Last evening, Commissioner Elia released a new list of schools and whether
they are in good standing, or identified for Comprehensive support (supposed to
be applied to the lowest 5% of schools, according to the formula used in NYS
ESSA plan) or targeted support (supposed to be applied to the lowest 10% of
schools.)
The full list and more info is available here. Schools identified for
comprehensive support will receive an unspecified amount of extra money from the state to self-evaluate
and implement their choice of “evidence-based” improvements from a list
of options supplied to by NYSED, as explained in Chalkbeat here:
Eighty-four
of the city’s schools are on the lowest rung — known as “Comprehensive Support
and Improvement Schools” — and will be required to craft improvement plans
approved by the state. The remaining 40 schools are only in need of “targeted”
support and will face less intense oversight.
The lowest-performing schools were
identified partly because they were in the bottom 10 percent of schools across
the state on a combined measure of growth and proficiency on state tests — the
biggest factor that went into their rating. For the first time, state officials
also took into account science exams, progress on a test taken by English
learners, and rates of chronic absenteeism.At the high school level, graduation played a big role, and any school that did not graduate 67 percent of its students within six years was automatically identified. New measures of college and career readiness were also factored in.
Five of the NYC schools identified as needing comprehensive support (CSI) schools are charters: New
Visions Charter High School For Humanities II, New Visions Aim Charter High School II, New Dawn Charter HS, Opportunity Charter School, and New Visions Charter High School For Humanities II.
How schools’
opt out rates figure into their identification is unclear, according to the official account offered by Ira Schwartz of NYSED.
To the right and above are the only NYC districts in Good
standing - meaning they have no schools needing comprehensive support. The list of struggling schools and districts is surprising
in many ways. Several schools are identified as needing Comprehensive support despite the fact that all their student subgroups are listed as in good standing, which I don't understand either.
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