well no 5th and 6th graders all take the same test because they are not yet taking algebra and geometry |
PP here. Your reasoning is flawed for families on this board. Your definition of good is improvement in at risk scores which is not at all relevant to us. What is relevant to kids at or above grade level is that they get the teaching content they need to challenge them and meet their full potential which is not happening, especially in schools with overwhelmingly poor performing at risk kids. This is because OSSE does not allow tracking in schools - no G & T program at the elementary level, no tracking of subjects in middle/high schools except math What happens is the teachers cannot effectively teach kids who are 3, 4 grade levels apart. So they teach to the majority lowest common denominator. This may not be apparent in ECE, K but it gets very apparent as the achievement gap widens starting in 1st/2nd. If your kid is not at risk but below grade level then they are where many at risk kids are and will be fine because the content is geared towards them. But not grade level kids and for sure not high performing kids. Lastly, it’s not either/or when it comes to reading. Just because a school is not at risk does not mean that they do not have a phonics reading curriculum. In fact at schools where majority are at or above grade level, the school can identify these kids and pull out for more individual attention. In addition, families also have the resources to further augment the support outside of school. Once kids are reading, it is tiresome and boring to continue so much focus on phonics ad nauseam in elementary. They can move on to higher reading, analysis, etc…. I would argue that the issue is not that CAPE scores are not broken down by at risk but why the scores are so damn low for lots of kids in this town when we throw so much money for each kid. Some of that is because these kids don’t have enough support starting early in elementary, social promotion, no tracking, etc.. in addition to inappropriate allocation and use of funds, etc… Lastly, not all at risk kids are below grade level. Some of these kids have a lot of potential if you give them the support early on with tracking. That is not happening in DC. So these kids lose out the most. These families don’t have options to move to better school. I say this as someone who was a FARMS kid who was placed in G & T by a teacher starting in 3rd which changed the trajectory of my life. No such out for poor kids in DC. By high school with schools like Banneker, it is too late and there is only so much catching up you can do. |
okay. but thats mostly an argument for avoiding schools with low scores and for tracking. whats the threshold where there are enough on grade level kids to not hurt school quality??? is school a with 85% passing really better than school b with 75% passing? |
how much value do cape scores have in assessing school quality? can a school with a majority of kids who are passing sometimes be a not so great school but the student population there would pass at any school? |
Yes. Poor CAPE scores relative to demographics (taking into account special needs) are a big red flag IMO. |
a lot of the reason why there is so much attention to at-risk scores is that they break those scores out |
You realize that BASIS is pure lottery, and 5th is the first year, so yeah, those scores tell very little about the other 6 years of schooling. |
CAPE results by school can be viewed here: https://osse.dc.gov/dccape That is how you can see all scores by grade and performance level. So you can see that, for example, 8.6 percent of BASIS 6th graders scored a 1 in 6th grade math. |
The other factor for BASIS is that they weed out poor performers through comps frequently and early. This is a feature and not a bug for most families that choose it. But it's not exactly the same model as other schools use. |
And this shows that by 7th grade, 80% of students are scoring 4+, and 97% of students are scoring 3+. https://www.empowerk12.org/data-dashboard-source/dc-parcc-dash |
Right, the ones who stayed and weren't required to repeat a grade |
Are you saying that like it proves something? |
And there's another OSSE spreadsheet that shows that the 7th grade class is smaller than the 6th grade class. Coincidence? |
Of course not. BASIS is an advanced school that is teaching Algebra 1 in 7th grade. Students who aren't ready for that are of course going to leave. But there are plenty of students who stay and do the work to catch up. |
Can you explain why BASIS isn't having kids take the Algebra I CAPE? |