One of the proposed changes that parents and educators may notice is a change in the terms applied to schools based on how they perform on the Delaware Comprehensive Assessment System. Currently, schools are placed in categories such as "superior," "commendable" and "academic watch." The draft proposal would drop those names in favor of the U.S. Department of Education's seven suggested category names, which would include descriptors such as "reward schools," "recognition schools," "focus schools" and "priority (partnership zone) schools." From the News JournalYou've got to be kidding me, right? Superior and Commendable were at least meaningful - you knew you were buying into a good school - at least until last year. That's when DOE - without the community meetings - went ahead and recalculated the way schools were labeled based upon achievement data. That resulted in schools that failed to meet the accepted definition of proficiency achieving a superior or commendable status based solely upon student growth - more students moving in the right direction but not reaching proficiency targets. The end result was a ton of confusion with little clear explanation directed towards parents or the public.
So, who wants their child to attend a school labeled "Reward School?" No, really? Does that title have any inherent meaning to you? And just what is the reward the school is earning? I don't have the answers - DOE hasn't extended its informational reach to general school board members, yet. Guess that means I'll be attending one of their forums. But, with only one meeting in each county - that may be a hard one to achieve... When the Gov. finally decided that he needed to sell RTTT to the tax payers, he hit each of the counties several times. I can only guess that redefining achievement is a bit less important...
When will DOE bring all the parties to the table and participate in shared decision making? If DOE was looking for true interactive feedback, these meetings would have been announced weeks ago, not during winter break when matters of education are in the far back of the parental mind. When will constituents be treated as thought partners? Inviting them to a dog and pony show is a far cry from being engaged in the development process. When will tax payers become more than human capital? School districts signed MOUs that promised they would continue to fund the reform efforts begun under RTTT after the federal grant runs out. Who will shoulder that burden? Delaware's workforce? They've been treated as a commodity thus far by an administration that talks jobs but fails to produce them.
Too little, too late. But, then, these are just the ramblings of a private cynic... citizen.
DRAFT PROPOSAL
To read the state's draft proposal, go to the Delaware Department of Education's website at www.doe.k12.de.us and click on "community meetings."
The meeting times and locations:
NEW CASTLE COUNTY: Jan. 4 at 6 p.m. in the James Gilliam Conference Center, 77 Reads Way, New Castle.
KENT COUNTY: Jan. 11 at 6 p.m. in the Kent County Government Building, Room 220, Dover.
SUSSEX COUNTY: Jan. 19 at 6 p.m. in the Sussex County Government Building, The Circle, Georgetown.
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