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Friday, May 8, 2015

What Really Happened to Atlanta's Students When Their Teachers Cheated - The Atlantic

What Really Happened to Atlanta's Students When Their Teachers Cheated - The Atlantic:

What Really Happened to Atlanta's Students When Their Teachers Cheated

Eight educators have been sentenced to prison for the decade-long testing scandal. But was the tampering even necessary?






A Georgia judge just finalized prison sentences for eight Atlanta educators, the latest development in a drama that has transfixed the city since 2011. That year, state investigators found that nearly 180 teachers and principals had illegally tampered with scores on state tests, both by telling students the right answers and by secretly correcting the work students handed in.

Once held up as a model of urban school reform, Atlanta now  gets cited as an example of everything wrong with test-based accountability. Under intense pressure to meet impossible targets, as well as the guidance of a superintendent who fostered what investigators called "a culture of fear," educators cracked—or so the story goes.

But Atlanta students, who are overwhelmingly African American and low-income, may have actually made genuine academic progress over the decade when the cheating took place. "It is possible that if they did cheat, they didn't have to cheat because they were really were improving," said Peggy Carr, the acting commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics.

Since 2002, test scores in Atlanta have steadily risen on a federal test that doesn't have a lot of stakes and is hard to game. It's called the National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, and it's been used since the 1970s just to track data on national trends in math and reading proficiency. "It's sort of an outside indicator, almost a second opinion," said Carr, whose office administers the test.

During the period in which the cheating took place—which could date back to 2001—Beverly Hall, who was superintendent at the time, implemented an array of school-reform strategies. She expanded charter schools, broke large high schools into small, themed academies, and raised millions of philanthropic dollars to support schools lacking in resources.

She also set up an aggressive system focused on accountability that revolved around state test scores. Her administration set academic targets for every school in the district, doled out bonuses when those benchmarks were met, and humiliated and intimidated educators when they failed to fulfill goals. Schools were expected to higher benchmarks each year; the administration would not accept failure. Hall, who was among the educators indicted in connection with the cheating scandal but she died before she could stand trial, later told investigators that the federal No Child Left Behind law compelled her to set ambitious targets.
Slowly but surely, school leaders started to encourage cheating. "Teachers who conducted themselves ethically but failed to achieve required results were sanctioned," the state investigation found in 2011.



Early in her tenure, Hall also signed up Atlanta to pilot a new NAEP test designed for urban school districts. She later told investigators that she wanted external validation of the district's progress. "We wanted an independent third party," she said—an assessment that the district did not administer, grade, or proctor, and that students were randomly assigned to take.

The NAEP data shows mixed success. Atlanta fourth- and eighth-graders still score below the national average in math and reading. The achievement gap between black and white students remains as wide today as it was aWhat Really Happened to Atlanta's Students When Their Teachers Cheated - The Atlantic: