This morning’s Buffalo News article (December
30, 2015) touted State Education Commissioner Elia’s decision granting
unbridled receivership powers to Buffalo Schools Superintendent Kriner Cash. Thanks to the Commissioner’s quick and
decisive action, Superintendent Cash has been given unprecedented authority to
circumvent the Teachers’ Contract and Board approval to institute any changes
he deems necessary in 20 “receivership” schools. This action is being hailed by reformers as a
“victory” that will benefit the students in the schools, which have been
targeted “persistently struggling” and “struggling”.
As an aside, the reporter raised an issue
that I wrote about two weeks ago; related to high stakes tests and receivership. On December 10th, Governor Cuomo
announced the findings and final report of the Common Core Task Force. Appointed by the Governor, this group
proposed a number of recommendations to address what they determined to be the
flawed implementation of the State’s Common Core Learning Standards, including
the Common Core aligned standardized ELA and Math exams. According to the Task Force, for numerous
reasons, the validity of these tests was deemed to be equally questionable. As a result, the Task Force recommended that “the
results from assessments aligned to the current Common Core Standards, as well
as the updated standards, shall only be advisory
and not be used to evaluate the performance of individual teachers or
students.” The Task Force did
not suggest how this recommendation will be implemented but did offer a time
frame, advising no use of the results from the tests until 2019-20. In fact the “moratorium” on the use of the
test results extends from the 2012-13 school year to 2019-20.
The Board of Regents quickly accepted the recommendations
and voted to suspend use of these tests as proposed by the Task Force. Historically,
these high stakes tests have played a critical role in assessing accountability
- that is judging the achievement of students, schools and school districts by
the State Education Department. They
were also the object of the grass-roots “opt-out” movement which succeeded in producing
an astounding 220,000 students (about 20 percent of students statewide), who
refused to take these tests this year. This movement deserves considerable
credit for the pressure it exerted on the State, which contributed to the
retreat from these inappropriate tests and their equally inappropriate uses.
Yet, in the face of these major
developments, Commissioner Elia refuses to discuss how the Task Force
recommendations regarding the tests impact decisions about the receivership
schools. The Buffalo reporter re-iterated my concerns by stating that “those
same tests, however, were a major factor in determining which schools were
placed in receivership.” The article
also noted that the Commissioner has been “dismissive” of this issue. The Task Force recommendation declared that
students should be held harmless from the results of these tests. However, this apparently doesn’t apply to urban
students. These students continue to be judged, evaluated and labeled by the
results of invalid measures. There has
been no change in the approach of the State Education Department with respect
to the “receivership schools”, as recommended by the Task Force and dictated by
sound pedagogical reasoning. Consequently, in light of the Task Force
recommendation, how can some children be held harmless as a result of their
test scores and others not? This raises
the question of disparate treatment.
Furthermore, when the Commissioner brushes
off the issue of the impact of the Regent’s decision to accept the Task Force
recommendation to make these tests “advisory”, the question must be asked of
the Regents as well as the Commissioner:
How does she justify granting sweeping
receivership “powers” to the Superintendent for schools which have been labeled
as “struggling” and “persistently struggling”, based in great part on invalid
tests?
More to come on this subject.