Title: Accountability: Where Are We Going?
1Accountability Where Are We Going?
- Martha Musser, Coordinator
- NYS Education Department
2This may be the Dawning of the Age of
Accountability
- Contract for Excellence
- NCLB Reauthorization
- NYC and other local accountability initiatives
3Contract for Excellence
- Governor has proposed a Contract for Excellence
that calls for an enhanced State accountability
system, including - New accountability standards based on State
assessments and other indicators of progress,
such as graduation rates or college attendance
and completion rates. - Growth model by 2008-09.
- Value-added model by 2010-2011 based on new or
revised state assessments. - Expanded SURR system, resulting in the
identification of up to 5 of State schools by
2011-2012 for restructuring or reorganization.
4Contract for Excellence Plans for Intervention
- School Review Teams conduct resource, program and
planning audits of SINI and SRAP schools and
assist all SINI and SRAP schools in development
of improvement plans. - Joint School Intervention Teams, whose members
are either appointed by Commissioner or educators
from the district, review and recommend plans for
reorganizing or reconfiguring schools that are to
be closed. - Distinguished Educators assist low-performing
schools and districts. - The services of all the above are a charge to the
school district.
5Contract for Excellence Now its Personal
- Commissioner shall define in regulation deficient
district performance. - School districts hiring a superintendent after
the effective date of regulation must include a
provision in superintendents contract that after
two years of deficient district performance the
superintendent will fully cooperate with a
distinguished educator. - After four years of deficient performance, school
board must seek to remove a superintendent or
provide a rationale to the Commissioner for why
board should not take such action. - After six years of deficient district
performance, the Commissioner shall commence
action to remove the board or board members.
6Distinguished Educators and Deficient District
Performance
- Consult with Commissioner on removal of
superintendent. - Serve as ex officio, non-voting members of Board
of Education. - Review all school and district improvement plans
and either endorse or make recommendations to the
Board of Education for change. - Boards of Education must make changes as required
by Distinguished Educators unless upon petition
by Board of Education Commissioner decides there
is a compelling reason not to implement the
modification.
7Status, Growth and Value- Added Models Defined
Contract for Excellence requires SED to implement
growth and value-added models and meet any
Federal requirements for such models.
8Status Models Defined
- Status or improvement models, the current
requirement for measuring Adequate Yearly
Progress (AYP) under No Child Left Behind,
measure progress by tracking the improvement at
the same grade levels within the school over
time. (This years grades 3-5 compared to last
years grades 3-5.)
9Growth Models Defined
- Growth models generally refer to accountability
models that assess the progress of a cohort of
individual students over time with the intent of
measuring the progress these students have made
(Performance in fourth grade compared to
performance in third grade).
10Value-Added Models Defined
- Value-added models generally refer to a specific
type of growth model in which student demographic
data or other statistical controls are used to
attempt to analyze the specific effects of a
particular school, program, or teacher on student
learning. - These models ask whether the school has increased
the measured achievement of students more than
expected based on data from similar schools.
11Purpose of Status, Growth, and Value Added Models
- Status model Determine whether an increasing
percentage of students are gaining proficiency
over time. - Growth model Determine how much progress groups
of students are making over time. - Value-added model Determine success of schools,
programs, or teachers by measuring student growth
over time while controlling for non-school
variables that impact on student performance.
12Value-Added Models The Holy Grail of
Accountability?
- Much controversy about value-added models.
- Some claim that good value-added models exist
(Sanders), statistical models not based on
vertical scales. - Some claim that the state of the psychometric art
does not currently support vertical scales. - Value-added models are not easy
- Less sophistication is required to make accurate
determinations about status then growth. - Acquisition of knowledge is not linear.
- Value-added models are heavily dependent upon the
robustness of their assumptions. - Value-added models break down more quickly as
groups become smaller. -
13Growth Model System Requirements
- Growth Model System Requirements
- Annual assessments in successive grades
- A unique student identification system
- Vertically aligned or scaled assessments
- Grade by grade standards
- A minimum of two years of assessment data per
student - Value-added systems require additional data on
those demographic or resource factors for which
the model seeks to control
14NY and Growth Models
- NYS Grades 3-8 Testing Program uses Vertically
Moderated Standards (VMS) - Student progress is measured from grade-to-grade
relative to proficiency in meeting the standards
(rather than in terms of change in scale scores). - VMS is applicable to some but not all growth
model designs. - NY will by the end of 2006-07 have only two years
of test data, limiting our ability to create
growth trajectories for individual students. - SEDs goal is to select a growth model
architecture by April.
15NCLB Status Report
- Revised State standards and Annual Measurable
Objectives (AMOs) established. - 05-06 Accountability Decisions Released.
- Development of elementary/middle level attendance
standards in progress. - Regents continuing deliberations regarding
raising high school graduation standards. - Regents engaging in NCLB reauthorization advocacy.
16State Standards
- State Standards for 06-07 are
- 155 for Grade 3-8 ELA and math
- 165 for HS ELA and math
- State Standards for 07-8 are
- 160 for Grade 3-8 ELA and math
- 170 for HS ELA and math
- State standard is used to determine which schools
must do Local Assistance Plans (LAPs) and which
schools and districts may be high performing.
17Original Annual Measurable Objectives for200203
to 201314
-
- School Year Elementary-Level Middle-Level Secondar
y-Level - ELA Math ELA Math ELA Math
- 2002-03 123 136 107 81 142 132
- 2003-04 123 136 107 81 142 132
- 200405 131 142 116 93 148 139
- 200506 138 149 126 105 154 146
- 200607 146 155 135 117 159 152
- 200708 154 162 144 129 165 159
- 200809 162 168 154 141 171 166
- 200910 169 174 163 152 177 173
- 201011 177 181 172 164 183 180
- 201112 185 187 181 176 188 186
- 201213 192 194 191 188 194 193
- 201314 200 200 200 200 200 200
18Revised Annual Measurable Objectives for200506
to 201314
-
- School Year Elementary Middle-Level Secondary-L
evel - ELA Math ELA Math
- 200506 122 86 154 146
- 200607 122 86 159 152
- 200708 133 102 165 159
- 200809 144 119 171 166
- 200910 155 135 177 173
- 201011 167 151 183 180
- 201112 178 167 188 186
- 201213 189 183 194 193
- 201314 200 200 200 200
19Calculating AMOs
- In 2000-2001 and 2001-2002 combined, 20 of NYs
public school students were enrolled in schools
with PIs below - Grade 4 ELA 123
- Grade 8 ELA 107
- Grade 4 Math 136
- Grade 8 Math 81
- In 2004-05, the percent of students below the
2004-2005 AMOs were - Grade 4 and 8 ELA combined 13.3
- Grade 4 and 8 math combined 4.2
- 2005-2006 Grade 3-8 ELA results
- AMO at 13.3 122
- AMO at 20.0 133
- 2005-2006 Grade 3-8 math results
- AMO at 4.2 86
- AMO at 20.0 132
20Limited English Proficient (LEP) Students
- All LEP students in grade K12 must take the
NYSESLAT annually. - LEP students in grades 3 through 8 enrolled in
U.S. schools (not including Puerto Rico) for less
than one year (enrolled on or after January 2,
2006) were not required to take the NYSTP ELA
assessment in January 2007. For such students who
did not take the ELA assessment, valid scores on
the NYSESLAT Reading/Writing and
Speaking/Listening components will meet the ELA
participation requirement. - The eligible LEP students must be identified in
the repository using Program Service 0242. - NYSESLAT performance levels will not be used in
calculating the Performance Index. LEP students
meeting the criteria to use the NYSESLAT in lieu
of the ELA will not be included in the
Performance Index calculation.
212002 Graduation-Rate Cohort Definition
- This cohort will be used to determine if the
district or school meets the graduation-rate
requirements for the 200607 school year. The
2002 graduation-rate cohort consists of all
students, regardless of their current grade
status, who were enrolled in the school on
October 6, 2005 (BEDS day) and met one of the
following conditions - first entered grade 9 (anywhere) during the
200203 school year (July 1, 2002 through June
30, 2003) or - in the case of ungraded students with
disabilities, reached their seventeenth birthday
during the 200203 school year.
222002 Graduation-Rate Cohort Definition (contd)
- The State will exclude the following students
when reporting data on the 2002 cohort - students who transferred to another high school
(excluded from the high school graduation-rate
cohort) or district (excluded from the district
graduation-rate cohort) or criminal justice
facility after BEDS day 2005 - students who transferred to an approved
alternative high school equivalency preparation
(AHSEP) or high school equivalency preparation
(HSEP) program (CR 100.7) after BEDS day 2005 and
met the conditions stated on the next slide - students who left the U.S. and its territories
after BEDS day 2005 and before August 30, 2006
and - students who died after BEDS day 2005 and before
August 30, 2006.
232002 Graduation-Rate Cohort(Transfers to
GEDRemoved from Cohort)
Students will be removed from the cohort for the
school and district from which they transferred
to an AHSEP or HSEP program if the final
enrollment record shows that on June 30, 2006 the
student a) earned a high school equivalency
diploma or b) was enrolled in an AHSEP or HSEP
program. Students will be removed from the school
cohort if the enrollment records showed that the
student transferred to a different high school
and was working toward or earned a high school
diploma. Students will be removed from the
district cohort if the enrollment records show
that the student transferred to a high school in
a different district and was working toward or
earned a high school diploma.
242003 Graduation-Rate Cohort
- Beginning with the 2003 graduation-rate cohort
(used for accountability in 2007-08) - students are included in the cohort based on the
year they first enter grade 9 (or for ungraded
students, the year they turn 17). - students who have spent at least five months in a
district/school during year 1, 2, 3, or 4 of high
school are part of the district/school cohort
unless they transfer to another diploma-granting
program.
25Inclusion Rules for the 2003 Graduation-Rate
Cohort
- A student will be included in the
district/school cohort if the students last
enrollment record in the district or school
shows - that the student was enrolled for at least five
continuous (not including July and August) months
and the ending reason was not one of the
following transferred to another New York State
district or school, died, transferred by court
order, or left the U.S. - fewer than five months enrollment and an ending
reason indicating that the student dropped out or
transferred to a GED program and the students
previous enrollment record in that
district/school (assuming one exists) - indicates that the student dropped out or
transferred to a GED program, and - that the student was enrolled in the
district/school for at least five months.
26 School Status for All State Schools 2005-06 2005-06 2006-07 2006-07
Number Percent Number Percent
Good Standing 3,743 84.4 3,749 84.3
In Improvement Status under Title 1 502 11.3 506 11.4
Requiring Academic Progress 192 4.3 193 4.3
Total in improvement status 694 15.6 699 15.7
Total Schools 4,437 4,448
27Student Enrollment by Accountability Status
NYC NYC Rest of State Rest of State Total Total
Schools Enrollment Schools Enrollment Schools Enrollment
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 1 9 10845 36 40043 45 50888
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 2 6 5957 38 53161 44 59118
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 3 10 21515 17 18481 27 39996
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 4 36 82411 15 19412 51 101823
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 5 14 19748 1 1032 15 20780
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 6 5 1335 0 0 5 1335
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 7 6 1759 0 0 6 1759
In Need of Improvement - Year 1 62 49523 46 28107 108 77630
In Need of Improvement - Year 2 58 49617 33 27957 91 77574
In Corrective Action 44 32074 23 223305 67 54379
Planning for Restructuring 46 61551 31 30436 77 91987
Restructuring - Year 1 22 17050 20 20459 42 37509
Restructuring - Year 2 57 52336 7 3741 64 56077
Restructuring - Year 3 47 46862 10 7460 57 54322
Total Title I SINI 336 309013 170 140465 506 449478
Total SRAP 86 143570 107 132129 193 275699
Grand Total 422 452583 277 272594 699 725177
Note Enrollment is based on counts from October 2005 BEDS survey. Note Enrollment is based on counts from October 2005 BEDS survey. Note Enrollment is based on counts from October 2005 BEDS survey. Note Enrollment is based on counts from October 2005 BEDS survey.
28Statewide Status of SINI and SRAP Schools 2005-06
vs. 2006-07
Status 05-06 Status Improved or Stayed the Same Status Became Worse Total Schools In Status Percent Improving or Staying the Same
SINI 1 61 70 131 46.6
SINI 2 33 51 84 39.3
Corrective Action 19 76 95 20.0
Planning for Restructuring 12 31 43 27.9
Restructuring 1 17 58 75 22.7
Restructuring 2 11 62 73 15.1
SRAP 1 44 28 72 61.1
SRAP 2 28 14 42 66.7
SRAP 3 15 44 59 25.4
SPAP 4 6 9 15 40.0
SRAP 5 or 6 3 1 4 75.0
Total 249 444 693 35.9
Note A schools status would improve or stay the
same if the school made AYP in the area(s) of
identification which gave the school its status.
A schools status becomes worse if it fails to
make AYP in one or more of the area of
identification which gave the school its status.
29WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS WEIGHTED PI BY ACCOUNTABILITY STATUS - ALL SCHOOLS
3-8 ELA 3-8 ELA 3-8 Math 3-8 Math HS ELA HS ELA HS Math HS Math
Acct Status Acct Enrolgt30 Wtd PI Acct Enrolgt30 Wtd PI Acct Enrolgt30 Wtd PI Acct Enrolgt30 Wtd PI
In Good Standing 920,862 163 914,553 168 109,948 183 109,948 185
In Need of Improvement - Year 1 37,283 132 37,069 137 3,694 152 3,694 159
In Need of Improvement - Year 2 41,845 133 41,132 136 4,386 146 4,386 150
In Corrective Action 24,988 127 24,747 125 3,989 144 3,989 149
Planning for Restructuring 32,143 117 31,639 110 9,971 138 9,971 145
Restructuring - Year 1 20,826 119 20,447 114 1,619 122 1,619 130
Restructuring - Year 2 37,304 116 36,921 116 874 132 874 139
Restructuring - Year 3 41,208 116 40,601 111 867 103 867 124
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 1 9,314 154 9,214 154 8,346 180 8,346 184
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 2 16,516 158 16,364 161 8,700 178 8,700 182
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 3 9,700 150 9,602 145 6317 169 6,317 170
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 4 12,526 142 12,418 141 17,151 149 17,151 150
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 5 3,763 125 3,722 113 3,628 132 3,628 141
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 6 443 114 427 99 419 116 419 118
Requiring Academic Progress - Year 7 1,236 94 1,220 91 212 118 212 118
Has No Status - Regulations Do Not Apply 316 145 308 140 0 0 0 0
Total Title I SINI 235,597 123 232,556 122 25,400 140 25,400 147
Total SRAP 53,498 148 52,967 147 44,773 161 44,773 164
Grand Total 1,210,273 154 1,200,384 158 180,121 171 180,121 175
30NCLB Reauthorization
- Regents have developed positions regarding
- Schools and districts with multiple federal
designations - Growth Models
- Targeted interventions
- AYP Methodologies
- Additional time to meet graduation standards
- ELL testing issues
- Implementation of choice and SES
- Safe Schools
31NCLB Reauthorization What we are Hearing
- Serious discussions about NCLB are beginning but
reauthorization more likely to occur in 2009 than
2007, very unlikely to occur in 2008. - Key issues being discussed
- Full funding
- Growth models
- N size and confidence intervals
- Required interventions, including SES and choice
- Assessments LEP, SWD, high school
- Highly Qualified Teachers vs. High Quality
Teaching - National Standards
- Science Assessments
32Other Accountability Initiatives NYC
- Children First
- Valued Added Model.
- More Ragu than KISS.
- Each school receives letter grade (A-F) on school
progress report. - Progress report consists of four categories
- School Environment (15)
- Student Performance (30)
- Student Progress (55)
- Additional Credit
33Children First Progress Report
- Schools grade is based upon how well the school
performs relative to other City schools (1/3 of
grade) and to a peer group of approximately 40
schools with similar demographics (2/3 of grade). - State assessments used to measure performance of
students over time. - Additional credit given to improved performance
among low achieving students and various
disaggregated groups. - Factors such as parent, student, and teacher
surveys credit accumulation PSAT scores used in
determining school grade.
34Challenges for SED
- Growing Pains
- Testing Times
- Vision 2020
- A Cart Before the Horse?
35Challenges Ahead for School Districts
- Immediate
- Single Grade 3-8 Performance Index makes schools
and districts responsible for more disaggregated
groups. - New standard setting for grade 3-8 assessments
may challenge middle schools even more. - Changes in testing practices for LEP students
require that bilingual education programs
emphasize rapid acquisition of English as well as
fluency in the native language. - New graduation standards will raise expectations
for middle schools and force high schools to
reveal hidden students. - Longer term
- If Governor and Legislature show school districts
the money, they are also going to demand that
districts show results.
36Challenges Ahead Lists, Lists, Lists
- How do we make all of these work together
- SURR
- SINI, DINI
- SRAP, DRAP
- IDEA Districts
- Title III AMAOs
- Persistently Dangerous Schools
- High School Initiative
- Highly Qualified Teachers
37This may be the Dawning of the Age of
Accountability
- Key Questions
- How do we design accountability models that
compel movement from awful to adequate without
impeding the movement from good to great? - How do we move from beating the odds to changing
the odds?
38More Information
- Ira Schwartz, Coordinator
- Office of School Improvement and Community
Services (NYC) - ischwart_at_mail.nysed.gov
- 718 722-2796
- Accountability PowerPoint for 2006-07
- http//www.emsc.nysed.gov/irts/accountability/2005
-06/accountability-rules-Nov2006_files/frame.htm - Manuals for NYS Student Identifier System and the
Repository System http//www.emsc.nysed.gov/irts/
SIRS/home.shtml