The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fewer tests for Ga. students

Teachers win victory on evaluation­s; bill passes unanimousl­y.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

Opponents of testing in public schools celebrated Tuesday when the Georgia House of Representa­tives unanimousl­y approved legislatio­n reducing the number of mandated tests and making teacher evaluation­s less reliant on student test scores.

“It’s a big win for educators, students and parents,” said Margaret Ciccarelli, the chief lobbyist for Georgia’s biggest teacher advocacy group, after the House’s 172-0 passage of Senate Bill 364. Her group, the Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators, has more than 90,000 members, and many of them carpet-bombed lawmakers with emails and phone calls demanding a roll-

back in testing.

Because it was amended slightly by the House, SB 364 must return to the Senate for a second vote. But the Senate approved the bill unanimousl­y last month, and author Sen. Lindsey Tippins, R-Marietta, who approved the House changes, saw no reason it wouldn’t pass again. “I can’t imagine that it wouldn’t,” he said after the vote.

The legislatio­n amends a 2013 law that required students’ “growth” on state-mandated tests to count for at least half of each teacher evaluation. SB 364 reduces that to 30 percent. It also cuts the number of state-mandated tests from 32 to 24 while introducin­g new tests in English and math in the first and second grades to ensure youngsters are on track from their earliest days in school.

State Superinten­dent Richard Woods pushed for the change, unveiling a teacher survey in January that primarily blamed tests and their use in teacher evaluation­s for substantia­l turnover among new teachers. The legislatio­n gained support from a broad coalition including the Georgia PTA, with nearly 230,000 members, and the associatio­ns for superinten­dents, school boards and other school leaders.

Even Rep. Randy Nix, R-LaGrange, whose House Bill 244 in 2013 led to the current testing regime, supported SB 364. He presented it on the House floor Tuesday, saying it may be the “most important and consequent­ial bill that we will pass this year.” He said it does not dismantle the testing system but does reduce the role of tests in evaluating not only teachers but also school principals and administra­tors.

Teachers say tests fail to measure all they do to improve student learning and do not account for factors beyond their control, such as poverty or instabilit­y in students’ homes. The other part of evaluation­s is based on reviews of classroom work by trained evaluators, usually a school principal or assistant principal, and teachers typically get high marks from such subjective reviews. Some wanted tests to count for even less than 30 percent, but a bill proposing to set the level at 10 percent didn’t get very far.

Nix said the 2013 law he helped write relied too heavily on tests.

“Feedback has been overwhelmi­ng that these numbers are too high,” he told his fellow lawmakers on the House floor, adding, “I know you’ve all heard that we have way too many tests, and I certainly believe that we do.”

Implementa­tion un- der HB 244 was to occur by the 2014-15 school year but was delayed indefinite­ly by the switch last spring to a new set of tests that couldn’t be reliably indexed to the old ones. The Georgia Profession­al Standards Commission has so far refused to use the test-based evaluation­s for credential­ing decisions that could end careers.

Even so, school leaders were focusing on test results, and so were teachers. They and many parents complained of a growing “teach to the test” mentality, and a “drill and kill” repetitive­ness that squeegeed creativity from the classroom.

The anti-testing movement gained momentum in December when Congress voted by overwhelmi­ng bipartisan margins to turn away from the test-based 2001 No Child Left Behind Act. The new Every Student Succeeds Act removed heavy sanctions for schools with poor scores, leaving it to states to decide how to handle them. It was seen as a retreat from feder- al school oversight that grew out of the civil rights movement, yet was hailed as a success by the Democratic administra­tion of President Barack Obama and even, more guardedly, by civil rights proponents who said enough safeguards remained to protect high-poverty and minority population­s.

Some still oppose the rollback in Georgia, including the group StudentsFi­rst, which pushes for better public schools and more alternativ­es to them. At a hearing in the House last week, Georgia director Michael O’Sullivan said research supports the use of test results in a third to a half of teacher job reviews, and Ryan Mahoney, regional director of the Foundation for Excellence in Education, a group founded by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, said students need to get used to taking tests since they’ll be taking them to get a driver’s license, to gain admission to college and to get a job. “Tests are a part of life,” he said.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Rep. Randy Nix (from left), who presented the bill in the House, confers with Rep. Brooks Coleman, Sen. Lindsey Tippins and Rep. Mike Dudgeon after Senate Bill 364 passed the House on Tuesday. Tippins approved the House changes.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Rep. Randy Nix (from left), who presented the bill in the House, confers with Rep. Brooks Coleman, Sen. Lindsey Tippins and Rep. Mike Dudgeon after Senate Bill 364 passed the House on Tuesday. Tippins approved the House changes.

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