New Ohio tests source of anxiety, anger

Anxiety, if not downright anger, over new standardized school tests is on full display in Columbus and Toledo.

Schools across Ohio this winter administered the new Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers exams, a series of online tests that replace the Ohio standardized tests. The tests were built to align with the Common Core State Standards, themselves a subject of scorn by some.

But the new tests, and their potential consequences, have created outcry from a broader segment, with enough opposition to catalyze legislation placed on Gov. John Kasich’s desk on Friday that would hold students harmless this year for any consequences of the tests.

Criticism of the tests center on their implementation, considered sloppy by some; their rigor, and just the sheer amount of time spent on assessment. Exams in reading and math and science — along with social-studies assessments developed with the American Institute for Research — are stretched out over weeks. Winter weather further pushed back regular classroom time.

“What I can say is that in my teaching career I have never experienced a time when so much instructional time has been spent on testing,” said Kay Wait, an instructional planner for Toledo Public Schools.

(Read more at the Toledo Blade).

One weird trick to fix Ohio charter schools

Charter school proponents recently agreed that Ohio’s charter schools are among the worst in the nation. As reported in Akron’s local newspaper, panelists at a conference on charter schools and choice hosted by the Education Writers Association in Denver, Colorado agreed that Ohio hosts an outsized number of charter school operators that run failing schools.

The participants on the panel included Micheal Pettrelli, the president of the Thomas Fordham Foundation which advocates for charters, vouchers and other market-based education reforms, and Todd Ziebarth who oversees state advocacy for the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. Both men have dedicated their professional lives to charter schools, but because they believe in the mission of such schools, they are willing to call out those that are failing students.

The story puts into perspective the well-documented problems with Ohio’s charter schools. Whatever inherent challenges charter schools pose, Ohio appears to wrestle with outsized problems compared to other states.

Those problems can be traced to many factors, but one deserves special attention. In 2006, during the lame duck session after the election of Ted Strickland, the General Assembly quietly passed one of the strangest laws I have ever come across. The law states that when a charter school board attempts either to terminate or decline to renew the contract of a charter school operator, the operator can seek to have the board dismissed.

A charter school operator is a person or organization that provides services to a school. Generally in Ohio for-profit corporations have stepped into the role. The typical operator takes in the state money, spends it as it sees fit on staff, materials, equipment and books, and keeps some portion as its management fee. In short, it is a vendor selling management services to a school, so Ohio’s legislature passed a law that empowers a company to punish a customer for declining to continue purchasing its wares.

One reason this law has persisted for eight years is that in order to understand its awfulness a person needs to understand the gallery of entities that make up the parallel charter school universe and the terms of art used to name them. “Operator” sounds like an official entity created by state law as opposed to a profit-making company enabled by it.

Technically a charter school is a not-for-profit corporation organized under the auspices of another organization known as a sponsor. The sponsor is charged with maintaining oversight over the board which runs the day-to-day activities of the school. An operator seeking to fire a governing board appeals to the sponsor. By law the sponsor is to consider whether the operator followed state law and fulfilled the terms of the contract. In other words, an operator performing to the bare minimum requirements of the statute and contract can get its customer fired. Weird.

The law renders charter school boards nearly powerless and operators supreme. Boards that have complained that they are unable to regulate or even learn how the operator spends the school’s state allocation have been successfully removed.

As weird as this all sounds, it is that much weirder when considered against the theory behind charter schools. Charter schools are supposed to benefit from fewer of the regulations a traditional public school is subject to, while they expose public education to the rigors of free markets, forcing all schools to be more innovative and effective. Charter proponents pressed their point with the mantra that they would break the public school monopoly.

But Ohio imposes a regulation that creates as effective monopoly in the market for providing services to a particular school. A charter school board that finds an operator who delivers better services for the money cannot switch to that vendor. The law shields operators from the market competition that in theory might make charter schools work, if they ever do.

Like any other promise to solve a vexing problem with “one weird trick,” the headline above exaggerates the prospects for a total solution. Partly that is because charter proponents originally sold the idea as one weird trick: impose a little market discipline and all of our education challenges would work themselves out. Subsequent experience indicates that market competition alone provides no panacea – the system must include some regulation and oversight. Indeed, one reason sponsors acquiesce to the appeals from operators to fire boards is that there is insufficient oversight upon sponsors.

Ohio’s charter system needs more than one reform, but this one would go a long way toward correcting one of a fundamental imbalance. And make it less weird.

(Read more that the Akron Legal News)

Bill to limit testing gets Ohio educators’ backing

The new tests associated with Common Core have Ohio schools experiencing “unprecedented chaos” and loss of instructional time, Licking Valley Heights Superintendent David Hile told lawmakers yesterday.

While the state is requiring that districts give tests that are ultimately not used to guide instruction, partially because results take too long to come back, Licking Valley and many other districts, Hile said, are spending money on other tests. They include the Measures of Academic Progress to monitor progress, tests for the third-grade reading guarantee, and tests to identify gifted students.

“We use the state test data for none of these purposes,” he said.

Hile testified in support of House Bill 74, a wide-ranging bill designed to reduce testing in Ohio and alter a system in which the Common Core-aligned PARCC (Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers) tests are given for language and math in grades three through eight and as a replacement for the Ohio Graduation Test starting with this year’s ninth-graders.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Andrew Brenner, R-Powell, seeks to give districts more control over testing options and teacher evaluations, limit end-of-course exams, and require the state to identify tests that can be used for multiple purposes.

Paul Imhoff, superintendent of Upper Arlington schools, testified along with Granville Superintendent Jeff Brown to push for elimination of a measure on student growth, known as value-added data, as half of a teacher’s evaluation. Instead, a principal should rate a teacher’s effectiveness in using value-added data to improve instruction, they argued.

(Read more at the Dispatch)

ECOT Charter School: Ohio’s Dropout Factory

The Kasich Administration and GOP-controlled Ohio General Assembly has been all about “education reform” over the last 5 years, with an alleged focus on improving student achievement — especially decreasing the dropout rate. Recent legislation has focused on getting Ohio’s students to graduate from high school with not only a high school diploma, but for those not interested in college, some sort of industry credential.

The Third Grade Reading Guarantee, for example, has been continually touted as a step toward decreasing Ohio’s dropout rate (we strongly disagree with this assertion) and the legislature has held firm on this law even while passing House Bill 7 that protects all other students (at least for the 14-15 school year) from experiencing negative ramifications from all other state standardized tests.

Additionally, Governor Kasich in his recent State of the State speech touted the need for charter schools in the state, saying:

“But I also want to say to you that just because a charter school is not producing great results in grades, it doesn’t mean they’re failing. Some of these charter schools have kids that if they weren’t in that charter school, they’d be out on the streets.”

Hmm.

Charter schools as a means of keeping kids in school? Fascinating.

(Read more at Plunderbund)

Thorough and Efficient Clause Saved From Chopping Block

A sub committee of the Ohio Modernization commission voted unanimously to retain the "thorough and efficient system of common schools" clause in the Ohio constitution, and not propose that voters consider removing it. This clause had been the bedrock upon which the Derolph funding case was litigated. It continues to be critical for maintaining a constitutional framework for the state to provide an thorough and efficient education system.

There was a lot of pressure to remove this clause from the constitution, led by the chair of the committee

The phrase in the Ohio Constitution that requires the state to provide an adequate system of public schools would be stricken from the document if the head of a constitutional modernization subcommittee has his way.

Chairman Chad Readler, a Columbus attorney who leads the Constitutional Modernization Commission’s schools and local government committee, wants to remove the phrase “thorough and efficient” from Article VI of the Constitution.

Readler, who is actively involved in the privately run charter school movement, is among 32 Ohio community leaders and legislators looking at ways to modernize the Constitution for recommendations to the legislature. Readler was selected by House leadership to run the subcommittee.

This is a big win for students, and a blow for profiteers and privatizers.

Teachers tell Ohio legislators that state tests take too long

Teachers urged an Ohio Senate committee yesterday to scale back new standardized tests, arguing that the longer exams take too much time away from instruction and are causing anxiety for students.

Teachers “are beyond frustrated with the increasing amount of time spent on testing and the way it has crowded out time needed to teach and engage students,” said Becky Higgins, president of the Ohio Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union.

“The current fixation with testing is sucking the oxygen and joy out of our education system."

Several classroom teachers told legislators that new standardized tests aligned with more-rigorous Common Core standards are of little help because the results aren’t available for months, long after school lets out for summer.

They also continue to oppose the use of test results to help evaluate teachers and grade schools on state-issued report cards.

“The purpose of tests should be to drive instruction, to meet the needs of children, not rate teachers and schools,” said Dan Greenberg, a high-school English teacher in Sylvania.

(Read more at the Dispatch)