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Thursday, February 27, 2014

Top 10 teachers in Florida illustrate how messy and absurd the new teacher data is | Education By The Numbers

Top 10 teachers in Florida illustrate how messy and absurd the new teacher data is | Education By The Numbers:



Top 10 teachers in Florida illustrate how messy and absurd the new teacher data is



This week of February 24, 2014 the State of Florida was forced to dump a boat load of data on its teachers into the public domain (It lost a law suit to Times Union newspaper in Florida, which requested the data). Nearly every public and charter school teacher in the state is named. And next to each named teacher is a “value added measure,” a figure that’s supposed to represent how effective he is based on how much his students’ reading and math test scores surpassed what you would expect them to be.
It starts with a complicated formula that predicts how much you expect each student to learn during the year.  I’m not quite clear on how the formula factors in where a student started. It’s usually easier to show larger gains off of a low starting point. But much harder to show gains from a high starting bar. I’ve already seen at least one post from a teacher of “gifted” students, complaining that she now has a negative value added measure because her students started the year with very high test scores. Her students’ scores increased at the end of the year, but not by as much as the complicated formula predicted they should have. It’s possible that this teacher isn’t very good. But it’s also possible that she’s a great teacher. It would be fascinating to calculate how many of the teachers of advanced students received negative value added scores.
One illustration of how bad this data is is simply to look at the top 10 list of teachers in the State. (I sorted the entire database by value added measure and made this table).
Teacher NameSchool Name
District Name
Value Added MeasureTaught a coursemeasured by the state tests
1RHODEN,TARA ARLENEBAKER COUNTY MIDDLE SCHOOLBAKER326.69%
Yes
2FISCHETTI,TRACY JANENAVARRE HIGH SCHOOLSANTA ROSA273.99%Yes
3MUNOZ,JULIALATIN BUILDERS ASSOCIATION CONSTRUCTION AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT ACADEMYDADE265.23%
No
4HARRIS,SAMANTHA LEIGHLATIN BUILDERS ASSOCIATION CONSTRUCTION AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT ACADEMYDADE265.23%No
5YORDAN,LINETTE MARIERONALD W. REAGAN/DORAL SENIOR HIGH SCHOOLDADE259.38%
No
6BURRIER,LYNNE MFORT MYERS HIGH SCHOOLLEE251.89%
No
7PHELAN,STACEY MARIECORAL REEF SENIOR HIGH SCHOOLDADE249.34%No
8FERNANDEZ,HILARIO LAZAROBEN SHEPPARD ELEMENTARY SCHOOLDADE243.21%
No
9KEARNEY,KAREN EF. W. BUCHHOLZ HIGH SCHOOLALACHUA241.88%
No
10BUTLER,LORINE GRIERENGLEWOOD HIGH SCHOOLDUVAL234.52%No
It’s not immediately apparent what subjects each of these teachers teach but 8 of the top 10 don’t even teach the courses that are measured by the state’s math and reading tests that were used to calculate the value added measures. They could have been art or physical education teachers. For the teachers that don’t teach a subject measured on the test, the state still uses the students verbal and 

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