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States Requests to Amend Their Educational Accountability PlansAn Overview

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Title: States Requests to Amend Their Educational Accountability PlansAn Overview


1
States Requests to Amend Their Educational
Accountability PlansAn Overview
William J. Erpenbach, WJE Consulting, Ltd Ellen
Forte Fast, edCount, LLC and Lori Cavell,
CCSSO CCSSO State Collaborative on Assessment
and Student StandardsAccountability Systems and
Reporting September 30, 2004Portland, Oregon
2
Overview
  • Background
  • Follow up paper on State accountability plan
    amendments and approvals.
  • Information Presented Today
  • Organizing categories for the amendment requests.
  • Decisions of the U. S. Department of Education
    (ED).
  • Conclusions including unanticipated or surprise
    approvals.
  • Caveats
  • Summary has not been merged with information
    about original plans does not reflect a
    comprehensive picture of what states are doing.
  • Not all states requested amendments and we cannot
    infer why.
  • Some states have submitted amendments two or more
    times since 2003 some two or more times this
    year alone.
  • ED does not necessarily respond quickly, even to
    seemingly simple requests.
  • ED letters do not always address all amendment
    requests or provide decision rationales.
  • States named only if ED has provided a public,
    written response.

3
Organizing Categories
  • Standards and Assessments
  • Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model
  • Inclusion
  • AYP Consequences and Reporting
  • Conclusions

4
General Impressions
  • Many States seized on EDs unanticipated plan
    approvals we reported in June 2003.
  • Dont ask if its likely you will get an answer
    youll not like.
  • Most frequent plan amendments requested
  • Participation Rate flexibility.
  • LEP student flexibility.
  • SWDs flexibility.
  • Larger minimum n for LEP student and SWDs
    subgroups.
  • Confidence intervals.
  • OAIsfrom absolutes to exceed or make progress
    toward and averaging over two or three years.

5
Creativity, Surprises, and Reaches
  • Arkansas, Delaware, Iowa, Tennessee, and
    othersnew model for AYP for LEAs.
  • North CarolinaSchool AYP based on students
    eligible or served under Title I.
  • Use of CIs with Safe Harbor determinations
    limited to 75.
  • Excluding opted out students in Participation
    Rate determinationsjury still out.
  • Washington, Arkansas, and othersuse of a
    progressive minimum n (results in higher
    minimum n for districts in some cases).
  • Not rolling up data to meet minimum n
    requirements for AYP determinations.
  • Including only students enrolled FAY and tested
    in denominator for calculating Percent
    Proficient.
  • Several Statesadded rounding up rules for AYP
    calculations.
  • Longer than calendar year to define AYP for some
    SWDs.

6
Consistent Nos
  • Same cell two consecutive years.
  • Retroactive applications.
  • Out-of-level testing other than within 1 cap.
  • Blanket exemptions for unexpected medical
    emergencies.
  • Apportioning subgroup membership.

7
Requests Awaiting Public Response
  • Use of results for a sub-set of grades until
    2005-06 in states already administering
    assessments in grades 3 8.
  • Use of results of re-tests after official
    administrations in AYP determinations.
  • Inclusion of students in only one program
    subgroup (SWDs, LEP, Economically Disadvantaged).
  • Use of growth models in place of Percent
    Proficient or Safe Harbor.
  • Exclusion from Participation Rate calculations
    for students opted out by parents in States where
    this right is protected by law.

8
Standards and Assessments
  • Changes to a Test or Grade Level Used for AYP
  • Banking of Test Results
  • Use of Out-of-Level Assessments or Other
    Alternate Assessments
  • Adjustments of Scores Designating Proficiency,
    i.e., Cut Scores

9
Standards and Assessments(Changes to a Test or
Grade Level Used for AYP)
  • Back off from use of existing 3 through 8 test
    results to only 3 5 and 6 9 grade spans until
    2005-06 (plus 10 12 grade span).
  • Back away from implementation of new instruments
    or policies prior to 2005-06.

10
Standards and Assessments(Banking of Test
Results)
  • Problematic during original reviewsnow,
    generally okay to bank results from
    administrations prior to the official one.
  • Oregon now allowed to use results that are
    accumulated across a school year for each
    student.
  • Allow districts to choose administration date.
  • Allow use of Performance (not Participation)
    results from re-testing that occurs after the
    official administration.
  • Use of scores from all grade levels at which
    students can take a test (Percent Proficient
    based on number tested).

11
Standards and Assessments(Use of Out-of-Level
Tests or Other Alternate Assessments)
  • Several States have requested approval to use
    out-of-level assessmentsnow effectively
    defined by ED as a test based on alternate
    standards for severely cognitively disabled
    students subject to the 1 cap.
  • Alabama, Indiana, and Nebraska approved to use
    results of alternate assessments for severely
    cognitively disabled students in AYP
    calculations.
  • West Virginia approved to develop an equivalent
    form of its State assessment for students with
    cognitive impairments that would not be subject
    to the 1 cap.
  • Three other States have asked to continue using
    out-of-level assessments for AYP without regard
    to the 1 cap until they undergo the next round
    of Peer Reviews on standards and assessments.
    They argue that more time is needed to develop
    alternate assessments for SWDs.

12
Standards and Assessments(Adjustment of Scores
Designating Proficiency, i.e., Cut Scores)
  • No State has yet requested a general change or
    notified ED of a comprehensive revisiting of
    achievement standards.
  • One change in cut score necessary due to an error
    during the original process.
  • Two States set student academic achievement
    standards for new tests and requested amendments
    to reflect these new standards.

13
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model
  • AYP Application
  • Rules for Targeted Assistance Schools
  • Triggers for Identification
  • Rules for Identifying Districts for Improvement
  • Retroactive Application
  • AYP Indicators
  • Percent Proficient
  • Participation Rate
  • Other Academic Indicators
  • Annual Measurable Objectives, Intermediate Goals,
    and Trajectories
  • Strategies Intended to Enhance Reliability
  • Changes to Minimum n
  • Consideration of ErrorConfidence Intervals and
    SEM
  • Safe Harbor

14
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Application Rules for Targeted Assistance
Schools)
  • North Carolina will permit districts to calculate
    AYP for schools that operate Targeted Assistance
    Programs based on only those students served or
    eligible to be served through Title I.
  • Another State has a similar request pending.

15
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Application Triggers for Identification)
  • Changes to conditions for overall ID
  • Arkansas will compare current year to average of
    most recent three years and use most favorable in
    AYP decisions and Washington will average data
    across grades and over two years.
  • West Virginia, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and others
    denied use same subject, same group for two
    consecutive years (ED provided extensive
    rationale statement to West Virginia)
  • North Carolina and Illinois approved to limit
    identification for improvement to same subject
    AYP misses while Oregon approved for same OAI
    (both policy shifts by ED)
  • LEAsby grade span and subject area okay
  • Student groups
  • A few requests for specific combinations of group
    performance

16
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Application Rules for Identifying Districts for
Improvement)
  • At least eight States approved to modify the
    method by which school districts are identified
    for improvement.
  • States include Arkansas, Delaware, Iowa, Maine,
    North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, and West
    Virginia.
  • Districts permitted to determine AYP by grade
    spans such as elementary, middle, and high
    school.
  • AYP determined on basis of grade span performance
    in academic subject areas only.
  • Districts identified for improvement only if all
    grade spans miss AYP target in same subject area
    two consecutive years.

17
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Application Retroactive Application)
  • ED consistently denied such requests from States
    (department included its rationale in letter to
    North Carolina).
  • Kentucky made AYP determinations (retroactively)
    based on amendments submitted to ED but not yet
    approved. ED accepted but warned State about
    future withholding of Federal funds if repeated.
  • Unclear whether some States may continue to push
    EDs policy decision on this subject.

18
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Indicators Percent Proficient and Participation
Rate)
  • Percent Proficientmostly FAY
  • Oregon and Kentucky will adopt new FAY
    definitions and Iowa received approval for
    defining FAY for some SWDs as being more than one
    year.
  • Wyoming received approval to use up to two years
    of data when making AYP determinations.
  • Another State asked to use growth indices in lieu
    of Percent Proficient.
  • Some States will use only students enrolled FAY
    and tested in determining Percent Proficient
    (approved for Maryland and Georgia in 2003
    reviews).
  • Participation Ratemostly new flexibility
  • West Virginia not allowed to provide blanket
    exemptions for medical emergencies but okay on
    case-by-case basis.
  • Other States would like to grant/ignore PR if
    fewer than 5 students not tested.
  • Several States will increase minimum n for PR
    and apply statistical tests to calculations.
  • One State seeking to include opted-out students
    if PR at least 90 but gt95, count these students
    as not proficient if their inclusion would reach
    at least 95 and recalculate PP.

19
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model (AYP
Indicators Other Academic Indicators)
  • Most common change involved shifting from meeting
    a target to making progress toward a target.
  • Elementary and Middle School
  • Kentucky allowed to lag OAI one year.
  • Others will change OAI to another indicator and
    some lowered target.
  • Graduation Rate
  • Mainecount only one dropout eventstudent is
    unit, not event.
  • Othersapply 95 CI, use probability model
    (undefined), include GED recipients.
  • Kansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, and others allowed
    to count as graduates SWDs who take more than 4
    years consistent with IEP.
  • Changes to target or to use of combination of
    status and progress targets.
  • Only used for schools with graduation as mission.

20
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model(Annual
Measurable Objectives, Intermediate Goals, and
Trajectories)
  • AMOs and Trajectories
  • Few requests for changes in these areas.
  • One State would like to round its Percent
    Proficient and AMOs to whole numbers.
  • Arkansas approved to use a confidence interval to
    make AYP determinations involving AMOs and IGs.
  • Kentucky will set these based on grade span
    configurations to cover differing LEA
    configurations.

21
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model(Strategies
Intended to Enhance Reliability Changes to
Minimum n)
  • Arkansas, Kentucky, North Carolina, and others
    increased their minimum ns.
  • Several will combine across years while some have
    decided the opposite.
  • Allow choice for small schools/groups.
  • Many approvals to use larger minimum n for SWDs
    and/or LEP students including Kansas, Missouri,
    New Jersey, and South Carolina.
  • One request to maintain low minimum n but only
    analyze if the group gt 15 of student population.
  • Several asked to increase minimum n for LEAs
    (denied) but those requesting use of a
    progressive minimum n approved (including
    Arkansas and Washington) which tends to have the
    same result.

22
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model(Strategies
Intended to Enhance Reliability Consideration of
Error)
  • Alabama and two others99 for Percent
    Proficient.
  • North Carolina, Pennsylvania other others95.
  • Six States requested use of CI for Safe
    HarborApproved but limited to 75 without stated
    rational.
  • South Carolina received approval to use a SEM in
    calculating Percent Proficient.

23
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Model(Safe
Harbor)
  • Use of 75 confidence interval in safe harbor
    reviews approved for Alaska, Kansas, Maine,
    Pennsylvania, and othersmost had requested at
    least 95.
  • Tennessee allowed to use value-added model in
    safe harbor.
  • Kansas permitted to use current years results
    compared with previous years to make safe
    harbor reviews for small schools even though
    minimum n not met in either case.

24
Inclusion
  • Students with Disabilities
  • Students with Limited English Proficiency

25
Inclusion
  • Generally
  • Many States approved to apply new flexibility.
  • Many will use higher minimum n for these
    subgroups.
  • Broader use of laws to keep students no longer
    directly served in the subgroups for AYP
    determinations.
  • Students with Disabilities
  • Some also asked to allow some kind of waiver to
    1 capKansas approved for a reallocation
    process.
  • ED denied Tennessees request to include scores
    of gifted students in SWDs category consistent
    with State law.
  • Count as graduates students taking longer than
    four years in high school consistent with IEPs.
  • Students with Limited English Proficiency
  • Alaska will not be allowed exclude results for
    Heritage language students from AYP until grade
    6.

26
AYP Consequences and Reporting
  • Timing and Degree of Consequences
  • Rewards and Recognition
  • Change to Program or Demographic Variables
  • Reporting Timeline

27
AYP Consequences and Reporting
  • Timing and Degree of Consequences
  • ED denied West Virginias request to switch order
    of school choice and provision of supplemental
    educational services but indicated that the State
    could offer both in the first year of
    identification for improvement.
  • Another State has asked to lag its accountability
    cycle by one year and another has requested
    approval to tailor the degree of sanction to a
    schools level of need.
  • Rewards and Recognition
  • Alaska, Delaware, and North Carolina will add new
    levels of recognition.
  • New Jersey will set priorities for instructional
    intervention efforts based on extent to which AYP
    targets were missed.

28
AYP Consequences and Reporting
  • Changes to Program or Demographic Variables
  • Illinois and Maine will add a multi-ethnic
    category to their AYP and reporting subgroups.
  • Maine will eliminate its Caucasian group since it
    does not differ significantly from the all
    students group.
  • Another State that does not have a statewide
    student-level database or student-level variable
    for determining income wants to designate every
    student who attends a school offering Title I
    services as being in a low socio-economic status.
  • Reporting Timeline
  • California and South Carolina will combine
    previously separate State and Federal report
    cards.
  • Texas will align its State and Federal reporting
    timelines.

29
States Requests to Amend their Educational
Accountability PlansAn Overview
finis
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