Posted on 06/09/2015 10:05:51 AM PDT by MichCapCon
Six Detroit high schools perform so poorly that they have been placed in a form of state administrative receivership, and earned an F grade from a school rating system that takes into account the poor economic status of their students.
Yet almost across the board these schools' teachers were assessed by their administrators as effective using the prescribed terminology. Out of 232 teachers, just three were deemed minimally effective or ineffective, while 229 were given the second best effective rating. And not a single teacher was perceived as sufficiently outstanding to be deemed highly effective.
The schools are among 15 under the oversight of a state bureau called the Education Achievement Authority (EAA). They also received "F" grades on the Mackinac Center for Public Policys high school report card released in the fall of 2014. The report card factors in the socioeconomic status of a school's student body to determine how much value it is adding regardless of where their students start academically.
Teacher assessments that appear to overestimate teacher effectiveness are not unusual, although such consistency does draw attention. What comes as more of a surprise is the district not finding a single standout teacher.
You mean to tell me of a group of 232 people there isnt a single person who is a rock-star teacher? asked Audrey Spalding, education policy director for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. No way, right? There is somebody who is a rock-star teacher. But they arent doing the job of telling them what their performance rating really is.
EAA Chancellor Veronica Conforme said the office has moved away from the evaluation system used in 2013-14, and toward a system that is more expansive in its criteria.
Conforme said when she took over in June 2014 she saw flaws in how the EAA evaluated teachers and has spent most of this past school year making reforms to that system.
The system in 2013-14 was based mostly on evaluations by principals and teacher portfolios, she said. The new system will include teachers' contributions and student progress on tests.
Thats why you are getting these types of measurements that puts everyone in one category, Conforme said.
Conforme said having all teachers lumped together in one category isnt helpful.
We need accurate and informative evaluations in order to give teachers honest and constructive feedback to improve their performance, Conforme said.
She described her year at EAA as engaging teachers and school leaders in redesigning the evaluation process for next year. It is intended to set a new standard and create more of a bell curve distribution in terms of how teachers are grouped throughout the four performance categories.
Thats not what we are seeing here (2013-14 evaluations) and it is problematic, she said.
The Education Achievement Authority was created in 2012 with goal of turning around academically troubled schools. Currently, it operates 15 schools, all located in Detroit. The students in the EAA attend 40 more days of school than the conventional public school.
There are dozens of public schools that have rated their teachers in the same manner as the EAA.
In 2013-14, Detroit Public Schools rated 79 percent of its 3,208 teachers as highly effective despite being one of the worst academic school systems in the country.
Is it “Opposite Day” in deetroit???
Effective compared to what?I guess that if your students don’t murder each other in class,then you’re doing a good job.
Again the devil is in the details. Detroit teachers have to teach the children of a broken city riven with gang violence, many from broken or never-formed families, in a broken city. That the schools under-perform schools in affluent suburbs and peaceful rural areas is not proof that the teachers are ineffective. If even a plausible percentage of the kids they have to work with turn out somewhat literate and numerate, the teachers deserve to be called effective.
One does not hand a craftsman sub-standard materials and tools to work with, then judge him an ineffective craftsman because he has not miraculously fixed the defects in the materials to make a product equal to or better than that of a journeyman supplied with the finest raw materials and tools.
The teachers are all effective. It’s the students who are ineffective. (/sarc)
They give themselves excellent ratings in line with the left wing technique of merely asserting good ratings then giving bonuses(taxpayer money) to the incompetents. The left then turns around and publicly asserts how wonderful these “teachers” are. Reality being that most so called Detroit teachers suffer from low IQ’s and poor impulse control.
“Effective” defined as “collecting a pay check”.
Their rating system is completely ineffective and not worth the time wasted on writing the evaluations. If I took a job teaching in Detroit public schools (VERY unlikely), I would not bother reading my evaluation.
Ah, you touched the other side of the education equation....the school kid and his family. That side is actually the most important part of the equation. Many conservatives make the mistake of believing the admin-teacher part is the most important part. It's not. Put a determined kid in a school with a strong family background, and that kid will learn.
By contrast, if the kid is disinterested, dull, and/or violent with a family that couldn't care less, the kid will not learn no matter how good the school and the teachers.
“The system in 2013-14 was based mostly on evaluations by principals and teacher portfolios, she said. The new system will include teachers’ contributions and student progress on tests.”
So the teachers who are big social activists (aka liberals) and those who falsify test scores/help their students cheat will now become the “cream of the crop”. Sounds about par for the course.
OTOH, it’s not the teachers’ fault when parents don’t make their kids do homework, behave in class or bother showing up for school.
Calculated using the New Math.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.