In a monthly online newsletter published last week on the Louisiana School Boards Association website, the teacher group alleges the Recovery School District in
“„Irregular “scrubbing” practices that appear to have been imported to the RSD by Paul Vallas leave many test units administered by unaccounted for in school performance scores (SPS). Apparently, a set of computer filters are set to screen out from consideration any student scores that meet select criteria (less than 120 days in school, failing the test, failing to enroll in summer remediation, and failing to pass the summer retest).
“„Louisiana has gained national recognition for its accountability program. Critical to this is ensuring the integrity of testing and performance scores at every level. Therefore, the Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE) allocates significant resources to the design, administration and scoring of statewide assessments. These services are coordinated by LDOE, not local districts, through professional service contracts with certified and reputable national vendors. Test results are not routed to local districts to calculate School Performance Scores, nor do local districts have the ability to manipulate the data. To suggests (sic) a district, any district, including the Recovery School District, has the ability to filter or eliminate test scores prior to the calculation of School Performance Scores or at any point is unreasonable.
“„Likewise, the Department has an aggressive monitoring program to actively make certain students, teachers, administrators and districts are operating in accordance with stringent state policies and procedures. Through the support of our testing vendor, for example, we are able to identify patterns of excessive wrong-to-right erasures on state tests.
“„We are disappointed that the Louisiana School Boards Association (LSBA) would make these unfair and unsubstantiated claims. These allegations call into question the state’s accountability model and therefore the progress Louisiana students, teachers, districts and communities have demonstrated through the state’s accountability program over the last decade.
“„In 2009-10, there were 71 schools in the RSD. A total of 21 schools did not have baseline School Performance Scores; yet, only 9 of them without scores were new schools. Compare that with the 2008-09 year, when the RSD had 66 schools, and a total of 10 did not have baseline School Performance Scores, of which 7 were new schools.
