Tests don’t tell the whole story
Wendy Leece
We asked our parent panelists this week: What are your impressions of
the Academic Performance Index scores released last week? Are the
improvements significant? Where would you like to see them get
better? And are API scores in general a fair assessment of a school’s
performance?
API reports are written for educators, not parents and taxpayers.
But even if we can’t totally understand how API works, we should be
thankful we have a system that holds our tax-supported public schools
accountable.
Since the advent of API in 1999, rigorous academic standards have
been established that dictate what our children must learn and be
tested on in each subject.
Recently, the API has been tied to the federal No Child Left
Behind requirements that place more responsibility on teachers to use
proven methods to teach the basics.
Each year in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, the API
gains are steady, with only a few schools sliding backward. The same
Newport schools are on the top, Mesa schools are in the middle and
the Westside schools are on the bottom. It’s a mystery why there are
no scores for Estancia. In comparing scores from the last few years
it’s good to see the great progress Wilson, Whittier and Rea schools
have made. But Westside schools have a long way to go to catch up to
Newport.
New education is a political hot potato and is extremely partisan.
The Republicans and Democrats who write education policy rarely agree
about the best ways to improve instruction and raise student
achievement.
Simply put, Republicans are for kids learning the basics: reading,
writing, math, history (not revised) and science facts. Democrats,
who have controlled education policy for a long time, usually favor
trendy, politically correct ideas such as bilingual education, whole
language, tolerance and self esteem classes and school-based
healthcare. But teaching to the state standards doesn’t leave
teachers much time to waste on nonessentials. API and No Child Left
Behind curtail the nonacademic to some degree.
The API was implemented because lawmakers realized students were
not getting the quality, tax-supported education that taxpayers
demand. API may not be the best indicator of student achievement, but
it does force teachers to stay on track. Parents still need to pay
attention to everything that is going on in the classroom and read
the books and textbooks their children use.
Parents and taxpayers must be vigilant to make sure our schools
are accountable.
* WENDY LEECE is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa and is a former
Newport-Mesa school board member.
The API scores themselves are not good enough. What makes more of
an impression on me, however, is the spin that we get this year and
every year.
The overall average is down, but the comments from the school
district officials don’t even acknowledge that fact. We hear instead,
“We’re on our way to 800,” and that some gains are more meaningful
than others.
Those things may be true, and there is no doubt that teachers and
officials are trying hard to improve scores, but I’d prefer that
officials publicly acknowledge the facts.
The facts are that we’re making some progress on some fronts, but
it’s not enough. I don’t really understand what’s to be accomplished
by painting these rosy pictures with carefully chosen statistical
nuggets. Putting lipstick on this pig will only prolong the problem.
The bottom line, as usual, is money. We continue to strangle our
school systems by under-investing in them. API scores and every other
academic measure would skyrocket if we simply reduced class sizes.
We started down that path a few years ago and made some decent
progress, but the financial rug was pulled out from under that plan
before it was completed. Even the best, most dedicated teachers can’t
be effective in a classroom with 35 to 38 students, 80% of whom are
English learners.
We can do lots of things with technology, specialized curricula,
and teaching techniques, but I am simply not sold that we can do more
with less. Those things, along with the rosy spin on the lackluster
scores, seem like denial or resignation -- maybe both.
There may be some fat in the system, but even if California public
school administrations were wrung out to Walmart-like efficiency
levels, we wouldn’t come close to providing the necessary funds to
take class sizes from 35 to 20.
Raising the money it would take to make that kind of investment
would mean that taxpayers would have to pay more taxes -- something
that hardly anybody is willing to do. Shortchanging this most
critical piece of our social infrastructure has long-term costs that
far exceed the short-term investment requirements.
* MARK GLEASON is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa.
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