Over the
last two months I have written two letters, a resolution, a petition that
gathered over 500 signatures and a few emails to State Education Commissioner
MaryEllen Elia, the Board of Regents, several members of the Legislature, the Buffalo
Board of Education and the Superintendent. What all these communications had in common
was a request for answers to a number of critical questions about the Governor’s
Common Core Task Force Report. These
questions were related to the Task Force’s recommendations regarding New York
State standardized tests and the major implications for our District’s Receivership
schools and admissions criteria to Criterion schools (City Honors and Olmsted, in
particular).
Recently, I
received a reply and while the Commissioner’s letter was perfunctory, I did not
want to respond to her correspondence with the same lack of regard with which
my letters were received.
My article last
week cited the unprecedented impact of the Opt Out movement, which resulted in
hundreds of thousands of children refusing to take the test last year. Buffalo students opted out but in low numbers.
My letters to the Commissioner
questioned how tests results from 2014 and 2015, deemed by the Common Core Task
Force to be invalid in determining student placement and evaluation, are being
used to assess and label our schools as failures, designated for Receivership. In response the Commissioner replied that the
Task Force recommendations applied to “the performance of individual teachers
and students”, not to “institutional accountability”. Bottom line; Receivership is the law. I still question that response. However, while the Commissioner did not make
this point; the Receivership law is the subject of a law suit so its future will
be determined by the courts.
The second
question I asked the Commissioner addressed the use of these same test scores,
by the District, in the criteria that determines student admissions’ eligibility
to the criterion schools. In fact, I first
brought this concern to the attention of District administration in December
shortly after the Common Core Task Force Report was made public. Remember, the Commissioner replied that the Task
Force’s recommendation on the use of ELA/Math assessment results is related to “the
performance of individual teachers and students”. The specific language from the Task Force
Report states: “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
Commissioner elaborated on this issue in the following statement:
“While it is not
appropriate for me to comment on the District’s specific policies in this letter,
I note that Part AA, Subpart C of Chapter 56 of the Laws of 2014 added a new
subdivision (47) to Education Law 305, which directs the Commissioner to
provide that no school district shall make any student promotion or placement
decisions based solely or primarily on student performance on the State
administered standardized English language arts and mathematics assessments for
grades three through eight. The statue
does not allow a school district to consider student performance on such State
assessments in making placement decisions, but only as one of multiple measures
and only if such assessments do not constitute the major factor in such determinations.”
There are
several measures that comprise the admissions criteria and are used to
determine individual student performance.
The District calculates a student’s rank for criterion school admission
based on 4 or 5 measures – totaling 31 points (City Honors) or 20 - 31 points
(Olmsted). The criteria are: Cognitive
Ability Assessment, 1-9 pts; NYS Math & ELA Assessments, 1-9 pts; Grade
Point Average (Olmsted only uses this criteria for high school applicants), 4-9
pts; Attendance, 2pts; Teacher rating, 2pts).
I have
received complaints from several parents whose children opted out of the
Math/ELA tests and as a result were given a zero for this measure on their
applications to City Honors and Olmsted.
This score effectively nullifies a student’s application as it makes
consideration for admission impossible. Unlike
the case of a child from a private school, who didn’t take the ELA/Math tests
and is allowed to substitute a comparable measure, these Buffalo students were
given no such option. In the case of the
City Honors’ criteria, the zero accounts for 29% of the potential score for
ranking. Even more astounding, a child
applying for admissions to Olmsted in grades 5 -8, lost 43% of the potential
score.
The Commissioner’s
citation of the State regulation regarding the use of ELA/Math scores in
placement decisions underscores an inequity in Buffalo’s application of the
admissions criteria. Although the word “solely”
is clear the use of “major” can be interpreted to a degree. The assignment of 29% and 43% of a ranked score
based on the Math/ELA assessments is a significant contribution to the overall accumulation
of points and final ranking, and therefore “major”.
As I have
done since identifying this problem, I will continue to question the fairness
of the systematic assignment of a zero for children whose parents made the
decision to refuse the ELA/Math tests.
Even Governor Cuomo has acknowledged that parents have the right to make
this decision for their children. Nearly
a quarter million children refused the test last year and will benefit from the
Common Core Task Force recommendations. The
District is refusing to reconsider the weighting of the admissions criteria and
appears willing to penalize Buffalo school children, whose parents made them a part
of this movement. This is not
acceptable.
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