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Monday, February 1, 2010

City schools to be graded on a curve for next year’s report cards | GothamSchools

City schools to be graded on a curve for next year’s report cards | GothamSchools


City schools to be graded on a curve for next year’s report cards

Many of the city elementary and middle schools who received A’s on last year’s report cards are likely to see their grades drop under a new scoring system for next year, Department of Education officials told principals today.
Next year, only the top-scoring 25 percent of schools will receive A’s, with just under a third of schools each getting B’s and C’s. A tenth of schools will be handed D’s, and 5 percent will receive failing grades, according to the plan outlined today by the city’s accountability chief Shael Polakow-Suransky.
(More than 80 percent of elementary and middle schools took home A’s on their progress reports for last school year.)
The change comes as part of the first step of a gradual recalibration of the way schools are rated in the city’s progress reports system and is also a by-product of the wider state effort to overhaul tests given to New York’s third through eighth graders.
State education officials are redesigning tests this year, both to make them more difficult and to judge a wider set of skills. Students are also taking state test in May this year for the first time, where in the past they’ve sat for exams in January.