Anne Hyslop
Policy Analyst, Education Policy Program
In education, virtually nothing is less popular than standardized tests. But for Stanford professor Linda Darling-Hammond and AFT President Randi Weingarten, there is one thing: accountability for standardized tests. And today鈥檚 Stanford Center on Opportunity Policy in Education鈥檚 鈥淩ethinking Accountability鈥 is a megaphone for their call, previewed in the , to shift from NCLB-style 鈥渢est-and-punish鈥 accountability to a system built on 鈥渟upport-and-improve.鈥
鈥淪upport-and-improve鈥 isn鈥檛 a new idea, though, and it doesn鈥檛 have the best record. President Clinton鈥檚 education policy laid the groundwork for NCLB by requiring states to develop standards and tests, but all of its accountability. Yet when fewer than twenty states developed the required tests鈥攍et alone the unmentioned accountability part鈥斺渟upport-and-improve鈥 easily became 鈥渄o-nothing.鈥 And when states and districts actually try to improve their schools, rather than ignore them, it becomes even clearer that no one has figured out how to make schools better, systematically and at-scale. After billions invested in retooled School Improvement Grants since 2010, with more resources and more intensive strategies, many under-performing schools have seen , and a third declines, under the program. Meanwhile, the on NCLB-style accountability鈥攚ith consequences鈥攈as found positive effects on student achievement, especially for low-performing students and in math.
But the real kicker isn鈥檛 that 鈥渟upport and improve鈥 alone fails to work. It鈥檚 that the 鈥減unish鈥 part of 鈥渢est-and-punish鈥 doesn鈥檛 exist. At least not right now. Thanks to the Obama administration鈥檚 , there don鈥檛 have to be stakes, for anyone, on upcoming state tests. None.
Thanks to the Obama administration鈥檚听No Child Left Behind waivers, there don鈥檛 have to be stakes, for anyone, on upcoming state tests. None.
That鈥檚 because states are in the to college- and career-ready standards and tests. And in order to allow schools, teachers, and students time to adjust during that transition, the 40+ waiver states low-performing schools next year, or even update their school ratings. In fact, some states don鈥檛 have to publicize test results at all (), because all students are for the new assessments. This accountability moratorium could easily extend beyond 2015 if states choose to make those results a new baseline year (for a closer look at how 5 states are handling the transition, read Victoria Sears鈥 latest for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute). And even before hitting pause, waiver states were identifying low-performing schools than under NCLB. In a recent survey of states鈥 waivers, I found that of low-performing schools in the NCLB system were not similarly identified under waivers.
And what about those supposedly high-stakes teacher evaluations? There don鈥檛 have to be consequences attached to them right now either. There don鈥檛 even have to be systems in place, really, and the U.S. Department of Education has their development. Confused? Check out this for how quickly the first waiver states must launch their evaluations:
High stakes don鈥檛 have to enter the picture until Spring 2017鈥攁fter Arne Duncan hands over the keys to the . Teachers could get two ratings and two rounds of 鈥渟upport and improvement鈥 before anystakes are involved (and even then, federal leverage is limited in terms of how much evaluations must inform personnel decisions). And , the Department has also let states apply for to use evaluations to 鈥渋nform鈥 those decisions. That delays full implementation until as late as Spring 2018. Simply, the over whether there should be consequences for teachers during the transition to new assessments often obscures the fact that a no-stakes period is already standard federal policy. And now that the Department is its review process for extending the waivers, they could be opening the door to even more delays鈥攁 move that would be welcomed by many, including Darling-Hammond and Weingarten.
In short, if educators or local officials feel like today鈥檚 accountability systems 鈥渢est and punish鈥 them, it鈥檚 got much more to do with their responses to federal accountability, not the policy itself. In the transition to new standards and tests, states have already halted many of the consequences. If NCLB is a , then 鈥渢est-and-punish鈥 accountability is a ghost: you might think you see it, and you might be afraid of it, but turn on the light, and you鈥檒l find it just isn鈥檛 there.
If NCLB is a听zombie, then 鈥渢est-and-punish鈥 accountability is a ghost: you might think you see it, and you might be afraid of it, but turn on the light, and you鈥檒l find it just isn鈥檛 there.
What鈥檚 more, most education reformers, on the and , can find common ground with Darling-Hammond and Weingarten: nobody thinks that we don鈥檛 need a better, smarter approach to improving school and teacher practice. And states have been able to try new 鈥渟upport-and-improve鈥 approaches in their waivers. has a school-led program review as 20 percent of its accountability model鈥攁 more holistic, educator-driven take on the quality of local curricula and practice. And California鈥檚 relies on teams of educators from high-performing schools to lead and advise school improvement, with a similar approach planned . While it鈥檚 far from certain that these approaches than previous improvement efforts, today鈥檚 federal accountability regime is in no way incompatible with a 鈥渟upport-and-improve鈥 model. The key difference is that, unlike Darling-Hammond and Weingarten, most reformers also believe schools can鈥攁nd should鈥攄o all of these things in tandem with meaningful accountability systems.
What is incompatible with the support-and-improve mindset is the choices of some elected officials, school administrators, and educators. If drill-and-kill, or weeks of rote test prep, or a testing week 鈥減ep rally鈥 is the best you can come up with in response to a system of accountability, then something went terribly wrong, and it isn鈥檛 the test. It鈥檚 how schools and districts are choosing to react to it. It may not be as easy to implement, or as cheap, but there are alternatives that don鈥檛 sacrifice high-quality, rich instruction at the altar of test-based accountability. These alternatives may require building professional capacity, training teachers and leaders differently, and providing new resources and time, but there are other choices. And making these choices more popular will require tackling education challenges鈥攐ften beyond the scope of accountability policy鈥攈ead-on, from teacher preparation to school leadership.
Accountability systems under NCLB waivers aren鈥檛 perfect, and we must continue to refine their design and execution. But they aren鈥檛 responsible for the test-and-punish culture at work in far too many schools and districts. What really warrants a transformation isn鈥檛 accountability鈥 it鈥檚 our response to it.
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