Study Concludes NCLB's "Adequate Yearly Progress"
Is Not An Accurate Measure
The Northwest
Evaluation Association, a partnership of school
districts and educational agencies, released a
report in April 2004 concluding that Adequate Yearly
Progress (AYP), the standard mandated by the federal
"No Child Left Behind"
Act (NCLB), is not an accurate measure of a school
performance. The study recommends adding a "growth"
component to assess how a school contributes to students'
learning.
The study uses test scores from assessments conducted
across the nation over several years to compare the
"snapshot" provided by AYP, which measures a student's
performance at one point in time, to a longitudinal
picture of a student's performance accumulated over
a period of several years. The authors conclude that
AYP, which shows nothing about where a student started
before s/he reached the AYP score, is inadequate. According
to the study, AYP does not take into account students
above or far below the standard. The growth of students
who already meet the AYP standard is not measured. Furthermore,
the advancement of students who do not yet meet the
standard is not included. Thus, according to the authors,
AYP is more a measure of demographics than school effectiveness.
A recent study
conducted by the Harvard Civil Rights Project reached
the similar conclusions.
The authors of the study recommend including a growth
component in NCLB's measure of school performance. They
do not advocate a particular model, but rather present
several models already in existence. They also demonstrate
how a growth model can be combined with AYP, so that
NCLB need not necessarily be amended. The authors answer
concerns of those who may think that adding a growth
component would be too complicated to implement by pointing
out that people often use complex indicators (the consumer
price index, sports statistics, weather indicators)
without knowing how to compute them. If the models are
subject to professional scrutiny, their integrity may
be maintained.
The study asserts that prior to NCLB, longitudinal
studies were the primary method for accountability under
the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which
was amended, reauthorized, and renamed "No Child Left
Behind" in 2001. In addition, Kentucky,
which has been in the forefront of standards-based reform,
has been using a growth model to gauge school performance
for years. Many people are now advocating a return to
the growth model under NCLB. As reported in the New
York Times on March 24, 2004, chief state school
officers from fourteen states wrote a letter to U.S.
Secretary of Education Roderick Paige requesting that
the Department of Education allow states to incorporate
a growth model in NCLB assessment of AYP. In addition,
the California Department of Education, a signatory
of the letter, put forth a
proposal for changing NCLB to include a growth model.
Prepared by Wendy C. Lecker, May 3, 2004.
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