Showing posts with label pandemic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pandemic. Show all posts

Thursday, September 1, 2022

NAEP results released today fueling bitter debate over remote learning and false prescriptions to address decline

Results of the long-term NAEP exams for 9 year old students, showing a sharp decline in test scores between 2020 and 2022, has re-fueled the already incendiary debate about whether closing schools even temporarily during the height of the pandemic was the right decision, or whether as Nate Silver argued, “it produced once of the biggest policy disasters in a generation.” 

At the time, in March of 2020, with our hospitals full and Covid victims dropping like flies left and right and virologists and epidemiologists begging the Mayor to close our schools, it certainly seemed like the right decision.   

 Even now, as Commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Dr. Peggy Carr pointed out today at a NAEP online briefing,  the pandemic had many effects that transcended school closures that could have had negative impacts on learning and test scores, including death of family members, their loss of jobs, and widespread illness and absentees, including of students themselves.   

Moreover, the results from the long-term NAEP itself are so far unclear that remote instruction was the primary factor.   For example, there was no drop in average reading scores in cities – where there were more frequent school closures, though the declines were significant in suburbs and towns.  

Fewer kids learned remotely in Midwest compared to Northeast, according to surveys undertaken in conjunction with the NAEPs.  Yet the average declines in math and reading in those parts of the country were about the same. 





The student ethnic group that was most likely to learn remotely was Asian – and yet that group also exhibited no statistically significant decline in reading or math scores.

Even if a rigorous analysis eventually concludes that those students who engaged in remote learning were also most likely to have low scores compared to years past, it is difficult to retroactively judge that closing schools during the height of the pandemic was the wrong decision at that time.

The other unfortunate response to the test score decline is the prescription from “experts” on how to address it.  In the NY Times, Martin West proclaimed that the only solution was an “ increase instructional time” through a longer school day or year, even though the research on this measure is very weak, as I’ve written about here and here. It has been tried repeatedly and failed in NYC schools, including in the Renewal schools.  US students already spend more time in the classroom than those in most every other country.  Moreover, last year about $600 million in federal funds remained unspent in NYC schools, much of that for extended instructional time in the form of  afterschool and Saturday “recovery programs”.  Many students didn’t want to attend these classes, and most teachers who already felt burnt out didn’t want to teach them.

After years of steady progress, NAEP scores had already begun to  flatten, with stagnant or declining test scores in reading and math in nearly all states in the decade since 2009.   These results, as I argued here, were most likely a consequence of the lingering impact of  the great recession, which led to class size increases and thousands of teacher jobs lost, and the imposition of the Common Core standards.  As might be expected, the negative impact was felt most sharply on the highest-need students. The gap between high-performing and struggling students significantly widened, and the pandemic has made the gap wider still.  

Struggling students and their teachers have suffered through one round of false and damaging policy prescriptions.  Instead of longer days and years, what education leaders should be doing now is narrowing that gap by reducing class size, one of a very few reforms proven to do just that. As noted education researcher  Gene Glass has concluded, “Within reason, the productivity of the schools is not a matter of the time allocated to them as much as it is a matter of how they use the time they already have. Instead, our Mayor seems intent on cutting school budgets and increasing class size, while we sit and wait for Gov. Hochul to sign the class size bill.  Please sign our petition, urging her to do so now.

Screenshots from today’s NAEP briefing follows.


Thursday, October 28, 2021

Mayor de Blasio and DOE Chancellor say state test results "cast a positive light on NYC's performance" (parody by Fred Smith)


Today the state test scores from last spring
were released, revealing that only 20% percent of eligible NYC students in grades 3-8 took the exams, as many were engaged in remote learning and parents had to opt in for their children to take them. Thus the results were more meaningless than ever.  Even so, a 64% of students tested "proficient", a higher percentage than in years past. 

Below is testing expert and critic Fred Smith's rendition of a NYC press release, a parody of the nonsense that regularly comes out of the Mayor's office and DOE in a usual, non-pandemic year.

____

This afternoon, Mayor de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Porter announced the results of the 2021 ELA and Math Tests.   

They cast a positive light on New York City's performance.

The chancellor said that since the Common Core tests began in 2013, this year's results had reached new heights of irrelevance. 

"This shows how good leadership and dedicated teachers and principals can bring us to a new level, despite the challenges we have faced.

I want to thank the mayor for the support he has given us.  Chancellor Carranza, my predecessor, deserves some of the credit too."

The Mayor seemed particularly gratified and attributed this year's success to the seeds planted by his Universal Pre-K program.  

"I would say that anytime we make strides, even if they lack meaning, is a good time." 

Power point charts were made available to the media providing the usual breakdowns.  As expected, New York did better than the Big 4 cities. 

              ~30~

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Gov. Cuomo: please call off the SHSAT, absolutely critical especially during a pandemic.


The letter below was sent to Gov. Cuomo on Monday via his webform; feel free to send your own thoughts on the matter.  

November 23, 2020

Dear Governor Cuomo, 

We, the undersigned organizations and individuals, write to request the issuance of an Executive Order to suspend the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT) for the specialized high schools in New York City. 

The Hecht-Calandra Act requires that admissions to the specialized high schools be solely and exclusively determined by scores on the SHSAT, which is administered by the NYC Department of Education usually in late October/ early November every year.  Nearly 30,000 students take the SHSAT for approximately 5,000 seats across 8 specialized high schools. The test is administered on campus at these schools.  Obviously this year with the pandemic and particularly now with the increasing infection rates, in-person testing is infeasible and the DOE has not announced how it plans to administer the test. 

The Mayor hinted at offering the SHSAT online at the weekly radio address last week. However, not every student has access to an adequate device or reliable internet connectivity, making the online option discriminatory. In addition to the inequitable access to the digital platform, many of our students are traumatized by the pandemic, having lost loved ones to the disease, facing a new economic reality resulting from parental job loss, or living with the anxiety of a parent who is an essential worker. These traumas disproportionately affect historically marginalized students.

Because the Mayor does not have the power to change the admissions to the specialized high schools, we call upon you to issue an Executive Order suspending the SHSAT this year and allowing the Chancellor of the NYC DOE to develop an alternative method of admissions to the specialized high schools. And given that our estimate of the costs for test administration is approximately $3 Million per year, suspending the SHSAT is also prudent in the face of the fiscal crisis.  We believe this is the only equitable path forward.  

Sincerely, 

Organizations

Alliance for Quality Education

Class Size Matters

Coalition for Asian American Children & Families (CACF)

Community Education Council District 14

Community Education Council District 16

Community Inclusion & Development Alliance

Education Council Consortium

EduColor

El Puente

Families for Real Equity in Education (FREE)

IntegrateNYC

Masa

MORE-UFT (Movement of Rank and File Educators)

NYC Kids PAC

NYC Opt Opt

S.E.E.D.S., Inc. <www.seedswork.org>

Teens Take Charge