http://nepc.colorado.edu/blog/teacher-evaluation-going-bad
I just retired from teaching and am so glad. I saw the gradual slide into Evaluation craziness and am glad to be away from it. MASSIVE POVERTY IS THE ISSUE FOLKS, not bad teachers.
By Carol Burris
Sheri Lederman, is a gifted and beloved fourth-grade teacher in Great
Neck, New York. Her principal adores her and relies on her to help
mentor her colleagues. Over twice as many of her students have met the
state standard than the average percentage for the rest of the state.
Sheri is also a scholar. She received the 2012 H. Alan Robinson
Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation award for her research on how
10-year-olds learn science. Yet her growth score based on the results of
student Common Core standardized tests found her to be an “ineffective” teacher.
Under the present teacher evaluation system in New York, known as
APPR (Annual Professional Performance Review), she is not in danger of
losing her job. She was rated effective overall due to the
points she received on the local measure of her students’ achievement,
combined with those based on the observation of her teaching. But that
will change if Chancellor Merryl Tisch has her way. Sheri would be rated
ineffective overall, and one more such rating would get her fired.
New York Chancellor Merryl Tisch has announced her New Years
resolution—revise the teacher evaluation system so that Common Core 3-8
test scores can trump all. In a letter to Andrew Cuomo’s aide, Jim Malatras, she explains how she (speaking for herself, not necessarily the Board of Regents) wants APPR to change.
The system she wants to change is one that she created several years
ago with former education commissioner John King, which was put into law
by the New York Legislature and that was rushed into place by Gov.
Andrew Cuomo who denied districts state aid if they did not adopt it. It
became mandatory for teachers and principals to be evaluated in part by
student standardized test scores.
The short version of what she wants to do now is this—double down on
test scores and strip away the power of local school boards to negotiate
the majority of the evaluation plan. Tisch would get rid of the locally
selected measures of achievement, which now comprise 20 percent of the
evaluation, and double the state test score portion, to 40 percent. She
also recommends that the score ranges for the observation process be
taken out of the hands of local districts, and be determined by Albany
instead. Dr. Lederman, start packing up. Merryl Tisch and Andrew Cuomo,
whom you have never met, know your talents better than your local school
board, your principal and the parents of the children you teach.
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