Charter-school laws could be much better

When Ohio first authorized charter schools almost two decades ago, children who had been failed by traditional public schools at last had another option. Public charter schools, it was said, would be free of some of the restrictions, allowing teachers and school leaders to implement innovative approaches to learning.

Today, charter-school proponents and critics agree on one thing: The laws authorizing public charter schools in Ohio are too weak. Despite individual charter schools that have succeeded, charter schools in Ohio as a whole have not.

Ohio has an opportunity in the next two months to greatly improve its charter-school laws. Public dollars and public confidence are at stake.

A bipartisan coalition of legislators is proposing significantly stronger oversight, building on legislation proposed by Gov. John Kasich and approved by the Ohio House. Recently, the Columbus Partnership was proud to join a press conference in support of Senate Bill 148 introduced by Sens. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering, and Tom Sawyer, D-Akron. Encouragingly, supporters included Democratic and Republican legislators, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Philanthropy Ohio, and KidsOhio.org.

There was strong bipartisan agreement that Ohio badly needs to improve the academic and fiscal performance of its public charter schools. Under current law, too many public charter schools have opened without having to demonstrate competence in academic leadership and financial management. That’s why many of these schools fail, while others limp along with high rates of switching schools and mediocre academic performance. Current law also permits many mediocre schools to add schools with little critical review of their capacity. And the Ohio Department of Education lacks the authority and staff to enforce charter-school laws.

(Read more at the Dispatch)

Ohio needs to combine and shorten its new tests and give three-year "safe harbor," state testing committee decides

Ohio needs to shorten its new state tests and give students, teachers and schools a three year "safe harbor" on any negative consequences from bad scores, the state Senate Advisory Committee on Testing decided last night.

State Sen. Peggy Lehner, who created the committee, said the group of teachers, superintendents and legislators unanimously made several recommendations Wednesday.

Among them:

- Cut the new tests from one round (in February and March) and a second round (in April and May) to just one round in May.

- Make them shorter.

- Wait three years until people are comfortable with the new state and Common Core standards and tests before holding students, schools or teachers accountable for poor scores.

- Let the Ohio Department of Education decide which vendor should provide the tests.

(Read more at Cleveland.com)

The Problems with Ohio's Testing Regime and Recommendations to Fix Them

We have spent 100's of hours talking to 100's of educators over the last 2 years about standardized testing, and the associated problems. We're under no illusions that the current testing crisis caused by reformers is complex, layered at the local, state and federal levels, and has stakeholders who hold divergent views.

In a perfect world, testing designed to evaluate an education system ought to be grade-span, and only require a sampling of students, akin to NAEP. It is over-kill to test every student in every subject, every year. However, we do not live in a perfect world, therefore Join the Future has identified the following problems, and provides the following recommendations as a way forward

Problem: Technology

The technology deployment for this years testing has been a predictable debacle. Perhaps half of Ohio's schools felt so lacking in technological capacity that they performed the tests on paper. For the remainder, most lacked sufficient technology to perform the testing in a short period of time, instead having to schedule weeks of testing that caused massive classroom disruption.

The testing software itself was a mess. Technology and media specialists in schools spent hundreds of hours, making thousands of tech support calls to testing companies trying to resolve technical problems with the software. Teachers were provided with inadequate training. Some students had to re-take the test up to 3 times because of technical difficulties. One can only imagine the stress a 3rd grader must have felt.

There was a lack of hardware compatibility between PARCC and AIR testing platforms. School IT professionals spent countless hours re-imaging computers to switch between testing use and general use. School libraries and computer labs in schools throughout the state have been unusable for most of the time tests have been taking place.

Technology Recommendations

1. Schools must be provided with the flexibility to offer paper based testing for at least 3 years.
2. Any testing solution must be platform agnostic and work on desktops, laptops, Tablets and Chromebooks alike, without need for special software or re-imaging.
3. Educators must be provided with adequate time to train on the platform.
4. Students must be given adequate practice time with the testing platform. They don't need to be taking 2 tests in one - one on the intended content and the other on how to navigate a complex software product.
5. Schools must be provided with adequate resources to purchase compatible technology capable of testing the entire student population within one week.
6. Schools must be provided with adequate resources to ensure they have bandwidth to perform the testing seamlessly.

Problem: Testing Time

Testing cannot consume weeks and weeks of instruction time, and be repeated. Schools spent almost the entire month of February in a state of disruption, made worse by inclement weather and snow days, only to have to perform yet more tests in April. If schools had lost the entire month of February to 4 feet of snow it would have been viewed as a statewide crisis, yet that is the practical effect testing had on schools this year.

Testing Time Recommendations

1. Tests need to be shorter.
2. Tests must be align with a typical classroom schedule, e.g. if a typical classroom period is 30 minutes, the tests cannot be 40 minutes. That disrupts two periods and the subsequent schedule all day.
3. Schools need enough infrastructure to perform the tests in a single week, just once a year.

Problem: High Stakes

Attaching high stakes to a new and unstable testing regime is unfair and has caused lasting damage to morale and motivation. Stories of students getting physically and mentally sick with anxiety are common place. Educators have faced a high stakes evaluation system under constant change. Furthermore, it is becoming apparent to most students that the tests don't matter. Outside of 3rd grade and HS, the results of standardized testing has no impact on students, but deeply affects educators and their schools. This mis-alignment of stakes is a huge problem.

High Stakes Recommendations

1. Implement at least a 3 year moratorium on high stakes consequences until the system matures and proves itself.
2. Stakes must be aligned. It is simply not fair or appropriate for educators to face career consequences for tests students are taking, where the students themselves have no stake in the result. We recommend the elimination of student tests scores as a means to measure teacher quality at the individual level.

Problem: Inappropriate Test Content

Testing has been widely criticized for being age inappropriate. Many test questions were deployed at reading ages much higher than the target age range of the test takers. Often times, especially in Math, the root question itself might be appropriate, but couched in language far too complex for the student to comprehend. Not only does this need to cease, it needs to be investigated.

Reports that questions have spread across multiple pages or screens, forcing a student to remember large blocks of complex text, while navigating back and forth have been widespread. Students should be evaluated on content knowledge not their memories or ability to navigate complex software products

Test Content Recommendations

1. Tests must be age appropriate in content and reading level.
2. Questions must be easily navigable, or compact so that students can concentrate on the answer and not a page flipping ordeal.
3. The State should have a review panel to vet test questions in advance, with the ability to veto inappropriate questions.
4. An element of a testing companies contract should be tied to the appropriateness and accuracy of the tests they provide.
5. Test questions and their answers should be made public within 4 years.

Problem: Useful Results

Parents, students and schools should not have to wait 6 months to receive results, especially results performed electronically. By the time this years results are made available, many students will have moved classes, schools, districts and maybe even out of state.

Results need to provide more than a meaningless score. Educators would benefit from results that include identifying a students strength and weaknesses.

Furthermore, who is grading the tests needs to be closely examined. There has been widespread reports of craigslist advertisements for tests scorers, who require little training or knowledge.

Test Result Recommendations

1. Results should be available before the end of the school year, with a portion of a testing companies contract tied to timely delivery of results.
2. Results should include a description of where a student excelled and performed poorly.
3. All test answers should be publicly available within 4 years, with a portion of a testing companies contract tied to accuracy.
4. A system of qualifying test scorers, and evaluating their accuracy is needed.

Evidently the problems are significant and will require time to implement. Policy makers must resist the calls from corporate reformers for quick fixes. It has been their influence and misguided advice that has navigated us in to this crisis. If a test is being performed in a school the first questions ought to be how does this benefit the students education? Is the benefit of the test proportional to any of its impacts on student education?

Parents, students and educators alike would like to see a reduction in the total volume of testing, with the testing that remains primarily aimed at improving student learning.

Ohio's standardized test-makers preparing revisions

As state leaders consider changing or dumping new student assessments, the consortium of states that developed some of the exams is planning to streamline them.

The governing board of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC) will consider recommendations in the coming weeks to shorten the time students spend taking standardized tests. A final decision is expected by mid- to late summer.

“We have heard what you all are saying,” Jeff Nellhaus, chief of assessments for PARCC, told members of a Senate advisory committee on student testing last week.

“We’re definitely addressing the testing-time issue.”

The PARCC governing board, which includes Ohio schools Superintendent Richard A. Ross, is expected to consider a proposal to combine two blocks of testing, one in the fall and another in the spring. Individual tests also could be shortened.

The tests for English/language arts and math currently take up to 10 hours, depending on the grade level.

Whether such changes will appease state lawmakers and local educators remains to be seen.

(Read more at Dispatch)

Ohio Senate leads on reform

A charter-school-reform bill introduced in the Ohio Senate Wednesday is a marked improvement over a similar measure in the House. Lawmakers should ensure that the bill that eventually is sent to the governor incorporates the rigor of the Senate version.

Senate Bill 148 not only strengthens important provisions that have been watered down in House Bill 2, but enjoys bipartisan support.

The primary sponsor, Senate Education Chairwoman Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering, has stood fast for school reforms despite pushback from those in her party beholden to for-profit charter-school operators, some of whom are major campaign contributors. In this bill, she stands up for taxpayers by insisting on greater transparency and accountability.

Lehner created an informal, bipartisan panel that spent months reviewing the changes needed to rid Ohio’s charter-school system of conflicts of interest and a lack of accountability.

What resulted was a strong bill co-sponsored by Lehner and Democratic state Sen. Tom Sawyer of Akron. Senators who showed their support by attending a press conference included Senate minority leader and Democrat Joe Schiavoni of Boardman and Republicans Frank LaRose of Copley and Shannon Jones of Springboro.

Also showing their support were state Reps. Kristina Roegner, R-Hudson, and John Patterson, D-Jefferson, and Ohio Federation of Teachers President Melissa Cropper.

(Read more at Dispatch)

Ohio House plan to nix PARCC tests risks loss of $750 million in fed money

Risking the loss of three-quarters of a billion dollars in federal education funding, Republican leaders in the Ohio House have placed language in the two-year budget to ban the use of new student assessments and cut off the money to pay for them.

The PARCC (Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers) tests in English/language arts and math have been under fire for being too hard on students, taking too much time away from classroom instruction and technical glitches with the online exams.

The House version of a two-year state budget prohibits the use of state funds to purchase the PARCC exams.

It also slashes $33.6 million per year from the Department of Education’s budget for assessments and bans the reallocation of other money to pay for assessments.

The proposal does not suggest a replacement for the tests that are required under federal law — and even if it did, the money to pay for them has been eliminated. Ohio spent $45 million on PARCC, which took years to develop and align with new Common Core academic standards.

“We’re trying to send a message that is pretty clear: We need to look at different testing mechanisms for the state,” said House Finance Chairman Ryan Smith, R-Bidwell.

(Read more at the Dispatch)