Los Angeles Times

Bait-and-switch evaluation models

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Re “Grading California’s schools,” Editorial, Aug. 8

Does it really make a difference how California schools are evaluated?

Longitudin­al studies show that although all schools can improve their rankings, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean their students will improve on SAT or Advanced Placement tests. Schools that ranked high under the Academic Performanc­e Index will still rank high under any new model; similarly, schools struggling to achieve greater college readiness for their students will still struggle.

Furthermor­e, existing longitudin­al school data already provide substantia­l informatio­n on the strengths and weaknesses of our schools — enough to save money on testing for years.

The shame is that taxpayers are being charged for bait-and-switch evaluation models without demonstrat­ing how students will get access to better schools.

Michael Katzman

Bell Canyon The writer is a former data analyst for the Los Angeles Unified School District.

If California overhauls the API, affective outcomes should be included to give taxpayers a better picture of how well their dollars are being spent.

Teachers can teach their subject well while teaching students to hate the subject in the process. The result is a pyrrhic victory that no nation should be proud of.

That has happened in South Korea, where students consistent­ly score near the top on all tests of internatio­nal competitio­n, and yet many suffer from depression, which has led to a high suicide rate.

Walt Gardner

Los Angeles Gardner is the author of Education Week’s Reality Check blog.

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