CASE - Five Stars
CASE - Five Stars
CASE - Five Stars
Cousins Jeri Lynn DeBose, Tish Hoover, and Josephine( Joey) Parks looked
forward to meeting up during the Christmas holidays to compare notes on the
results of mid- year teacher evaluations.
All were public school teachers in districts scattered over the state. In the
pressured search for new levels of teacher accountability demanded by legislators,
the state department of education joined 16 other states in implementing a new
teacher evaluation system. The goal is to hold teachers accountable for student
learning progress in the classroom. Under the guidance of the National Council for
Teacher Quality, criteria varies by state, but in most cases, 40 percent of each
teacher’s accountability score would be based on the principal’s evaluation and
ranking based on personal observation, 30 percent would be based on personal
observation by a master teacher from outside the district, and the other 30 percent
would be based on student test score gains. The state department of education
would set a performance goal for each school district, and the principal would set a
performance goal for each teacher. In preparation, the state conducted intensive
training sessions for principals and designated master teachers who would conduct
the evaluations based on four class observations per teacher. Officials used
standardized achievement tests to derive value-added scores that measure student
learning over the year.
Teacher ratings were 1–5, with 1 being the lowest and 5 representing near
perfection. The publication of the first year’s evaluations stirred interest and
controversy, particularly among teachers who worried about the possible long-
term effects on job retention and tenure.
Now, with the first-year evaluations in hand, the three cousins pored over their
experiences. The three represented different types of school systems within the
state. Jeri Lynn worked for a metropolitan system in the state capital. The system
included many low-income students whose first language was not English, and
several schools within the system were teetering on the brink of state takeover if
improvement in student scores didn’t materialize this school year. Tish worked in
a county system dominated by upper-income residents, and Joey taught in the rural
community in which all three grew up. The rural community had high
unemployment, and a low percentage of graduates went on to college. As a result,
the cousins came to the table with differing teaching experiences.
“The numbers are all over the place,” Jeri Lynn remarked as she studied the pages.
“The whole system is flawed and they need to make changes,” Joey said. “It’s too
subjective. The principal and master teacher observations are subjective because
there are personal factors that affect a true outcome.”
“Yeah, look at the numbers from your upper-income district,” Jeri Lynn said to
Tish. “How can 60 percent of the teachers score 5s?”
Tish chuckled. “Yeah, lucky us. Our schools are over- flowing with children from
wealthy families. These are the kids who will apply to Ivy League schools. I can
tell you that the principals are going to avoid confrontation on all fronts. No
principal is going to give any indication that their students are receiving an
education that’s less than perfect, and that means cramming the rankings with 5s.
They claim a higher level of motivation for students, and thus the selection of an
elite team of educators. So with those pressures, I don’t think we get personal
feedback that is accurate.”
“At the other end of the spectrum, we have my rural district,” Joey said. “The big
problem is that the principals know everyone and have longstanding relationships
with everyone in the county, so I think scores are based on personal history. We
could almost predict who would get high or low scores before the observations.
For principals, it can go back as far as ‘his daddy and my daddy hated each other
in high school, and now I get to evaluate his daughter.’”
“I think that in many cases, principals feel pressure to align scores with state
expectations. The state expected my district to have high scores and expected rural
schools such as yours to be lower,” Tish said.
“But isn’t that partially offset by lower goals for the rural school districts?”
responded Joey.
“The key to the accountability system is the principal in each school,” Jeri Lynn
suggested. “With severalof the schools in Metro teetering on the edge of state
takeover by the end of the year, we had lots of strict principals who wanted to hold
our feet to the fire with lower scores.”
“I thought the whole idea was to provide the teachers with feedback so that we
would know the areas where we need improvement,” Tish said.
“The principals were supposed to conduct two observations in the fall and two
more in the spring,” Jeri Lynn said. “I think that’s asking too much of them when
they already have so much on their plates. I think a lot of them are skimping on
their visits. I know I only had one observation last semester, and I’m sure Mr.
Talley just faked the second set of numbers. The master teachers make only two
ob- servations a year, which may be more objective but counts for less.”
“So the question is how do they create a system that is fair?” Tish asked.
Questions
1. What do you see as the major strengths and flaws in the feedback control
system used in the schools in this scenario? What changes do you recommend to
over- come the flaws?
3. How might the state control the accuracy of principals who are conducting
teacher evaluations? Explain.