tests inadequate since no syllabus. Great differences among schools, Districts and States • AYP computations (based on 95% participation and achievement by each subgroup) in a cross-sectional mode increase likelihood of failing targets • Few tests in use have adequate vertical comparability to allow longitudinal inferences

  25. NCLB Concerns (Cont’d) • Failing schools will encourage private education • Good teachers will leave schools with problems in performance • Members of subgroups will be ostracized • Until recently, special needs children would not succeed • High school exit exam is often used as NCLB measure, so failure means no diploma

  26. NCLB Concerns (Cont’d) • Mobility in urban settings makes school performance difficult to monitor • Focus on test results has resulted in lock-step curriculum, with no time to implement improvements • Special problems for limited English speaking students

  27. NCLB Results • Divided support • Improved performance among young children • Attention paid to low economic students • No improvement at middle or high school • Some additional help from Federal government

  28. Examples of Positive Publicity • Celebrating Making AYP • After focused efforts by State and local school officials, two Arizona elementary schools were able to reach their adequate yearly progress marks after four consecutive years of falling short • Nebraska Students Write On • Added emphasis on writing in Nebraska schools, as part of the effort to meet the No Child Left Behind Act requirements, has led to improvement in writing among all students, including those in subgroups

  29. Positive Publicity (Cont’d) • Broad effort closes Grade 3 achievement gap • By channeling the efforts of teachers, community members, and parents, staff members at Maryland's Viers Mill Elementary School were able to close the achievement gap in reading and math at the third-grade level

  30. NCLB Research = CRESST • Helping teachers to assess students in classes • Helping teachers to give in-class feedback • Helping teachers to develop alternative or back-up teaching strategies • Motivating students for test performance

  31. NCLB Research Problems • Developing better assessments that can be used economically • Developing approaches to measure classroom practice in a scalable way • Providing out-of-school instructional support • Rapid preparation to replace retirements • Explore teacher incentive systems

  32. NCLB Research Opportunities • Develop stronger methodology to measure growth and attribute performance • Develop better indices of stability of performance • Counter lack of validity of assessments for multiple purposes • Assure students can perform outside of narrow test confines (transfer and generalize) • Develop adaptive approaches to instruction using computers for high-level learning

  33. What Is Next? • NCLB to be reauthorized and could be changed • Direction will depend on election • Research support is falling, focused on program evaluation • Longitudinal data and longer term studies are needed linking instruction, performance, and student and teacher backgrounds

  34. Eva L. Baker Voice: Fax: Email: Web: 310.206.1530 310.267.0152 eva@ucla.edu www.cresst.org

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