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California’s School Accountability Laws Have Quietly Become Defunct

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This article in the Voice of San Diego.

When a school showed up on the state鈥檚 list of lowest-performing schools in years past, parents had several options spelled out in state law: They had the right to shake up the school鈥檚 staff or change its curriculum if they gained enough signatures; they were also automatically notified their school was on the list, and provided with options for their child to attend a higher-performing school.

Those laws remain on the books, but changes to the state鈥檚 evaluation system 鈥 which across several categories 鈥 have made them unusable.

Political winds have swung wildly against charter schools, which drained money from cash-strapped local school districts, in recent years. And as pressure has mounted to increase accountability for charters, which have been subject to little oversight, accountability for traditional public schools has quietly ratcheted down.

At the core of the changing policy landscape sits an essential question: Is it possible for educators to eliminate the achievement gap for black, brown and poor kids to give them an equal shot at success? The ultra-high pressure accountability of the federal No Child Left Behind law did not do the job. Will the light touch of no accountability work any better?

Under the old system, the state created the list of lowest performing schools by using the Academic Performance Index, or API score, which largely measured a school鈥檚 test scores. Now, schools are measured using the California School Dashboard, which gives a more nuanced picture of success that includes absentee and suspension data. The dashboard came online last school year.

The old accountability laws used API score and another measure called Adequate Yearly Progress as their underpinnings. Since the laws don鈥檛 reference dashboard criteria, they are unenforceable.

The new system is transparent, but it鈥檚 not accountable, argues Bill Lucia, the president of EdVoice, a non-profit aligned with charter school supporters.

鈥淚n the health world, we take a patient鈥檚 temperature 鈥 103 degrees is pretty sick. That鈥檚 like having all red [the worst ranking] on the dashboard,鈥 he said. 鈥淭ransparency is taking the temperature. Accountability would be: Someone has to call the ambulance, did it show up within six minutes, did it make it to the ER, was the patient treated, did they get better? Is there any evidence of ongoing care besides creating the dashboard?鈥

But stepping back and letting teachers do their job is exactly how to help students perform better, said Ed Sibby, a former teacher and communications consultant for the California Teachers Association, a statewide union. He thinks the list is not helpful in the first place.

鈥淎s teachers we don鈥檛 look at our schools in terms of comparison with other schools and definitely not in terms of 鈥榝ailing鈥 or 鈥榥ot failing.鈥 The labels don鈥檛 help students at all, frankly,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e measure our students by their strengths in the classroom and want to move away from standardization.鈥

I asked Sibby if some terms, like 鈥渁chievement gap,鈥 weren鈥檛 important for maintaining the urgency required to help struggling schools. He bristled at the term. 鈥淭his idea of the 鈥榓chievement gap,鈥 it has a lot of pejoratives for me. That said, as a white male who went to public schools my entire life, I know I got a different education than some people.鈥

When a school previously ended up on the list, the automatically kicked in. Parents had to be notified their child鈥檚 school was on the list and be given the option to transfer out. If the school stayed on the list for a number of years, the also kicked in. That let parents organize petition drives that would allow them to reconstitute the school. They might change the curriculum, seek to replace the school鈥檚 staff or, in the most extreme option, turn the school into a charter.

Now when a school ends up on the list, it enters a program, according to state guidelines. from the San Diego County Office of Education explains the cycle.

School districts get a small amount of money, which is filtered through the County Office of Education, to try to examine the root causes for a school鈥檚 failure to thrive. Districts are then supposed to engage parents for ideas and implement solutions on their own, without additional money. Then the data gets reviewed again and, in the ideal world, the school will have improved.

Parents no longer have to be notified their school is on the list.

Aside from the tens of thousands of dollars schools get to study the problem, this is not different than how any school in California theoretically operates. Administrators, principals and teachers are constantly examining data to figure out where they need to improve and then looking for results.

Officials with the California Department of Education declined to comment for this story.

Schools have four years to exit the list. If they don鈥檛, schools 鈥渕ay be required to conduct a new school-level comprehensive needs assessment,鈥 according to , and may be required to partner with an outside organization to help them improve. After that, 鈥渢he plan does not indicate next steps if schools still don鈥檛 improve,鈥 according to an analysis by the Education Trust 鈥 West, a non-profit group.

Schools make it onto the list if they are ranked worst 鈥 on the dashboard it鈥檚 red 鈥 in all of five categories, or all but one. They make it off the list if they receive a middle ranking (yellow) in at least two categories. The five categories are absenteeism, suspensions, math, English and English-learner progress.

High schools with graduation rates of less than 67 percent also automatically make the list.

鈥淥ur goal is to have a quality school in every neighborhood and if a school is performing low on lots of measures it鈥檚 obviously not a quality school,鈥 John Lee Evans, a board trustee for San Diego Unified School District, . 鈥淲e need to focus extra attention and resources on those schools within the limited budget we have.鈥

In San Diego Unified, . Countywide, it鈥檚 58 schools, including charters.

Seth Litt, executive director of Parent Revolution, argues that the Parent Empowerment Act may still be viable. His group helped parents organize several campaigns to use the law in the Los Angeles area. He pointed to in Anaheim that was decided during the transition from API to the new dashboard. That case ruled that even without new API data, the law was still valid. But now that the new dashboard is up and running, state legislators would have to clarify what dashboard metrics make the law kick in.

Letting the laws become impossible to access because of technicalities is a 鈥渂ackdoor way鈥 to change the law, he said.

鈥淟awmakers have been negligent and made these laws hard to access, without proposing new laws that would, essentially, strip rights from families,鈥 Litt said. 鈥淏ut if that鈥檚 what they intend to do that would be the more transparent path.鈥

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California’s School Accountability Laws Have Quietly Become Defunct