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– Editorial – - State school report cards do more for politicians than parents

By Editorial Board

Last week, the Wisconsin Department of Pubic Instruction (DPI), released its annual report cards for public schools across the state.

The state school report cards are a largely useless waste of taxpayer resources, that do nothing to improve the education of children or educate parents about school options.

The primary beneficiaries of the annual report cards, are paper-pushing bureaucrats, whose job it is to prepare them, politicians wanting to make speeches about holding public schools accountable and for urban private school recruiters, as a way to get parents to transfer out of “failing” inner-city schools.

As usual, the release of the report cards came with the annual warning from the DPI and school officials, not to read too much into them. Or, at least to not focus too much on the large-print number or the number of stars on the front page, without diving into the 14 plus pages of supporting documents for those stars and numbers.

Additional annual cautionary statements come from every local school official, pointing out that the formulas used to weigh scoring areas, make comparing one school district’s scores with another.

For example, Rib Lake School District saw its achievement scores soar last year, but saw its state report card grade drop, because as a high poverty school – as measured by the percentage of students getting free or reduced lunch – the state puts more weight on showing progress, than on the actual achievement test scores.

So consistently high-performing, but low income, school districts, get lower state grades, because of unrealistic and impossible to meet benchmarks.

Ratings are everywhere in society and are used by consumers to make a wide range of decisions, from choosing a restaurant to finding the safest vehicle for your family. The public is trained to think that a four-star rating is better than a one-star rating or that a score of 86 out of 100, is better than a score of 59 out of 100.

Despite appearing to offer parents that level of consumer information, everyone in education will tell you that is not how the report card number should be used, at least, when it comes to comparing one district to another.

When it comes to apples vs. apples comparisons, about the best the state report cards can do, is show how schools do when compared to others within that district.

This works for places like Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay or Racine, that have multiple schools at each grade level, but is less relevant for the vast majority of Wisconsin school districts, that might have one building or less each, for elementary, middle and high school levels.

The state report cards do little to actually improve learning in the classroom and instead, steal away resources and time, from educators and districts. Schools use a host of real time assessment tests and tools, to track and identify problem areas, so that they may be addressed immediately.

Author and radio host Garrison Keillor described his fictional Lake Woebegon, as being a place where “all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking and all the children are above average.” The caution in that statement is the inherent bias people have to put their community, students and institutions on a pedestal, whether or not they deserve to be there.

To the general public, the obvious intent of the state issuing report cards, is to provide an objective way to determine the difference between those schools that are succeeding and those that are failing. With ever-changing criteria for coming up with the scores, the state report cards fail miserably at doing this, being less than useless in comparing even individuals schools over time.

It is time for Wisconsin to scrap the current school report cards, and replace it with a system that looks at existing widely-used objective assessments and set metrics, to measure success.

Members of the Courier Sentinel editorial board include publisher Carol O’Leary, general manager Kris O’Leary and Star News editor Brian Wilson.

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