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by Paul
Socolar In October 2001, when former Governor Mark Schweiker announced plans for taking over management of schools in Philadelphia, he promised that dramatic intervention would take place at the District's "60 lowest performing schools." Ever since,
references to the system's "lowest performing schools" have
cropped up regularly in media coverage and conversation about the takeover.
That phrase has been frequently attached to the 86 schools at the center
of the District's reform program. Schweiker's plan didn't name which 60 schools he considered to be the city's lowest performing, but he called for turning over management to private education providers like Edison Schools Inc. at these schools, while other schools would experience less drastic interventions.
"I hope
we can drop the label 'lowest performing schools,'" said Deputy Chief
Academic Officer Ellen Savitz, who oversees the schools affected by the
takeover. "It's demeaning to the kids and the parents." Branding
the 86 schools the District's "lowest performing" is also plainly
inaccurate. Even based
on the test score standard used by the SRC to rank schools and then to
select these 86, they are not the lowest ranked schools in the District.
Low-scoring
schools left out The SRC's
standard was the schools' combined reading and math score on the 1998-99
PSSA test, the state's standardized test given every spring. But there
are 23 low-ranked schools that were passed over because they were high
schools, discipline schools, or other specialized schools, which the SRC
was not prepared to include in the takeover. The ranking
of schools by the SRC never incorporated more than a dozen elementary
schools where test scores are consistently low. The reason: they are K-4
schools, and the PSSA exam was not yet being administered in any of those
grades, though they have scored poorly on other standardized tests. Debate about
whether the 86 schools were actually the system's lowest performing raged
last April as the SRC was deciding the fate of these schools. A host of
criticisms were raised about why the criteria used by the SRC for targeting
these schools were not fair:
Savitz told
the Notebook that the District usually tries to rely on multiple
measures to assess schools. But in identifying the 86 schools, the SRC
relied solely on the results of the PSSA test. "Whether
that's a fair way to judge a school is a question," she stated. Savitz said
she preferred to describe the targeted schools as ones "where the
kids need major support in reading and math." "There
are other schools that were not on the list of 86 that appear to really
need major support," she added. A Notebook
analysis of last fall's results from the District's first use of the
new TerraNova standardized test given to students in grades 3-10 shows
that the vast majority of the 86 schools targeted by the SRC because of
low scores on the state test are in fact among the schools that score
the lowest in reading and math on the TerraNova exam. But some
schools' standings on the TerraNova are very different. Sixteen of the
86 schools labeled "low performing" appear in the top half of
District schools overall, when schools are ranked based on their combined
reading and math scores on the fall 2002 TerraNova. The takeover
schools whose combined reading and math scores on the TerraNova are above
the midpoint for the District are Cook-Wissahickon, Dunbar, Cramp, Heston,
Blankenburg, Martha Washington, Kinsey, Comegys, Central East, Pennypacker,
Anderson, Leidy, Ferguson, Cassidy, Huey, and Emlen. Most of the
District's comprehensive high schools are clustered near the bottom on
the TerraNova. The results provide CEO Paul Vallas with ammunition for
his plans to redirect to the high schools some of the extra funding provided
to the 86 schools affected by the takeover. The fact
that the PSSA and TerraNova are different tests-one measuring performance
on state standards and one based on national standards-accounts for some
of the variations in the rankings, according to Joe Jacovino, chief accountability
officer for the School District. Jacovino
added that when comparing fall TerraNova scores with PSSA results from
three years earlier, "It's not surprising that there have been some
changes, both increases and decreases." Whether the
gains some schools have made will stick - and whether the label "lowest
performing schools" will stick - remains to be seen. Paul Socolar
is Editor and Director of the Philadelphia Public School Notebook, an
independent quarterly newspaper that serves as a voice for parents, students,
teachers, and other members of the community who are working for quality
and equity in Philadelphia's public schools. This article was first printed in the Summer 2003 edition of the Notebook and was part of a series that explored the theme: "The takeover-one year later."
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