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Will New Pre-K Accountability Metrics in D.C. Enhance鈥擮r Undercut鈥擯re-K Quality?

Like many in D.C.鈥檚 family-heavy Ward 4, Sam Chaltain sends his children to charter schools. His older son attends Latin American Montessori Bilingual, and his younger son will follow in a few years. This is just one of the area鈥檚 charters; it also boasts E.L. Haynes, Capital City, and several others that rank among the District鈥檚 very best, according to D.C.鈥檚 Public Charter School Board鈥檚 . While Chaltain loves the pre-K experience his oldest is having, he鈥檚 concerned that coming policy changes could jeopardize it in the future.

That鈥檚 because D.C.鈥檚 Public Charter School Board (PCSB) is deciding how to its (PMF) to pre-K providers on September 23 (public comments are welcomed ). The proposed changes would allow charters that offer pre-K to choose between two systems for scoring these programs. As the chart below shows, Option 1 ties 60 percent of a pre-K program鈥檚 PMF score to reading and math growth between the beginning and the end of the pre-K year. Option 2 reduces that number to 45% if the program opts to include a social-emotional learning assessment as part of its accountability system.

Source: PCSB Proposal for Early Childhood Performance Management Framework

These weightings concern Chaltain. 鈥淚t鈥檚 na茂ve to the last 12 years of federal policy and what happens when you only incentivize certain things and leave other things to be optional,鈥 said Chaltain in an interview. 鈥淢ost public schools that I enter, I just see reading and math happening all the time. To me, that鈥檚 the issue [with the proposed PMF changes]. It鈥檚 just a question of balance.鈥

Chaltain鈥檚 concerns are valid. No Child Left Behind unintentionally encouraged test preparation and 鈥渢eaching to the test鈥 in the grades included in states鈥 standardized testing programs. All too often, these practices , significantly reducing time for non-tested content areas like social studies and science in the early grades, especially in schools serving struggling children. Would the new PMF lead to the same consequences?

The updated PMF formula would apply to lower elementary charter programs as well, under a slightly different formula. For the K鈥2 years, charter schools can choose to have 80 percent (without a social-emotional learning assessment) or 70 percent (with an SEL assessment) of their PMF scores tied to reading and math progress or achievement.

Progress, sometimes known as growth, is a measure that provides data on how much progress students have made between the beginning and end of the school year in a specific area. Achievement is a summative (end of school year) measure that provides data on the attainment level of students. Acknowledging developmental differences of young children, the framework for grades K-2 can measure achievement or growth. If a student does not meet the achievement target on the summative assessment, then the student must show adequate progress toward the target. (.)

Source: PCSB Proposal for Early Childhood Performance Management Framework

Chaltain comes at the policy changes from two perspectives: as a father and  who writes the blog 鈥淥f, By, For: In Search of the Civic Mission of K-12 Schools鈥 for Education Week. He recognizes the challenge of improving quality and maintaining accountability, but worries about its emphasis on academic subjects. 鈥淲hen you disproportionately weight one assessment almost to the exclusion of everything else, you change it from a diagnostic tool into an accountability tool.鈥 Research on assessment does indicate that using one assessment for a purpose it was not intended, such as accountability, could invalidate the results for both purposes. You wouldn鈥檛 use a life vest to jump out of an airplane.

For example, if a school leader felt pressured by the PMF to increase the school鈥檚 early grade math and reading scores, he could in turn pressure his teachers to focus more on those subjects 鈥 or worse, to prepare only for the test, which sometimes measure only a limited range of basic skills. Young children might not be appropriately challenged or given time to play or explore new topics. Not only is this is one of the quickest ways to get kids to dislike school from a very young age, but it also means we鈥檙e not going to get quality assessment data that help the teacher know how well her students really understand a concept. Nor do we get an accurate picture of how well a school is education its students. 

For pre-K, at least, the plan includes measures beyond student progress in reading and math. The Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS) accounts for 30 percent of the schools鈥 rating. Lisa Guernsey and Susan Ochshorn write about the CLASS in their paper . The CLASS is a who watch and record how teachers interact with children in their classrooms. The tool measures teacher-child interactions within three domains (emotional climate, classroom organization, and instructional support) and along multiple dimensions, including quality of feedback and concept development, among others.

In an interview yesterday, Sara Mead, DC Public Charter School Board member and former director of the Early Education Initiative, pointed out that even if programs choose to not assess students鈥 social-emotional growth, the requirement to use data from the CLASS will capture the extent to which teachers provide a positive emotional climate, provide appropriate feedback, and engage students in rich conversation.

PCSB School Quality and Accountability Specialist Erin Kupferberg is confident that the proposed PMF would improve both accountability and quality in D.C.鈥檚 charter-based pre-K classrooms. 鈥淚t is an improvement on our previous accountability plans…Before, every school鈥檚 goal was different. [By making] this pre-K PMF similar to the PMF in use for grades 3 and above, it gives parents the ability to compare between quality choices,鈥 Kupferberg said.

It also encourages charter schools that serve PreK-8th grade, as some schools do, to ensure they are working to meet the needs of their youngest students as well as the older students, points out Jack McCarthy, president and CEO of for Education Innovation and AppleTree Early Learning Public Charter School. These charter schools will be measured by both the Early Childhood PMF and the Elementary/Middle PMF.

The Early Childhood PMF was developed in collaboration with local charter school leaders. 鈥淚 do think it is an important step in the right direction,鈥 says McCarthy. He believes looking more closely at student learning and developmental outcomes will help to define what high-quality early childhood really is.

It鈥檚 important to note that the new PMF is not a mandate forcing 3- and 4-year old students to sit for grueling rounds of standardized 鈥渂ubble tests.鈥 It allows schools considerable flexibility in their choice of assessment. Most assessments for children this age are observation-based, meaning that they are based on what a teacher has watched a child do. (Has the child been able to hold a crayon and press with enough firmness to form letters or produce other signs of early writing? Can the child provide answers when asked open-ended questions about a story?) These assessments are given once in the fall and again in the spring. 鈥淲e began with a list of assessments our schools were already using,鈥 Mead said. The Board evaluated those assessments for quality; the approved list includes any that made the cut.

D.C. charters have been assessing their pre-K students for years. The new PMF would incorporate this data into PCSB鈥檚 annual report on the quality of each of D.C.鈥檚 charter schools. The report groups schools into three tiers, with the top-performing schools in Tier 1 and the weakest-performing schools in Tier 3. Parents can use that information to help guide their decision in choosing a school. The reports are also a helpful resource when it is time for a school鈥檚 charter to be reauthorized, which happens every five years. The PMF, along with other factors, could be used to determine whether a school鈥檚 charter is reauthorized or not. However, 鈥渘o school closure policies have been established for early childhood based on the PMF,鈥 said Mead.

This tiered-rating system is similar to states鈥 quality rating and improvement systems () that are being implemented across the country to provide parents with an easier way to judge the quality of preschool programs and child care centers they are considering for their children. QRIS, though, do not typically incorporate student progress or achievement data in centers鈥 ratings and the idea is controversial in traditional early childhood circles. Instead, QRIS often include measures of the learning environment and teacher interactions with children (like the CLASS) as well as measures like class size, student-to-teacher ratios, meal provisions, the presence of family engagement programs, and whether the center conducts student assessments. The measures focus on inputs rather than outcomes. This is the case for   the QRIS for DC non-charter child care programs proposed by the Office of the State Superintendent for Education (OSSE).

鈥淲e are the only [charter school] authorizer in the country doing this,鈥 says Mead. A few states are considering including student outcomes in QRIS to rate child care centers. Mead notes that Louisiana is one.

Source: DC Public Charter School Board

(Note: The above slide from the on July 8, shows the differences between DC鈥檚 Office of the State Superintendent of Education鈥檚 (OSSE) QRIS proposal and the Public Charter School Board鈥檚 proposal for early childhood.)

鈥淚f you look at 3rd– and 4th-grade scores on D.C.鈥檚 CAS, a majority of students still are not ready to read. This is about making sure that children are ready for school,鈥 said PCSB Director of Communications Theola Labb茅-DeBose.

It鈥檚 also about making sure that the gains children make in early education programs are followed by high-quality instruction, developmentally appropriate curriculum, learning environments, and opportunities in the early grades. The K-2 PMF leaves out the measure of teacher interaction and downplays the weight for social-emotional development, provided that school leaders choose to assess that learning domain at all.

Given all this context, here are some preliminary suggestions based on our work here at the 国产视频 Foundation:

  • We think the charter school board should encourage K-2 schools to emphasize social-emotional assessment and teacher-child interactions.
  • We also think the board should reconsider the weights assigned to reading and math in the PreK-3rd grades and allow for a more balanced framework.
  • DC PCSB鈥檚 focus on progress rather than endpoint achievement is the right way to go, and should be the case for PreK-12th grades.
  • Finally, while we think that outcome data should play a role in whether a school鈥檚 charter is reauthorized or not, it should never be the only factor.

Perhaps it鈥檚 also worth noting that arguments over the quality of public pre-K (in charter or traditional schools) are a second-order affair. In other words, we can only argue over how we rate public pre-K providers once we鈥檝e invested resources in establishing pre-K in the first place. While it鈥檚 surely cold comfort for those unhappy with however the PMF is ultimately structured, these are privileged problems to have.

To comment on PCSB鈥檚 proposed early childhood PMF, .

(Interested in more analysis of D.C.鈥檚 pre-K program? Don鈥檛 miss Conor鈥檚 column in this Sunday鈥檚 on the secret hero of D.C.鈥檚 nigh on universal pre-K system.)

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Conor P. Williams

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Will New Pre-K Accountability Metrics in D.C. Enhance鈥擮r Undercut鈥擯re-K Quality?