Chattanooga Times Free Press

4th graders must show reading progress to advance

- BY LAURA TESTINO CHALKBEAT TENNESSEE

Thousands of Tennessee fourth graders will have to show during state testing this spring that they’ve made progress toward becoming better readers in order to move to the fifth grade, according to an “adequate growth” policy measure approved by the Tennessee board of education.

But continued pushback against Tennessee’s 2021 reading law could prompt new advocacy and recommenda­tions for changing it. Some board members said they would support lawmakers revisiting key pieces of the legislatio­n meant to help struggling readers.

Their deliberati­ons Feb. 16 suggested many members made their votes so school districts and families could plan for what is coming, and not because they support the required growth measure in the law, which is the only pathway thousands of students may have to advance to fifth grade.

“Clarity is better than ambiguity,” said board member Nate Morrow, an education administra­tor.

Last year’s third graders were the first to face the threat of retention since the law took effect. While 60% of students were marked at-risk because of their scores on the state’s English and language arts subject test, just 1% of third graders were ultimately retained, according to state data.

About 15% of students advanced to fourth grade with the expectatio­n that interventi­ons like summer school or tutoring would help boost their reading skills. Retention in fourth grade will be unavoidabl­e for those students, however, if they don’t score proficient on the test or meet their individual­ized “adequate growth” testing metric approved

“I believe up until the fourth grade growth component, they have done an amazing job getting students the support they need. But unless there is a pathway for fourth graders to move to fifth grade, this will be in all aspects a retention law.”

— KRISSI MCINTURFF, STATE BOARD MEMBER, ON THE NEED

FOR CONTINUED READING SUPPORT FOR STUDENTS

Friday by the state board.

David Laird, assistant commission­er of assessment and accountabi­lity at the Tennessee Department of Education, presented the proposed calculatio­n for determinin­g a student’s growth on the TCAP test. While the calculatio­n is much more complex than the straightfo­rward https://www.chalkbeat.org/tennessee/2023/5/19/23730582/tennessee-third-grade-retention-law-promotion-adequate-growth-state-board-of-education/ growth measure required https://www.chalkbeat.org/tennessee/2023/5/19/23730582/tennessee-third-grade-retention-law-promotion-adequate-growth-state-board-of-education/ for some third graders, it is individual­ized to each student, he explained.

The calculatio­n looks at where a student was in third grade and makes a determinat­ion of how far that student has to go to reach proficienc­y during their public education, a metric that is “objectivel­y a high bar … in Tennessee,” Laird said. He said recent tweaks to the calculatio­n include considerat­ion for retake exams and, for parts of the calculatio­n, students’ scores in other subject areas. Department officials plan to provide districts with these growth projection­s for each student by the end of the month.

“In all the different places we could have put the line for adequate growth, what does that actually help us understand in terms of kids actually becoming proficient at some point in time in the future?” Laird said.

What remains to be seen, he said, is how effective the high dosage tutoring interventi­ons have been for this student group.

Some board members voiced support for a set of resolution­s board member Ryan Holt said he plans to bring to the board’s next special meeting in March. Holt, appointed in 2022, encouraged the board to exercise its advisory capacity and propose to the General Assembly a re-evaluation of the literacy law and to call on lawmakers to create more pathways for students to advance to the next grade with reading supports rather than be retained.

https://www.tn.gov/sbe/about-us/board-members/krissi-mcinturff.html Krissi McInturff, a state https://www.tn.gov/sbe/about-us/board-members/krissi-mcinturff.html board member who has https://www.tn.gov/sbe/about-us/board-members/krissi-mcinturff.html been a fourth grade teacher, https://www.tn.gov/sbe/about-us/board-members/krissi-mcinturff.html criticized the law’s lack of continued supports for fourth graders who still aren’t meeting Tennessee’s benchmarks and said she hoped lawmakers would consider changes.

“I believe up until the fourth grade growth component, they have done an amazing job getting students the support they need,” McInturff said. Tennessee third graders, for instance, can avoid retention by enrolling in summer school or tutoring. “But unless there is a pathway for fourth graders to move to fifth grade, this will be in all aspects a retention law.”

The Tennessee State Board of Education will hold a special meeting on March 4. Find the full meeting schedule and agenda informatio­n https://www.tn.gov/sbe/meetings.html on the https://www.tn.gov/sbe/meetings.html board’s website.

Laura Testino covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Laura at LTestino@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Kobi Higgins, right, and Cyanna Bryant, both 10, work on a reading worksheet in 2022 at Battle Academy.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Kobi Higgins, right, and Cyanna Bryant, both 10, work on a reading worksheet in 2022 at Battle Academy.

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