September 7,
2014
Let me begin
with a disclaimer. I do not believe that
the Buffalo Schools are meeting the challenge of educating all of our children
to reach their potential. In fact, this
is not new news as the District has struggled for many years to increase
student achievement. Yet we were
beginning to see incremental progress under Superintendent Dr. Pamela Brown. (That’s
a whole other article, however) Even the
new Interim Superintendent, Don Ogilvie has admitted that there has been
positive movement in the right direction.
However, too often the District is described only by referencing its
struggling schools. “The Buffalo Schools
has 47 failing schools!” is the refrain most often exclaimed.
I take
exception to this statement because it reduces the very complex problem of
student achievement to one baseless accusation.
It ignores the impact of poverty and other social problems that affect
our community. Further, it is an insensitive
remark that targets not only the schools but all the children in them as “failing”. I vigorously protest such reckless and
pejorative labeling of our children and their schools. Yet, when I and others object to this
outlandish claim, we’re often ridiculed as making excuses for the District and
by implication, the incompetent and lazy teachers.
Those
of us who raise these concerns are portrayed as people who want to maintain the
status quo and have something to gain personally by doing so. Nothing could be further from the truth.
I believe
that parents and concerned citizens should understand the process that is used
to determine school rankings so we can have an honest dialogue. Schools are ranked as Priority, Focus or
Schools in Good Standing. The primary
basis used by the State to rate school success is through student achievement
on standardized tests and other measures.
A Priority school is one which is within the bottom 5 percent of public
schools, based on measures including high school graduation rates persistently
below 60 percent or low performance on English Language Arts (ELA) and Math
tests.
The second group of schools is
classified as Focus Schools. These
schools are determined by a two part process starting with identification of
districts with lowest-performing subgroups, such as low-income students, racial
or ethnic groups, students with disabilities or English language learners.
Districts then single out Focus Schools within the districts. Schools in Good Standing have met the
requirements set by the State Education Department again as determined by the
standardized tests, graduation rates and other measures. The Buffalo School District has 27 Priority
Schools, 16 Focus Schools and 12 Schools in Good Standing. This year International School #45 has now
come off the list and is recognized as a school in good standing.
It’s
important to note that a few years ago the designations for school progress
were different. At one time terms such
as “Schools in Need of Improvement” and “Persistently Low Achieving Schools”
were used. The standardized tests have
also gone through a transition and from time to time, the “cut” scores (the
passing grade) were changed. In other
words, for the purpose of identifying a school district’s success their
student’s progress is determined by “standardized measures”. In fact these measures have become so central
to school achievement, not just for the students but there is an attempt to
relate teacher performance to student performance on these tests, making these
tests not just a measure of student progress but a high stakes measure of
overall . The new Common CORE standards
have raised these tests outcomes to a new level of importance that will be
discussed in a future article.
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