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Monday, March 30, 2015

John Thompson: A Teacher Proposes a Different Framework for Accountability - Education Post

John Thompson: A Teacher Proposes a Different Framework for Accountability - Education Post:

John Thompson: A Teacher Proposes a Different Framework for Accountability







 Since Education Post publicly launched last September, we have had the privilege of getting to know people across the policy spectrum who are passionate about public education. Two in particular, Oklahoma teacher John Thompson and New York teacher Audrey Hill, are regular debaters in social media.

Though we agree on little, we strive to be respectful. Following a debate on accountability, we invited them to outline an alternative to the current system of test-based accountability. Thompson’s recommendation follows, and Hill’s can be found here.
I agree with Robert Pianta, dean of the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia, who says that Congress needs to find a way to “let 1,000 flowers bloom” and back away from a punitive approach to controlling schools. The federal government should hold states accountable for the validity and reliability of accountability protocols that are tied to federal money. It should concentrate on:
  1. Equity and improving outcomes (which, real world, can’t be predetermined by a statistical model) and/or opportunities for underserved persons, or those who have faced a history of discrimination or underachievement.
  2. Spurring innovation.
Also, in contrast to Race to the Top (RTT) and the School Improvement Grant (SIG) program, federal interventions should favor “win-win” experiments, not innovations that will inevitably hurt some children in an effort to help others.

State Accountability and Consequences

Many reformers have an inflated appraisal of what accountability systems can possibly accomplish. Accountability can help improve schools, but there is no reason to believe it can drive systemic school transformations for the better.
States should determine how much they want to invest in accountability and design their systems accordingly. If states can afford an “Inspectorate,” with highly-trained teams of inspectors who are armed with data when visiting schools, that would be ideal. If not, most states have always had inspection and accountability systems for individual districts and schools, and the federal government could incentivize the improvement and/or the funding of those systems.
Data-driven accountability undermines those goals by making the juking of the stats the #1 priority. However, federal and state governments should encourage collaboration and experimentation in data-informed accountability. It could borrow from data-driven crime fighting to use metrics to identify “hot spots” of schools, systems, or other areas that need additional patrols, or other forms of oversight. Data can be used to pinpoint places for extra scrutiny.
Teachers and principals also should be evaluated on their professional practice, as observed by trained, flesh-and-blood human beings, using rubrics and observation techniques developed by Pianta and others. We already have an evaluation model—early education—that could be applied to traditional public schools. I don’t believe it’s possible or desirable for pre-K-to-12 schools to keep track of as many metrics as the best early education programs use, but they show that it is possible to raise John Thompson: A Teacher Proposes a Different Framework for Accountability - Education Post: