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Education
law is tougher on diverse schools
Paul
Socolar
Schools
with more targets to meet under NCLB were far more likely to be
branded as in need of improvement.
Some
critics of the federal No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) have argued
that large schools and schools with a diverse student population
are penalized by the law's provisions. School performance results
from 2004 in Philadelphia appear to bear out this charge.
Few
of the School District's larger and more diverse schools achieved
what the state considers "adequate yearly progress" toward
achievement goals set under NCLB. Some now argue that smaller and
more homogeneous schools may be getting off easy while some relatively
successful large or diverse schools may be getting unfairly labeled.
"The
research nationally makes it very clear that there is what amounts
to a diversity penalty," said Monty Neill, executive director
of FairTest, a Massachusetts-based organization that has been a
strong critic of NCLB.
The
law as a result "gives an inadequate identification of which
schools really need extra help," Neill stated.
Schools
Must Meet all Targets
"Adequate
yearly progress" (AYP), which is defined by each state based
on specifications in the federal law, has become the most closely
watched measure of school performance. To "make AYP,"
all schools and school districts receiving federal funds must meet
all their targets for test scores and test participation for the
overall student population and also for demographic "subgroups."
High
schools must also meet targets for graduation rates, and in Pennsylvania,
elementary and middle schools must meet targets for student attendance.
This
year, 160 of 265 District schools (or 60 percent) met all their
AYP targets set by the Pennsylvania Department of Education. That
represented almost a threefold increase over last year's results.
Public attention has focused on these significant gains.
Lost
in the celebration is the fact that some schools had many more targets
to reach than others, and schools with more targets to meet were
far less likely to meet all their targets as required by NCLB.
The
reason schools have different numbers of targets is the provision
of the law requiring that test performance and participation be
broken down by "subgroups." The provision was an attempt
to promote equity in the educational outcomes for different populations
within a school.
Every
subgroup of children is expected to achieve both proficiency and
test participation targets in reading and in mathematics. Potential
subgroups include different racial and ethnic groups, students with
limited English proficiency, economically disadvantaged students,
and special education students. But in Pennsylvania, a subgroup
target only applies to a school if the subgroup contains 40 or more
students.
Smaller
and less diverse schools are not likely to reach the 40-student
threshold for most subgroups and can essentially fly under the AYP
radar, escaping any accountability for the performance of subgroups
of students that may be disadvantaged.
In
Philadelphia, several large public schools had to meet the test
score and participation targets for each of as many as six or seven
subgroups, while some schools had no subgroups to report and only
had to meet targets for the overall student population.
More
Subgroups, Less Success
Of
District schools that had four or more subgroups reporting, only
one-fifth (four schools out of 20) made all their AYP targets -
excluding those schools with selective admission criteria. These
schools with four or more subgroups had to meet 21 or more targets.
But
Philadelphia schools reporting one subgroup or none had much less
trouble getting to AYP. Of these schools, 24 out of 25 made adequate
yearly progress - when schools with special admissions criteria
were excluded. These schools had to meet nine or fewer targets.
While
these results in Philadelphia do not prove that having more subgroups
is what prevents schools from making AYP, the findings are consistent
with two recent research studies in California that show that the
more subgroups a school has, the less likely it is to make AYP.
Researcher
Robert Balfanz of Johns Hopkins University, who has analyzed data
on Philadelphia middle schools, argues that a key determinant of
whether high-poverty middle schools here failed to meet AYP was
the number of subgroups reporting and specifically whether schools
had to report the progress of special education students or limited
English proficiency students.
Few
Philadelphia schools had success at meeting targets among subgroups
of special education students and limited English proficiency students.
But
close to 90 percent of Philadelphia schools were not held accountable
for the performance of their special education students as a subgroup
because they had fewer than 40 of those students tested. Among the
25 neighborhood schools with the fewest subgroups, all but one of
which achieved AYP, not one of them had to count their results for
subgroups of special education or limited English proficiency students.
District
had to Meet 41 Targets
Similarly,
at the district level, Philadelphia experiences challenges in making
AYP that face large and diverse districts. Despite increases in
proficiency in nearly every area, the School District fell short
on some of its districtwide AYP targets for the sixth consecutive
year. That result earned the District the lowly status of "Corrective
Action II, second year." This status could prompt a state takeover
under NCLB, if one hadn't already taken place.
Philadelphia
as a district has to count its results for nine subgroups. It met
its AYP targets for five subgroups, including economically disadvantaged
students, and overall, it met 31 of 41 targets. The District came
up short with four subgroups: Black, Latino, special education,
and limited English proficiency students.
Yet
the vast majority of districts in Southeastern Pennsylvania - 80
percent - had to worry about five or fewer subgroups compared to
Philadelphia's nine. No other district had to meet more than 33
targets overall, and most had far fewer.
Under
NCLB, the highly regarded Radnor Township school system in Delaware
County was not required to report on the progress of its Black students
or economically disadvantaged students as subgroups. It claimed
only three subgroups - Whites, Asians, and special education students.
In suburban Jenkintown's school system, the only subgroup reported
was White students.
Charters
Faced Fewer AYP Targets
A review
of subgroup reports shows that Philadelphia charter schools, many
of them smaller and less diverse than traditional public schools,
faced fewer hurdles than District schools. All but three of the
43 charters tested in Philadelphia had two or fewer subgroups. Despite
this advantage, charter schools have lagged behind District schools,
with less than half making AYP this year.
Only
one of 43 Philadelphia charters, Philadelphia Academy Charter School,
had a special education subgroup, and it failed to meet its targets
there. Not a single Philadelphia charter reported a subgroup of
limited English proficiency students.
Critics
of the NCLB "diversity penalty" say that it creates incentives
for schools and districts to segregate their students. It may also
create an incentive to underreport or reclassify students and avoid
having to count the data for a subgroup.
Neill
noted that with categories such as special education and limited
English proficiency students, "you can choose to label them
somewhat differently" - and schools can thereby stay below
the reporting threshold and improve their odds of making AYP.
"Schools
can shuffle kids around, push them out, label and re-label kids,
or not count them in testing," Neill commented. "We're
going to see more and more of that," he predicted.
This article was originally published in the Winter 2004-05 issue
of the Philadelphia Public School Notebook (www.thenotebook.org),
an independent newspaper covering the Philadelphia school system
and supporting community efforts for educational quality and equity.
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