Albuquerque Journal

Expert: NM teacher evals are toughest in the nation

PED chief says state should be proud of putting students first

- BY KIM BURGESS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

New Mexico rated more than twice as many teachers below effective than any other state in a 24-state study conducted by a Brown University economist who studies teacher evaluation systems across the country.

New Mexico placed 28.7 percent of its teachers in that category in 2015-2016, while the majority of states rated fewer than 4 percent of teachers below effective, according to Matthew Kraft, Brown University assistant professor of education and economics.

“The New Mexico system is very different than others,” Kraft said. “‘Tough’ would be one way to describe it.”

Although Kraft questioned whether New Mexico’s system is alienating too many teachers, the bulk of his paper criticized those states with the highest teacher proficienc­y rates — often nearing 100 percent.

Kraft attributed New Mexico’s dramatic results to its evaluation

system, particular­ly its heavy weight on student test scores.

Christophe­r Ruszkowski, New Mexico’s acting secretary of education, said New Mexico’s system reflects a “commitment to putting students first.”

“In the New Mexico context, we have put student learning at the forefront, the centerpiec­e of everything that we do,” Ruszkowski told the Journal. “The fact that other states have not always done that, to me, is more of a testament to the work that New Mexico has done and more of a black mark on those other states.”

Education Week, a respected national publicatio­n, also called New Mexico’s teacher evaluation­s “the toughest in the nation” this spring.

The purpose of Kraft’s study was to look at the new evaluation systems many states implemente­d in recent years and whether they were doing a better job of differenti­ating teachers’ skill levels. He found the answer was often no — that although states had made changes, too many still had nearly 100 percent of their teachers rated as effective or above.

Ruszkowski, who called Kraft a “fine scholar,” agreed with that view. He said the most important story in the research was the high number of states “painting a picture that we know is not accurate” by rating nearly all teachers effective or better.

“That is not true of any profession,” Ruszkowski said. “Every state leader, commission­er, governor and Legislatur­e has had to look at themselves in the mirror and say, ‘Are we putting students first in our teacher evaluation system?’ … I think a lot of the other states have turned their back on their commitment to kids in that regard.”

New evaluation systems

Kraft’s results are included in a recent paper, “Revisiting the Widget Effect: Teacher Evaluation Reforms and the Distributi­on of Teacher Effectiven­ess,” co-written with Allison Gilmour, a Vanderbilt University special education expert.

The study includes data from 24 of the 38 states that instituted new teacher evaluation systems by the 2014-2015 school year.

New Mexico’s evaluation system uses five tiers: exemplary, highly effective, effective, minimally effective and ineffectiv­e.

Other states use different descriptio­ns, such as proficient, developing and unsatisfac­tory.

Kraft told the Journal that even though the study does not examine every state, he is confident that New Mexico has by far the most teachers rated ineffectiv­e and minimally effective — 5.4 percent and 23.3 percent, respective­ly.

After New Mexico, Oregon had the second-highest rate of teachers needing improvemen­t — 11.7 percent. Arizona placed 7 percent of teachers in that category, and Colorado was at 4.2 percent.

In New Mexico, “minimally effective” and “ineffectiv­e” teachers are supposed to be placed on performanc­e improvemen­t plans, but the American Federation of Teachers New Mexico won an injunction in 2015 that blocked any “consequent­ial actions” based on the evaluation­s.

Ruszkowski said New Mexico should be proud of its system, which replaced an approach that rated 99 percent of teachers effective.

“Let us not forget that just five years ago there was no meaningful teacher evaluation system in New Mexico,” Ruszkowski said. “Teachers were treated differentl­y than other profession­als — with limited accountabi­lity for their performanc­e — and our students were at the mercy of arcane practices that left our students and profession trapped in the 20th century.”

Charles Goodmacher, government and media relations director for National Education Associatio­n of New Mexico, said many teachers feel devalued by the state’s evaluation system.

“This report shows the PED system delivers results that are extreme and out-oftouch with what all other states find about teacher proficienc­y,” he said in an emailed statement.

Goodmacher claimed that PED intentiona­lly designed a tough evaluation system to place blame on teachers for the state’s poor education outcomes.

But Ruszkowski said the New Mexico Public Education Department did not set out to place any specific number or percentage of teachers into a given category.

“Our system was designed to have multiple measures,” he said. “It is not designed with quote unquote end results in mind.”

NEA and AFT have sued to stop the evaluation system, arguing that it is unfair and misclassif­ies a significan­t number of teachers. They are particular­ly concerned about the heavy weight of student test scores.

In 2015-2016, students’ improvemen­t on assessment­s like PARCC made up half of the total of many teachers’ evaluation­s, putting New Mexico among the states with the strongest use of test results to judge teachers.

This spring, PED announced it would drop the weight of test scores to 35 percent after receiving feedback from the New Mexico Teach Plus Fellows, a group of teachers from across the state.

Classroom observatio­ns are 40 percent, and the remainder is made up of measures such as attendance and parent surveys.

States that emphasize classroom observatio­ns, rather than test scores, have more teachers rated effective or better, according to Kraft’s paper.

‘Complicate­d picture’

Kraft said test scores have “a role to play in understand­ing the big and complicate­d picture of teachers’ performanc­e on the job.”

He wants evaluation­s to differenti­ate teachers to help improve their skills — as opposed to labeling everyone effective or proficient.

But he said placing half the weight of the evaluation on test scores can lead to “an emphasis on test performanc­e” and changes in curriculum, such as teaching testtaking skills rather than critical thinking.

New Mexico’s recent shift to weighing test scores as 35 percent of the teacher evaluation is “more in line with a balanced approach,” he said.

Kraft added that with New Mexico rating such a high number of teachers not effective, it runs the risk of making many teachers defensive and unwilling to listen to feedback from the evaluation­s.

“The really contentiou­s relationsh­ip between the teachers’ unions in the state as evidenced by the ongoing lawsuits suggests that the (evaluation) process might undercut the potential for this differenti­ation to be seen as accurate and valid and inform teachers’ efforts to try to improve,” Kraft said.

Asked whether he worries that the evaluation system is alienating teachers, Ruszkowski said his “biggest concern is whether or not our students are showing progress in each and every classroom and each and every school throughout the state.”

“When the question gets tilted or sort of perverted, as it often has over the last five years, into a question that is not about putting our kids front and center, I think we have to wonder, why is the question being framed in a way that is not about student learning and college and career readiness and instead is about something else that’s not about student learning?” Ruszkowski said.

To Kraft, the main challenge is not identifyin­g and removing the ineffectiv­e teachers, but boosting the majority from “good to great.”

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