At last night's Board meeting the Board of Education  approved the contract for Bruce Watkins and he joined the Board for his  first meeting with us.   At the meeting, we also received results of our  new educational accountability system, which is based on learning  scorecards (also called vision cards).   The information that we  received is much a more powerful and meaningful report on student  achievement across the district by grade level in math and reading than a  Board of Education has ever received in our school district.  We looked  at results for grades K-9 for the entire district and we looked at the  results by school. 
 The test results say that in the majority  of grades, in both math and reading, students are making above average  progress as compared to students in other schools.  The reports also  showed us a few grades where students are not making acceptable progress  as compared to other schools across the nation.   District and school  leadership, and teachers as well, will be using this information to fix  what needs to be fixed and to reinforce what is working.   The  testing results is shining a light on student progress in a way  that  we've never seen before, and it is going to give us the information that  we need to identify exactly where we are doing well, and where we need  to make significant improvements.  
Our  accountability system is based on  the highly respected NWEA MAP test,  which allows us to measure growth at the individual student level, at  the classroom level, at the school level and across the district.  You  can find out more about how this nationally normed testing system works  by clicking HERE.     NWEA testing norms are based on a population  of over one million students who take the tests.  Parents who want to  understand more about the NWEA testing system can download the "parent  toolkit" at the main NWEA testing website.
A  student's reading and math scores in a MAP test are reported as RIT  scores.  The RIT score is grade independent; it is a scale that you  might compare to a yardstick.   Imagine that you have posted the  yardstick on your wall and as your child grows, you measure growth in  inches.  Every inch of growth is worth the same amount of growth.  In  the same way, growth can be measured against the RIT scale.  When a  parent receives the math and reading RIT scores, it comes with  information on (a) the child's score at the beginning of the year, and  then at the end of the school year, (b) RIT scores from last year (when  available), (c) the typical RIT scores for children in the same grade,  and all other grades, so that the parent can see where the student is  located in both math and reading.    The parent can also compare their  students growth during the school year to the average growth of other  students. 
This system provides accountability tools to the  district leadership, but it also provides superb reporting to parents.    Students now take the MAP test in math and reading three times a year.   The teacher and the parent gets information on where each student is in  the fall, winter and Spring at the end of the year.  No more does the  parent hear vague generalities about student progress. 
The  reports that we received last night provided us with school by school  information on how much progress students are making. The  statistics show us the percentage of students in each of four  categories: (1) the percentage whose annual growth  was below the  typical rate of growth for similar students and whose scores were below  projected proficiency.  These are students who started the school year  behind, and who didn't make enough progress during the school year as  compared to other students.   (2) The percentage of students who's  annual growth was greater than average, but who are still behind average  proficiency.  These are students who came to school behind, but made  more than a year's progress.  They are still behind, but they are on the  road to catching up.  (3) The percentage of students who perform above  projected proficiency, and who also had more than a year's growth.   These are kids who are doing very well, and are actually getting  further ahead.  NWEA monitors this, because of course we want to make  sure that all students are growing and all students are challenged, even  the students who are already doing well.  (4) The percentage of  students who perform at above average proficiency, but who didn't grow  as much as they were expected to grow.
It might be helpful to  understand the kind of data that we are getting to look at the results  of one school, Madison.   They showed that 12 percent of the students at  Madison fell into category 1--students who are behind projected  proficiency and who did not make average progress.   Fourteen percent of  Madison students fell into category 2, that is, they were behind  required proficiency but made more than one year's gains during the  year.  That is, they were on the road to catching up. Fully 53 percent of students at Madison were  in category (3).  These are  students who scored above expected proficiency and also displayed above  average educational growth.  The remaining students, 15 percent,  performed at above average proficiency, but failed to make the expected  amount of growth. These are students who are doing "well enough" but who  need to make more progress to maintain their proficiency over the  years. 
We received similar data for every school in the  district.  As I said, in most grades, we saw that students are making  above average progress as compared to students across the country, but  in a few grades they are not.  Using this districts, principals and  teachers can now work together to compare the progress that they are  making, grade by grade, classroom by classroom, student by student, and  that's exactly what they are doing.  They get this information at the  beginning of the year and in the middle.  They don't have to wait until  the end of the year to discover that there are kids who are falling  behind.  They get just in time data that allows teachers and school  leadership to take corrective action. 
Finally, this tool gives  us the ability to compare what is happening in each school throughout  the district, and in each grade from year to year.  The idea is that  these first results give us a baseline to work from and to attack our  problems to improve next year. 
Time for a Public Discussion on Delivering a Constitutionally Adequate education to Minnesota
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