Los Angeles Times

Don’t judge teachers by test scores, court says

The decision runs counter to an earlier ruling in Los Angeles making results a key part of evaluation­s.

- By Howard Blume howard.blume @latimes.com

A judge in Northern California dealt a blow this week to a controvers­ial campaign to make teachers more accountabl­e for their students’ level of achievemen­t, the second key setback in recent months for those behind the effort.

The ruling by Contra Costa County Superior Court Judge Barry Goode went against the Bay Area group Students Matter. The group’s lawsuit aimed to force 13 school districts, including seven in Southern California, to make student standardiz­ed test scores a key part of teacher evaluation­s.

Students Matter had hoped to build on a 2012 ruling against the Los Angeles Unified School District, which led to a settlement under which test scores were supposed to become part of teacher evaluation­s.

But in Doe vs. Antioch, the case decided this week, the judge concluded that districts had broad discretion over how to use test results. The school districts in question, including Inglewood Unified, El Monte City, and Saddleback Valley Unified, were meeting their legal obligation­s, he said.

“The Legislatur­e endorses many uses of those tests, including evaluating pupils, entire schools and local educationa­l agencies,” Goode wrote in an opinion released Monday. “But it does not say the results should be used to evaluate individual teachers.”

This week’s ruling follows the California Supreme Court’s August decision not to re-examine a ruling that preserved traditiona­l teacher job protection­s, including tenure and seniority-based layoffs. In that nationally watched case, Vergara vs. California, Students Matter argued that these job protection­s are unconstitu­tional because, by protecting ineffectiv­e teachers, they deprive students, especially poor and minority ones, of their right to an education.

The Antioch decision surprised Marcellus McRae, who represente­d the plaintiffs, six California residents including parents and teachers.

“If you really think about it, this is such a basic concept that the goal of teaching is for students to learn,” said McRae. “It is, to me, axiomatic that teacher evaluation­s have to be based at least in part over whether students have learned.”

“What other profession is there where people do not get evaluated on results as opposed to their efforts only?” McRae added. “How is that, in California school districts, 98% of teachers get satisfacto­ry ratings, but only 44% of students meet the English Language Arts literacy standards? And only 34% met the standards in math?” he said, referring to 2014-15 numbers. (Performanc­e improved somewhat in the tests taken during the last school year.)

Teachers unions argue that judging teachers by test scores overlooks the effects of poverty and other external factors on student achievemen­t. They also challenged the focus on test scores as a uniquely important measure of student progress.

“Every day teachers across California use a variety of benchmarks, including in-class quizzes, tests, projects, and personal observatio­n to fine-tune their approaches with their students,” said Joshua Pechthalt, president of the California Federation of Teachers. “There is no single method for assessing progress that is ideal or that should be used to the exclusion of all others.”

Students Matter, which focuses on “impact litigation,” also is pursuing a lawsuit in Connecticu­t that aims, among other things, to make it easier to open charter schools. The group is funded by philanthro­pists with an agenda that broadly includes greater reliance on test scores, weakening teachers unions and spurring the growth of charter schools. Allied groups have active Vergara-like cases in New York and Minnesota.

A fundamenta­l goal of their strategy is to use the courts to bypass state legislatur­es in which teacher unions exert powerful influence.

Initially, the Antioch litigation seemed like lowhanging fruit. If L.A. Unified, the nation’s second-largest school system, could be brought to heel, what hope of resistance was there for Antioch Unified, a district of 18,000 students east of Berkeley? Perhaps fearing the worst, nine of the districts revised their evaluation processes after the suit was filed, McRae said.

Both the L.A. and Contra Costa cases were based on language from the Stull Act, which the Legislatur­e passed in 1971 and amended several times since. It requires school districts to “evaluate and assess” teachers in a manner that “reasonably relates” to the progress of pupils toward establishe­d standards and, “if applicable,” to state learning goals as measured by standardiz­ed tests.

Students Matter is weighing whether to appeal.

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