VIDEO: Ensuring Every Student Succeeds: Opportunities and Challenges of ESSA

VIDEO: Ensuring Every Student Succeeds: Opportunities and Challenges of ESSA

Originally Published on Oct 4, 2016

This keynote address provided a high-level overview of major reauthorizations since the passage of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. It focused on the key priorities of the new Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), looking particularly at accountability systems, school improvement, teacher and leader quality, data collection and reporting, educational technology, and regulation. Maureen Wentworth, Director of the Education Data and Information Systems of the Council of Chief State School Officers, gave this address at the 2016 Pennsylvania Department of Education Data Summit.

The content of these videos does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Institute of Education Sciences or the U.S. Department of Education, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

WEBINAR: League of Education Voters: Washington’s Plan for the Every Student Succeeds Act

WEBINAR: League of Education Voters: Washington’s Plan for the Every Student Succeeds Act

Published on Aug 25, 2017

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), which goes into full effect in the 2018–19 school year, rolled back much of the federal government’s big footprint in education policy, on everything from testing and teacher quality to low-performing schools. And it gave new leeway to states in calling the shots. ESSA’s goal is ensure that every student, regardless of race, income, disability, ethnicity, or proficiency in English, is ready for a fulfilling career, college, and life.

Gayle Pauley, Assistant Superintendent for Special Programs and Accountability at the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI), outlines Washington’s ESSA plan and how you can get involved.

Moderated by LEV communications director Arik Korman.

NEW YORK: Parent Update from Commissioner Elia

NEW YORK: Parent Update from Commissioner Elia

Dear Parents,

Earlier this week, the State Education Department released the results of the 2017 Grades 3-8 English language arts (ELA) and mathematics tests. Overall, there was a modest improvement in scores statewide, which means we’re moving in the right direction. In ELA this year, the percentage of students in grades 3-8 who scored at the proficient level (Levels 3 and 4) increased by 1.9 percentage points to 39.8, up from 37.9 in 2016. In math, the percentage of students who scored at the proficient level increased this year to 40.2, up 1.1 percentage point from 39.1 in 2016.

This progress is a result of the hard work and dedication of our teachers, students, and parents. Thank you for all you do.

The achievement gap between black and Hispanic students and their white peers also narrowed slightly statewide for both ELA and math. For ELA, black students saw a 2.8-percentage-point increase in those achieving proficiency while Hispanic students experienced a 2.4-percentage-point increase. In both cases, the increases were greater than those seen by white students, who saw a 1.1-percentage-point increase statewide.

Math scores tell a similar story with increases made by black and Hispanic students outpacing those made by white students. Proficiency rates in math for black and Hispanic students went up by 1.4 and 1.3 percentages points, respectively, while proficiency rates for white students increased by only 0.4 percentage points. While these improvements are encouraging, we know there is still more work to be done to close these gaps.

Every Big 5 City made progress this year, with New York City’s ELA proficiency rate (40.6) now slightly exceeding the statewide rate (39.8). Of the Big 5, Yonkers made the biggest gains in proficiency in ELA and math, with a 3.6-percentage-point increase in ELA and a 3.7-percentage-point increase in math.

Charter schools and students who received ELL services prior to, but not during, the 2016-17 school year (“Ever ELLs”) had some of the largest gains in proficiency this year. ELA proficiency rates for Ever ELLs rose 5.5 percentage points to 45.2 percent, more than 5 points higher than the statewide rate. In math, Ever ELL proficiency increased by 3.2 percentage points to 46.8 percent, nearly 7 points higher than the statewide rate. Statewide proficiency rates for charter schools in ELA and math are now 45-percent and 48.2-percent, respectively, also above the statewide rates.

Overall, this news is promising – our students are moving in the right direction. However, black and Hispanic student scores still trail those of white and Asian students, and the ELA and math proficiency rates for English Language Learners and students with disabilities, while up, are still far too low. Our work to diminish these troubling gaps will continue by expanding prevention, early warning, and intervention programs through My Brother’s Keeper; implementation of the state’s ESSA plan; and our equity initiative.

Still, it is clear we must do more. It is also clear that test results don’t give us the complete picture of how well our schools are doing. For that reason, our draft ESSA plan takes a more holistic approach to accountability and considers multiple measures of school and student success, not just test results. We developed our draft plan in a way that was deliberate, inclusive, and transparent, and we took the same approach in making changes to our standards and assessments.

The press release about the 2017 results has more information, including data on 2017 test refusals, which dropped by 2 percentage points. Additionally, a video of me discussing the results  is available as well as district- and school-level results.

I hope you enjoy the rest of your summer vacation. Savor the remaining days as much as possible because the first day of school will be here very soon.

As always, thank you for reading.

Sincerely,

MaryEllen Elia
Commissioner

New Federal Rule Could Force States to Lower Graduation Rates

New Federal Rule Could Force States to Lower Graduation Rates

By

August 25, 2017

A little-noticed change in the country’s main federal education law could force many states to lower their high school graduation rates, a politically explosive move no state would relish.

Indiana is the first state to be caught in the crosshairs of the law’s new language, but other states are likely to be affected soon. The resulting debate could throw a sharp spotlight on a topic that’s been lurking in the wings: the wildly varying levels of accomplishment signified by a high school diploma.

“This is about to become a national issue,” said Phillip Lovell, the policy director of the Alliance for Excellent Education, an advocacy group that focuses on high school issues.

In Indiana, the state faces the prospect of having to lower its graduation rate from 89 percent to 76 percent, a move its state superintendent fears could harm its economy and reputation.

The state’s in a bind because it offers several types of high school diplomas, and some are easier to earn than others. Half of Indiana’s students earn the default college-prep diploma, known as the Core 40. Thirty-eight percent earn the Core 40 with honors, and 12 percent earn the “general” diploma, which has lesser requirements.

Diplomas with less-rigorous requirements are the target of new language in the Every Student Succeeds Act. The law requires states to calculate their graduation rates by including only “standard” diplomas awarded to a “preponderance” of students, or diplomas with tougher requirements.

For Indiana, that means the state might not be able to count its general diplomas. State officials are in talks with the U.S. Department of Education about that prospect. Indiana Superintendent of Schools Jennifer McCormick also reached out to Indiana’s congressional delegation for help, saying in a letter last month that the lower graduation rate will put Indiana “at a national disadvantage” and would “not reflect well upon our state and could negatively impact our economy.”

Officials from the federal Education Department declined to discuss how they would interpret the ESSA language. In an email to Education Week, a spokesman said only that the department would provide “technical assistance” to states as they complied with the law, and that states can consult federal guidance issued in January on the law’s graduation-rate provisions.

The preponderance language in ESSA is only now beginning to creep onto states’ radars. The exact number that could be affected isn’t clear, although a recent report found that 23 states offer multiple pathways to a diploma. Many states offer multiple types of high school diplomas, though most don’t track—or publicly report—how many students earn each type.

In Arkansas, two-thirds of students graduate with the state’s “smart core” diploma, and one-third earn its less-rigorous “core” diploma.

In New York state, 4 percent of graduates get a “local” diploma, which isn’t as rigorous as its “regents” and “advanced” diplomas. In Oregon, 3.7 percent of students earn a “modified” diploma, which is intended for students with a “demonstrated inability” to meet all the state’s academic expectations.

“The idea is to create a pathway toward a diploma for students with significant challenges,” Jennell Ives, a program specialist with Oregon’s department of education, explained in an email.

Diplomas that signify less-than-rigorous academic preparation, however, were the express target of the new requirement in ESSA. No such language was in the previous version of the law, the No Child Left Behind Act.

“We were trying to address concerns about those weaker diplomas, to put a signal in there to drive states to make sure that diplomas were really preparing students for success,” said a Senate aide who helped draft the Every Student Succeeds Act.

‘Make the Most Difference’

Advocates for lower-income and minority students, and those with disabilities, were key voices at the table when that section of the bill was being drafted. Those students tend to earn disproportionate shares of the lower-level diplomas.

“We wanted the language in ESSA to make the most difference for those students,” said Laura Kaloi, who participated in the talks on behalf of the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, a special-education advocacy group.

By inserting the preponderance language into ESSA, its authors pushed federal law into a new area: linking graduation rates to the quality of the diplomas, not just to how many diplomas are awarded.

A 2008 regulation broke new ground by requiring all states to calculate graduation rates the same way: by counting the proportion of entering freshmen who completed school four years later.

That regulation also ventured into new territory by tackling the related idea of which diplomas should be counted. It said states could count only “regular” diplomas, not alternative or equivalency credentials.

The concept of diploma quality was on policymakers’ minds as they sat down to write the accountability section of the Every Student Succeeds Act. There was “a lot of bipartisan agreement” that the idea of counting only regular diplomas should finally be written into federal law, the Senate aide said.

“You could see this as being about states that have to lower their graduation rates, or about trying to be honest about our graduation rates.”Phillip Lovell, Alliance for Excellent Education

“This is new. For a long time, federal officials have been focusing on graduation rates without caring what a diploma actually means,” said Michael Cohen, who was the assistant secretary of elementary and secondary education under President Bill Clinton and now heads Achieve, a group that has researched the wide variety in states’ diploma requirements.

Allowing states to report graduation rates based only on regular diplomas, and diplomas that require more rigorous study, is long overdue, according to Lovell of the Alliance for Excellent Education.

States could well feel the sting of public disapproval if they have to revise their graduation rates downward, but the resulting shift in message justifies the discomfort, he said.

“The statute calls for honesty,” he said. “We’re finally being honest about what a diploma means.”

But Lovell also worries that an unintended consequence of the law is that states could lower their regular-diploma requirements to keep their graduation-rate numbers high.

‘Perverse Incentives?’

Other consequences are already unfolding, showing up first in Indiana.

The state has long been recognized as a leader in getting students to complete college-prep courses of study: 88 percent take the four years of English and three years of math—through Algebra 2—that are widely viewed as a “college-ready” curricula.

Yet Indiana might have to pay the price of lowering its graduation rate because it chose not to require college-prep study for all. That situation strikes Cohen as creating “perverse incentives” for states to award less-rigorous diplomas to a “preponderance” of their students.

“States that do the best job of getting kids to take advanced coursework could be the ones at greatest risk under this policy,” he said. “They’ve succeeded their way into trouble.”

Lovell begs to differ. “You could see this as being about states that have to lower their graduation rates or about trying to be honest about our graduation rates,” he said. “Indiana is stepping up and being honest.”

Activists may differ on whether the preponderance requirements in ESSA are a step in the right direction. But they agree on another, more ironic truth, which is that the law will fall short of ensuring that all high school diplomas mean students are ready to do well in college.

Even among the many states that offer only one type of diploma, what students achieved to earn that diploma can vary wildly. Still, those states are unlikely to be affected by the preponderance requirement of ESSA, since all students earn the same diploma.

In Massachusetts, for instance, 77 percent of students complete a course of study that reflects the expectations of the University of Massachusetts. The rest finish high school with other assortments of courses. Yet all students earn the same diploma, said state education department spokeswoman Jacqueline Reis.

The same situation holds true in Maryland, where most students finish coursework geared to state university requirements, and the rest don’t, but all walk across the graduation stage with the same type of diploma.

In Oklahoma, students are automatically placed in the college-ready curriculum and remain there unless they opt into a less-rigorous one. But only the tougher course of study requires three years of math—through Algebra 2. And all Oklahoma students earn the same high school diploma, a state education department spokeswoman said.

New Federal Limits under ESSA Impact Some Special Education Students in MA

New Federal Limits under ESSA Impact Some Special Education Students in MA

By Gerry Tuoti
Wicked Local Newsbank Editor
Posted Aug 25, 2017 at 12:30 PM
Updated Aug 25, 2017 at 3:23 PM

THE ISSUE: Some students with severe disabilities take an alternative to the MCAS. THE IMPACT: A new federal requirement caps the number of students who can take the alternative assessment, and Massachusetts is over that limit.

New federal limits on the number of students allowed to take an alternative to the state’s MCAS exam could have significant impacts for some special education students in Massachusetts.

The federal Every Student Succeeds Act, the successor to No Child Left Behind, includes a requirement that no more than 1 percent of public school students in any state take the alternative assessment instead of the state’s standardized exam. Proponents of the cap say the vast majority of special education students are able to take the standard exam with accommodations, and that taking the alternative assessment in early grades could put students on a track that could delay or hinder the eventual attainment of a high school diploma.

In Massachusetts, more than 1.6 percent of students currently take the alternative assessment, or MCAS-Alt, primarily due to severe cognitive disabilities.

“Obviously, if a student is required to take MCAS, even with accommodations, if it’s not developmentally appropriate for the student, it’s going to have an impact on them,” said Jim Major, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of Approved Private Schools, an organization of schools that educates severely disabled students whose educational needs cannot be met by their public schools.

Massachusetts is seeking a one-year waiver from the cap on the number of students taking the alternative assessment. The Department of Elementary and Secondary Education expects to hear a decision from the federal government in early fall.

“I think what they’re proposing is not a fix; it’s another delay,” said Kathleen Boundy, executive director of the Boston-based Center for Law and Education.

When a student has special needs or a disability, a team meets to create an individualized education program, or IEP, that outlines how the public school can best accommodate him or her. The IEP team, which includes educators, psychologists and parents, is responsible for deciding, among other issues, whether the student will take the standard MCAS exam.

Roughly 10 percent of special education students are designated for the alternative assessment, which is intended for students with the most severe cognitive disabilities, such as nonverbal impairments, traumatic brain injury…

Read the full story here…

 

New York Releases 3 ESSA Waiver Requests

New York Releases 3 ESSA Waiver Requests

Public Comments to Proposed Waivers

The New York State Education Department is requesting comments on three proposed waivers of statutory requirements of Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), as amended by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), for possible submission to the United States Department of Education in conjunction with New York’s ESSA plan. Comments can be submitted via e-mail to ESSAComments@nysed.gov  with “ESSA Comments from (sender/organization name)” in the subject line. Comments submitted via mail should be sent to the attention of Dr. Lisa Long, New York State Education Department, Office of Accountability, 4th Floor, 55 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, New York 11217. Comments will be accepted through close of business on September 8, 2017.

RECENT UPDATES

New York State Board of Regents – July 2017 Presentation Documents

ESSA Public Hearings – May and June 2017

COMMENT ON New York’s ESSA PLAN

In person at: An ESSA Public Hearing

ESSA Public Hearing Schedule and LocationsAdobe (to be updated as information is received)

Via E-Mail: ESSAComments@nysed.gov

Via US Postal Service:

New York State Education Department
ATTN: ESSA Comments
Office of Accountability, Rm 400
55 Hanson Place
Brooklyn, New York 11217
Comment Period:
Tuesday, May 9, 2017 – Friday, June 16, 2017

Confused About Where Your State’s ESSA Plan Stands? We’re Here to Help

Confused About Where Your State’s ESSA Plan Stands? We’re Here to Help

With the flurry of news about states’ plans for the Every Student Succeeds Act, are you confused about where things actually stand? We’re here to help end your confusion.

Over at Education Week’s detailed state ESSA plan tracker, we’ve just added a new map that shows the status of each state’s plan. There are three categories: one for states that haven’t submitted their plans to the U.S. Department of Education yet, one for states that have gotten feedback on their plans from the Education Department, and one for states whose plans have gotten final approval from the feds…

Read the full article here. May require an Education Week subscription.

Maryland State Board Approves ESSA Plan, Submits to Gov. for Review

Maryland State Board Approves ESSA Plan, Submits to Gov. for Review

The Maryland state Board of Education is at odds over how it wants to grade schools using a five-star rating system.

For now, Maryland is sticking with a five-star rating system to determine which schools will get passing grades. The Board of Education passed the education plan Tuesday with a 7-2 vote.

This is all part of new federal requirements for the Every Student Succeeds Act. The state plan still needs approval from the U.S. Department of Education.

Discussion Tuesday lasted nearly two hours as state Board of Education members try to come up with a final school accountability plan that spells out how Maryland schools will be graded in the future.

“We need to empower parents with clarity of information so they can say, ‘Why is my school one star? What are you doing to change it?’ Or, ‘Oh my goodness, my school is a five star,'” said Andrew Smarick, president of the Board of Education.

For now, the star-rating system will stay in place, but with some minor adjustments. The state will now add arrows next to the stars to help explain school-by-school progress.

“The more we can get up front in terms of information, the better we can serve parents,” said David Steiner, a member of the Board of Education.

The latest revisions to the ESSA draft plan are getting a nod from the state’s teachers union when it comes to overall school rankings.

“We are not just using testing to provide resources and support to schools, we are now going to look at all of those things; all of the indicators and supports that schools need to really address them instead of just a test,” said Cheryl Bost, president of the Maryland State Education Association.

But some Board of Education members said the recent changes made to the grading system may not go far enough.

“We cannot create a system in which we are misleading people that their kid is going to a great school if it’s not or if they’re going to a bad school if it is,” said Chester Finn, a member of the Board of Education.

The Board of Education must submit its final education plan to the federal government by Sept. 18.