Wednesday, October 6, 2010

District in the News Again: Test Score Shell Game



Troubled students excluded from high school scores

Sweetwater recalculation shows test gains would have been smaller without realignment

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2010 AT 7:54 P.M.

The state test rankings at 11 Sweetwater Union high school campuses went up 5 percent on average this year — a remarkable increase made possible in part by a controversial realignment that excluded some of the district’s most troubled students from those results.

If those students had been included, the average high school would have seen 4.3 percent growth, according to an analysis conducted by district staff in response to critics.

The alternative education students used to be included in each campus’ scores. They remain on campus, but have now been carved out for administrative purposes into a separate group called Bounce Back Independent Study High School.

That school scored 549 on California’s Academic Performance Index this year, well below the mainstream goal of 800 set by the state.

The district says the separation is for the good of the 2,200 independent study students, and had nothing to do with test scores.

Critics, including two former teachers, say the move was sleight of hand intended to scrub bad scores from each high school’s performance in a high-stakes test-score world where every point counts. Schools can face sanctions if they don’t show adequate progress each year.

The district’s own analysis of the 11 schools shows that the average campus scored 793 on the API rankings this year. Had the Bounce Back students been included in the scores, that would have been 788 instead. Either way, they say, that’s solid growth over the 756 average the year before.

At the schools that have the most Bounce Back students, the difference was more pronounced. At Castle Park High School, the state index was 812. It would have been 802 had the Bounce Back students been included. Again, district officials point to significant growth over the school’s 762 score the year before.

Sweetwater officials say their API growth is a result of district reforms and part of a trend that shows improved student achievement dating back three years.

“This is something to be proud of and this in no way deflates the gains we have made for our students,” said Diego Ochoa, Castle Park’s principal.

Maria Castilljea, the district’s executive director of curriculum and instruction, agreed, saying, “It is discouraging that somebody would discredit the work of 1,700 teachers and 200 administrators who have worked hard to close the achievement gap.”

To address the criticism, the district recalculated its state API rankings to see how inclusion of Bounce Back students would affect them. The higher rankings will remain as the official state record.

By having the Bounce Back students across the district assigned to a single principal — rather than administrators at 11 campuses — the district hopes to establish a more cohesive alternative education system.

John Brickley, an alternative education teacher who retired from the district last month, remains convinced the new Bounce Back school was a “cheap move,” designed to boost rankings at comprehensive high schools.

“These students, who are the neediest students, have been used as pawns by a district that is getting greedy about raising test scores as high as it can,” Brickley said. “The irony is that the district didn’t have to do this because the scores went up anyway. This just taints it.”

Sweetwater’s 42,000 middle and high school students made significant improvements on state tests in virtually all grades and subjects this year.

Released in August, English scores improved the most — a jump the district attributed to a new curriculum for English classes.

maureen.magee@uniontrib.com (619) 293-1369 Staff writer Ashly McGlone contributed to this report.


CAMPAIGN FINANCE DISCLOSURE --DO IT YOURSELF

Have you ever wondered who is donating to local elections?
Here is an easy way to access that information.
Challenge: Try to find the SUHSD incumbent who just recorded a $ 5,000. donation from Seville Group Inc. of Pasadena, CA.

1. Log onto the Registrar of Voters Web Site




2. Do you see the dollar sign in the middle of the page?

$ NEW Campaign Finance Disclosure Records

3. Click on that link and you will get to a page that looks like this.

http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/voters/Eng/proceed.html

4. Once you have proceeded, you can select your candidate by last name, for example. You will be able to review pdf files of forms they have turned in with names/contributors to their campaigns.

Here is an example of Arlie Ricasa's latest filing:


Monday, October 4, 2010

Community Member Challenges Board Incumbents...

Jane McGill, member of the Sweetwater Union District Proposition O Bond Oversight Committee, suggested board members recuse themselves from voting on contracts from companies and vendors who are donating to their campaigns. Though not illegal, one cannot help but notice the obvious conflict of interest. Where are the students in this equation?

Following here are Jane McGill's notes for the request she made to the board during open session on September 24. Just an FYI, the board scheduled the agenda items that Jane McGill was addressing for later in the evening when most of the public had left. Coincidence?


"Good evening. I have had the pleasure of serving on the Sweetwater Union District Proposition O Bond Oversight Committee for several years. This has been a wonderful opportunity to see various sites updated so that students in our district will be able to attend schools that would make any community proud. Also, during a recession it has poured huge sums of money into the local economy. I am delighted to see both of these things happening.

However, I do have a concern. It is one I have brought up before and it has become much more of an issue with the huge amounts of money being spent under Proposition O. At every board meeting millions of dollars are approved for various contracts and change orders. These contracts go to architectural firms and construction companies. When we voters approved this bond measure we expected the money to be spent totally without bias. I think it is inappropriate for board members to approve contracts and then take political contributions from companies that are involved with these contracts. I think all candidates for members of the board should decline all political contributions from firms that might be involved in work on the schools.

Unfortunately, this is not the case. I have seen some contribution records and I know two of the current board members have accepted donations for their current campaigns from these companies. This is a great concern to me. The people selected for contracts to work on our schools should be selected based on qualifications and the bidding process with absolutely no personal factors influencing the decision. If a board member does take funds from an architectural firm or contractor with any ties or even potential ties to the district, the ethical approach would be for the board member to refrain from voting on any issue that impacts that company in any way. Tonight that specifically applies to K1 on page 26 and M2 on page 27. Will the members of the board take an ethical approach and pledge to refrain from voting on any and all issues that are related to their campaign donors?"

Thank you, Jane. Who is donating to SUHSD board incumbents' campaigns?






UnionTribune Endorses Tom Torlakson

An editorial this week supported:
Tom Torlakson for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.
This is a reversal for our local newspaper! (and about time)


ELECTION 2010

Cooley , Torlakson deserve support

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2010 AT MIDNIGHT

California voters have an unusually good option in the attorney general’s race in Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley, a successful and bipartisanly admired prosecutor.

Cooley has won praise for his measured approach to “three strikes” prosecutions, which was demagogued by his opponents in the Republican primary campaign. We like his insistence on prosecutorial discretion and his less-publicized skepticism about counterproductive sex-offender residence restrictions in Megan’s Law. He also makes a welcome vow to depoliticize the Attorney General’s Office, which under Jerry Brown has seemed to function as a vehicle for Brown’s gubernatorial ambitions, exemplified by the slanted ballot descriptions Brown’s staff produces for measures disliked by Democratic constituencies.

Cooley’s Democratic opponent, San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris, is smart and charismatic, but her resume is simply not as strong. She is facing intense criticism over a judge’s allegations that prosecutors in her office covered up information about gross misconduct at her city’s police crime lab.

The choice is more difficult for state superintendent of public instruction. Larry Aceves, a veteran school administrator who began his education career as a kindergarten teacher in the San Diego area, is both thoughtful and blunt in discussing education orthodoxy. He disputes, for example, claims that classroom-size-reduction policies have been helpful academically.

But his opponent, Assemblyman Tom Torlakson, D-Antioch, wins our backing. The former teacher has bipartisan support, including from Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher, R-San Diego, and offers thoughtful plans for getting businesses more involved with schools to help shape a better-prepared and more productive work force.

Torlakson’s support from teachers unions should give pause to anyone who backs education reform. But those who know Torlakson best say he is an independent thinker. We hope they are right.


Pro-Teacher Endorsements From Around Town

Hello all: One of our fellow teachers working at Mesa College forwarded this list to us.*


AFT Guild, Local 1931 – November 2010 Election Endorsements

PRIORITY RACES

Community College/School Boards

Grossmont-Cuyamaca, Seat 1—Edwin Hiel

Grossmont-Cuyamaca, Seat 2—Debbie Justeson

Southwestern, Seat 4—Norma Hernandez

Southwestern, Seat 5—Tim Nader

San Diego Unified, District B—Kevin Beiser

State of California

Governor—Jerry Brown

Superintendent of Public Instruction—Tom Torlakson

U.S. Senate

—Barbara Boxer

State Propositions

Prop 24 (Repeal Corporate Tax Loopholes)—YES

Prop 25 (Simple Majority State Budget-No Pay for Legislators)—YES

BALANCE OF ENDORSEMENTS

State of California

Lieutenant Governor—Gavin Newsom

Attorney General—Kamala Harris

Secretary of State—Debra Bowen

Treasurer—Bill Lockyer

Controller—John Chiang

Insurance Commissioner—Dave Jones

Assembly District 74—Crystal Crawford

Assembly District 76—Toni Atkins

Assembly District 77—Mark Hanson

Assembly District 78—Marty Block

Assembly District 79—Ben Hueso

Assembly District 80—Manuel Perez

Senate District 36—Paul Clay

Senate District 40—Juan Vargas

Cities

Chula Vista City Council Seat 2—Pat Aguilar

El Cajon Mayor—Mark Lewis

Escondido City Council—Jason Everitt

Imperial Beach City Council—Ed Spriggs

La Mesa City Council—Patrick Dean

National City Mayor—Alejandra Sotelo-Solis

National City Council—Mona Rios & Luis Natividad

Oceanside City Council—Charles Lowery

San Diego City Council District 6—Howard Wayne

San Diego City Council District 8—Felipe Hueso

Santee City Council—John Ryan, John Minto & Janet Enright

Community College District Boards

Imperial, Area 2—Peter Martinez

Imperial, Area 5—Norma Sierra Galindo

Imperial, Area 7—Steven Taylor

Mira Costa, Area 7—William Fischer

Palomar Community—Paul McNamara

County of Imperial

Board of Supervisors District 1—John Renison

Board of Supervisors District 5—Raymond Castillo

Clerk/Recorder—Jacklin Colon

County of San Diego

Board of Supervisors District 4—Stephen Whitburn

Board of Supervisors District 5—Steve Gronke

Assessor/Recorder/Clerk—David Butler

Superior Court Seat 20—Richard Monroy

Other Local Districts

Alpine Fire Protection District—Jim Archer

Imperial Irrigation District, Division 1—Rudy Maldonado

Lakeside Fire Protection District—Peter Liebig, Susan Conniry, & Milton Cyphert

Otay Water District, Division 1—Chris Schilling

San Miguel Fire District—Jim Custeau, Kandhy Franklin, Jeff Nelson (vote for 3)

South Bay Irrigation District, Division 4—David Bensoussan

Tri-City Healthcare District—Ira Landis, Cyril Kellett, & Doreen Gounaris

School Boards

Alpine Union School—Jim Archer

Calexico Unified—Ruth Duarte & Tony Valenzuela

Central Union High School—Sean Arviso

Chula Vista Elementary, Seat 3—Francisco Sevilla

Chula Vista Elementary, Seat 5—Nick Segura

National School—Ted Godshalk & Elizabeth Vasquez

Poway Unified—Kimberley Beatty

Sweetwater Union High School, Seat 1—Karen Janney

Sweetwater Union High School, Seat 3—Hector Rivera

*(and Andy Valencia--SEA endorsed candidate running against Arlie Ricasa--who did not receive endorsement from the Labor Council)

Local Propositions

Prop A (Ban on County Government PLAs)—NO

Prop B (San Diego City Attorney Protection)—YES

Prop C (North San Diego Planning Amendment)—Neutral

Prop D (Protect Public Safety and Services in San Diego)—YES

Prop G (Carlsbad Permanent Pension Freeze)—NO

Prop H (Chula Vista Utility User Tax Modernization)—YES

Prop J (San Diego Unified Schools Teacher Retention)—YES

Prop K (San Marcos School Bond)—Neutral

Prop L (Julian School Bond)—Neutral

Prop M (Dehesa School Bond)—Neutral

Prop O (South Bay Union Teacher Retention)—YES

Prop P (Encinitas School Bond)—Neutral

State Propositions

Prop 19 (Regulate, Control and Tax Marijuana)—Neutral

Prop 20 (Congressional Redistricting Overhaul)—NO

Prop 21 (Protect State Parks)—YES

Prop 22 (League of Cities Budget Proposal)—Neutral

Prop 23 (Suspend Air Pollution Laws)—NO

Prop 24 (Repeal Costly Corporate Tax Loopholes)—YES

Prop 25 (Simple Majority State Budget)—YES

Prop 26 (New Budget Restrictions)—NO

Prop 27 (Eliminate Redistricting Commission)—YES


For other statewide endorsements not listed above click here:


http://www.cta.org/Issues-and-Action/Election-2010/Index.aspx