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Title: Change in Educational Accountability


1
Change in Educational Accountability
  • How will New Accountability Measures improve
    Instructional Practice to meet the needs of 21st
    Century Students?

Presented By Marisa Forbes, Kevin McGoey,
Patricia Griffin, Patricia Gitto, Weedens
Blanchard
2
Accountability in Education
  • Problem Statement
  • In what ways do new accountability measures
    reflect best practices of current research in
    order to improve the quality of teacher
    instruction and student performance?

3
Accountability
  • What the best and wisest parent wants for his
    own child, that the community must want for all
    of its children. Any other ideal for our schools
    is narrow and unlovely. Acted upon, it destroys
    our democracy.
  • John Dewey

4
How Does the Achievement of American Students
Compare to that of Students in Other Countries in
2007?
  • US 4th graders average math score was higher than
    23 of the other 35 educational systems and
    closely similar to the other remaining 4 systems
    Asian/Europe systems outperformed the US 4th
    graders.
  • US 8th graders average math score was higher than
    37 of 47 educational systems and was outperformed
    by Asia.
  • PISA 2007

5
How Does the Achievement of American Students
Compare to that of Students in Other Countries in
2009?
  • In reading literacy, US 15 yr. olds are ranked
    14th among 34 educational systems and are well
    below average at 25th in mathematics.
  • US 8th graders average science score was higher
    than 35 of 47 educational systems and was
    outperformed by Asia and Europe.
  • Finland, Korea and Canada are consistent high
    performers.
  • Shanghai (China) ranked top globally.
  • PISA 2009

6
Accountability in Education
  • Making an education system responsible for the
    performance of students in school and is
    associated with long-standing efforts to measure
    cognitive aptitude and ability. (RTT)
  • In current educational contexts, the concept
    carries with it the idea that individuals,
    organizations and the community not only are
    responsible for their actions, but must also
    answer for their performance to an outside
    authority that, in turn, may impose a penalty for
    failure to the teacher, the school, the district
    and NY State (RTT).

7
Past Accountability Measures
  • 1965-The Elementary and Secondary Education Act
    (ESEA) proposed large scale funding and grants
    for education.
  • It was passed as part of President Lyndon B.
    Johnsons Legislation Act of 1965. It was
    initially called War on Poverty.

8
Past Accountability Measures
  • 1983-A Nation at Risk
  • Found the low quality of public education in the
    U.S.A was endangering the
  • countrys ability to compete internationally.
  • Sought to incentivize states to set academic
    standards, administer tests to
  • determine whether students met those standards,
    and design
  • accountability measures to reward successful
    schools and punish failing
  • ones.
  • Pushed the nation further towards accountability
    and resulted in
  • more federal role in education.

9
1990s-The Decade Of Accountability
  • Reauthorization of Individuals with Disabilities
    Education Act 1997 all students with
    disabilities must participate in the state
    assessments WITHOUT the use of all of their
    testing accommodations.
  • Alternate Assessment for less than 1 of students
    with disabilities.

10
2000-NCLB
  • States had to drastically increase the amount of
    tests given.
  • Graduation and attendance rates were used to
    evaluate schools.
  • AYP introduced-Annual Yearly Progress, yardstick
    that measures how schools progress towards
    proficiency. All public schools must meet AYP
    for title 1 funding.
  • Over the past 20 years evaluation and
    accountability has shifted from being a primarily
    federally mandated activity imposed on state to
    being a self-imposed activity because of the
    realization that evaluation can be a helpful
    partner in education.

11
Current Accountability Measures
  • K-12
  • NCLB (GW Bush)
  • Race to the Top (Obama)
  • Annual Professional Performance Review (APPR)
  • Requires school districts and BOCES to annually
    evaluate the performance of probationary and
    tenured teachers and principals providing
    instructional and pupil personnel services.

12
Types of Accountability
  • Procedural
  • Responsibility in conducting activities according
    to prevailing expectations.
  • Consequential
  • Responsibility for the consequences or the
    results of ones actions-whether positive or
    negative.

13
Sources of Accountability
  • Bureaucratic
  • Legal
  • Professional
  • Political
  • Market-based

14
Race to the Top (RTT)
  • RTT focused itself on four main areas of
    accountability
  • - Developing effective teachers and leaders by
    retaining, developing, and
  • rewarding effective teachers.
  • - Improving low-achieving schools.
  • - Expanding student data systems that measure
    student growth and success,
  • which inform teachers about how they can
    improve instruction.
  • - Enhancing standards and assessments that
    prepare students for college and
  • workplace. By adopting Common Standards and
    implementing high quality
  • assessments.

15
RTT
  • New York enacted new education reform laws which
  • - expanded or linked student data systems.
  • - required teachers and principals evaluations
    to be based on
  • student academic growth. New York plans to
    spend 2.6
  • million to adopt a student growth model which
    will measure
  • annual changes in individual student
    achievement and link
  • them performance of the teacher.
  • - seek to increase the states ability to
    improve its lowest-
  • achieving schools.
  • - professional development to improve skills of
    teachers.

16
RTT and NYS teacher effectiveness,
accountability, and advanced licensure
Use outcome based performance indicators such s
student achievement, persistence in teaching
(teacher retention rates/turnover), and
production of teachers. Evaluated teacher
preparation programs effectiveness of colleges
and publically report. New York's proposal to
RTT says that the Board of Regents will adopt a
policy that prohibits teachers who are not rated
as effective in the classroom from obtaining
professional certification and continuing to
teach. Will develop and implement a new
professional certification process for teachers
by 2013 to ensure above mentioned criteria.
17
Who are subject to APPR Regulations?
  • All teachers/principals providing instructional
    services
  • Nonacademic and vocational subjects are exempt.

18
APPR plan must include specific procedures
  • Methods include
  • Classroom observation
  • Videotape assessment
  • Self review
  • Peer review
  • Portfolio review
  • Student's value-based and Standardized test
    scores
  • Points add up culminating in a scaled rating for
    staff and principals
  • Ineffective/Developing/Effective/Highly Effective

19
Feedback to Staff Regarding Instructional
Performance
  • Pre/Post Observations (during school year)
  • Annual Evaluation (June to allow for receipt of
    SED scores)
  • Student's assessment scores (June)
  • Value added analysis (during school year)
  • Professional Staff Development
  • Teacher Improvement Plan (TIP) for Ineffective
    and Developing teachers (due in the first two
    weeks in September developed by building
    principal for all required staff developed by
    Superintendent or designee for principals)

20
Current Accountability MeasuresHigher Education
(Prevailing Issues)
  • The eroding belief that Higher Education is a
    public good for all Americans, not just a private
    benefit for college graduates.
  • Business leaders question the responsiveness of
    colleges and universities to market forces in a
    changing economy.
  • Beleaguered presidents and chancellors accuse
    accountability advocates for demanding more
    services while supplying less support.
  • Civic Culture pushes political accountability,
    insisting colleges and universities must serve
    public purposes unfortunately, this culture also
    periodically slides into doing the bidding of the
    party in power.
  • Academic Culture presses for professional
    accountability, or faculty participation, as
    essential to effective governance occasionally,
    it produces gridlock in campus decision making
    and neglects societal needs.
  • Market Accountability advocates argue that
    colleges and universities must respond to client
    needs sometimes, however, they divert higher
    education from fundamental purposes toward market
    fads.

21
Burton Clarks Accountability Triangle
State Priorities
  • State Priorities-public needs and desires for
    higher education programs and services.
  • Academic Concerns-issues and interests of the
    academic community.
  • Market Forces-cover the customer needs and
    demands of students, parents, and businesses, as
    well as other clients of colleges and
    universities.

Academic Concerns (Professional)
Market Forces (Market)
22
Current Accountability Measures
  • Higher Education
  • Market Accountability- States leave more
    directions and cost of higher education to
    private markets.
  • Presidents, Vice Presidents, and Trustees are
    responsible for meeting state and public needs in
    student access and attainment, economic
    development and public service.
  • Decentralized departmentsbolsters autonomy

23
Current Accountability Measures
  • Higher Education (Bridging the Gap)
  • Distance between stakeholders and academics
    undermines the one characteristic that everyone
    sees as essential to balancing accountability and
    autonomy trust.

24
Current Accountability MeasuresHigher Education
(Bridging the Gap)
  • A public agenda prepared by top business,
    civic, government, and education leaders that
    identifies what your state needs most from higher
    education and includes prioritized goals,
    performance indicators, benchmark targets, and
    timetables.
  • Participation in the development and
    implementation of the agenda by private and
    public colleges and universities as well as
    public schools.
  • A focus on external results, not internal
    operations of colleges and universities, to
    produce external accountability while preserving
    institutional autonomy.

25
Current Accountability MeasuresHigher Education
(Bridging the Gap)
  • A commitment to adequate and sustained funding
    from public and private sources commensurate with
    the public agenda, with lower targets but not
    less worthy ultimate goals when budgets must be
    cut.
  • An integrated plan that connects accountability
    programs and their implementation at the state,
    system, and institutional levels.
  • A balanced approach to public funding and
    tuition, coupled with financial aid that ensures
    access and affordability in private and public
    institutions.
  • An appreciation of the contribution to the public
    agenda from all types of colleges and
    universities, based on mission performance not
    mission levels.
  • An integrated plan that connects accountability
    programs and their implementation at the state,
    system and institutional levels.
  • Five-year reviews of progress and revisions when
    necessary to meet new needs.

26
Content Analysis
  • Research methodology that examines words or
    phrases within a wide range of texts. 
  • Research literature
  • Hargreaves principles of sustainable
    leadership teach-learn-assess Finland model
  • Elmore culture of authority on schools core
    (teacher and students) vs. shell (federal/state
    and local authority) school setting and shared
    culture
  • Darling-Hammond reliance on testing as reform
    vs. reliance on comprehensive reform agenda

27
Effect of Increased Accountability Measures on
Teacher Retention/Mobility
  • The process of evaluating schools on the basis of
    student performance and providing rewards or
    sanctions associated with good or poor
    performance has led to an increase in social
    pressure because financial reasons drive school
    accountability ratings tend to be capitalized
    into housing values (indirect accountability).
  • Evidence has showed that accountability systems
    have led schools to become more productive.
  • Evidence has also showed that accountability
    pressures have resulted in strategic behavior
    with questionable educational benefit.

28
Effect of Increased Accountability Measures on
Teacher Retention/Mobility
- Some schools have responded by reclassifying
low-achieving students as learning disabled so
their scores will not count against
accountability systems. - Study in Virginia found
that there school districts altered their school
nutrition programs on testing days. - Jacob
and Levitt (2003) found that teachers are more
likely to cheat and cause schools to behave
differently. - Good teachers leave schools that
are deemed failing Studies found that
accountability systems face more pressure on
schools that perform well under the pressure to
maintain those high scores than low-
achieving schools. (Goldhaber Hannaway,
2004). - Boyd (2005) found that the introduction
of mandated state testing in New York led to an
increased rate of teacher turnover.
29
Has the Change in Accountability Standards paid
off?
  • Against Standards-Based Assessment
  • Educators must learn to do new things in the
    setting in which they work (Elmore, 2004).
  • Illusory emphasis on instruction (Cross City
    Campaign, 2005).
  • Multiple choice testing represents an outdated
    behaviorist view of learning (Pokewitz et al.).
  • Superficial responses of high stakes testing as a
    motivator (Darling-Hammond, 2002).

30
New Accountability Measures The
Change Process
  • What factors influence change?
  • How can instructional leaders build capacity for
    change?

31
The Concept of Change
  • Change is a process, not an event. It can be
    planned or unplanned and can be influenced by
    forces inside and outside of the schoolhouse.

32
The Capacity for Change
  • The level of dissatisfaction the stakeholders are
    experiencing with current conditions.
  • The short and long term costs.
  • The extent to which individuals understand the
    vision to be achieved by the change.
  • The consequences of the change.
  • The degree of difficulty in making the change.

33
The Capacity for Change
  • For the school leader to make change that is
    effective and sustained, producing the least
    amount of conflict, the school must have a
    capacity for change.
  • If the capacity for the desired change is absent,
    the leader can build capacity.

34
Building a Capacity for Change
  • Establish effective lines of communication.
  • Secure community support.
  • Acquire support for the new program concept.
  • Drive fear out of the schoolhouse.

35
Building A Capacity For Change
  • Work out bargaining agreements.
  • Acquire necessary approval from all agencies.
  • Identify sources of needed resources.
  • Become knowledgeable of effective change
    strategies.

36
Fullans Change Agent Theory
  • The leader establishes readiness for change by
    identifying and creating four leadership
    capacities.
  • These leadership capacities must be compatible
    with four organizational capacities.

37
Leadership Capacities
  • Personal Vision
  • Inquiry
  • Mastery
  • Collaboration

38
Organizational Counterparts
  • Shared vision building
  • Organizational structure
  • Norms and practices of inquiry
  • Organizational development

39
Shared Vision
  • Every individual in the organization has a
    vision, and that vision causes each individual to
    raise questions about his/her role in the change
    process and to take a stand for a preferred
    future.

40
Inquiry
  • Individuals internalize norms, habits, and
    techniques for continuous learning.
  • The individual continuously checks, views, and
    assesses the initial mental map to make sure it
    fits.

41
Mastery
  • Individuals clarify what is important and clearly
    see current reality.

42
Collaboration
  • Forming productive mentoring and peer
    relationships, team building, and developing
    partnerships

43
Change in Accountability Efforts should
  • Use standards and authentic assessments of
    student achievement as indicators of progress to
    improve teaching and provide needed supports.
  • Expand performance components that provide tests
    worth teaching to (Resnick).
  • Eliminate artificial testing barriers to students
    demonstrating what they know to the fullest
    extent possible.
  • (Jacobsen, Rothstein Wilder, 2008).

44
Change in Accountability Efforts should
  • Develop systems that include multiple measures.
  • Require and fund diagnostics for students who are
    not succeeding.
  • Use accountability to upgrade teaching and
    provide the kinds of professional development
    opportunities, curriculum reforms and resource
    allocations that standards-based reform
    anticipates.
  • (Jacobsen, Rothstein Wilder, 2008).

45
Change in Accountability Efforts should
  • Avoid establishing absolute outcome goals.
  • Ensure that all public institutions make
    appropriate contributions to youth development.
  • Not all traits for which schools should be held
    accountable can be measured by paper-and-pencil
    tests. (Jacobsen, Rothstein Wilder, 2008).

46
Future Implications
  • More intense focus on teacher quality and teacher
    preparation programs.
  • Encourage performance based evaluations.
  • Institute peer review systems and teacher
    mentoring systems.
  • More community decision-making.
  • Continue to reform the reforms.

47
References
  • Burke, J. C. (2011). Balancing all sides of the
    accountability triangle. 18-22.
  • Darling-Hammond, L. (2002). Standards,
    Assessments, and Educational Policy In Pursuit
    of Genuine Accountability. Educational Testing
    Services.
  • Darling-Hammond, L. (2006). Standards,
    Assessments, and Educational Policy In pursuit
    of genuine accountability. Princeton, N.J. ETS
  • Elmore, R. Reform and the culture of authority in
    schools. Educational Administration Quarterly.
    Vol. 23. No.4 (Nov. 1987) 60-78.
  • Green, R.E. (2009). Practicing the art of
    leadership a problem-based approach to
    implementing the ISLLC standards. Boston, MA
    Allyn Bacon.

48
References
  • Hargreaves, A. (2007). School leadership for
    systemic improvement in finland. helsinki,
    finland. Ministry of Education.
  • Heim, M. (n.d.). Accountability in education A
    Primer for School Leaders. Pacific Resources for
    Education and Learning (PREL). Retrieved
    September 28, 2011, from http//www.prel.org/produ
    cts/products/accountability.htm
  • Jacobsen, R. (2008, October 20). Grading
    education Getting accountability right. Economic
    Policy Institute. Retrieved
    September 28, 2011, from http//www.epi.org/public
    ation/books_grading_education/
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