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Wednesday, February 19, 2014

“Significant Flaws” with New York’s Teacher Evaluation Data |

“Significant Flaws” with New York’s Teacher Evaluation Data |:



“Significant Flaws” with New York’s Teacher Evaluation Data


New York “State officials admit problems with new teacher ratings” is how the headline reads. More specifically, it seems that New York State Education Department officials are acknowledging “significant flaws” with their new system of rating more than 126,000 teachers statewide by their effectiveness, and these errors are causing the state to push back the public release of these data.
While the state did not disclose any details to help define with what types of “significant flaws” the state was dealing, anecdotal evidence suggests there may be rating errors across similar tests and scoring errors whereby teachers who score consistently across subject areas are scoring below par in their overall categorization/ranking.
In addition, this release is only to be pushed back until around March, even though the data to be released are about teacher performance from the 2012-13 school year. Yes, teachers will be getting their data this March from last year.
Here’s the deal on this one. One of the biggest drawbacks of such teacher evaluation systems is that they have literally no instrumental value; that is, no states across the country have yet figured out how to use these data for instrumental or change-based purposes, to inform the betterment of schools, teacher quality, and most importantly