91制片厂视频

Assessment

Philadelphia Principal Describes Fallout of Test-Score Inflation

By Benjamin Herold 鈥 November 28, 2012 8 min read
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In July 2010, when Saliyah Cruz was named principal of Communications Technology High, state test scores said the small citywide admission school in Southwest Philadelphia was one of the best in the city.

Everything else said something different.

SAT scores were poor. Summer enrichment programs were empty. Loads of kids tested into remedial reading and math. According to Cruz, even the police complained that many students had spent much of the previous school year at the nearby Penrose Plaza strip mall instead of in class.

鈥淭hose kinds of things didn鈥檛 add up for me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f my kids were out in the street when they belong in school, how were they scoring [75] percent proficient?鈥

Two years later, an answer appeared: A mountain of circumstantial evidence now suggests that Comm Tech鈥檚 results on the 2010 Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) exams were inflated by adult cheating. The school is one of 53 District schools and four area charters involved in a state-led investigation that has prompted questions about the validity of test results between 2009 and 2011.

This 2010 file photo shows Saliyah Cruz as principal of West Philadelphia High School.

Cruz, now a middle school principal in Delaware, says the suspect scores at Comm Tech hurt students. She also believes they reflected a districtwide culture of rewarding improbable PSSA gains while dismissing steady improvement.

鈥淭he message quite clearly was, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 what鈥檚 expected in the School District of Philadelphia,鈥欌 said Cruz. 鈥淎ll the principals, all the teachers, all the kids need to be able to make these giant leaps forward.鈥

Testing experts say the ripple effects of inflated scores go even wider, especially because the District continues to rely heavily on data that is likely tainted to measure success and make high-stakes policy decisions.

鈥淚 think the implications are pretty profound,鈥 said Jonathan Supovitz, a University of Pennsylvania professor who co-directs the Consortium for Policy Research in 91制片厂视频 (CPRE).

鈥淚f we can鈥檛 assume the stability of the data, then any sense of guidance about what we鈥檙e doing well or not well is broken down.鈥

District officials declined to be interviewed for this story.

鈥淚t is too early to say how the PSSA scores have been affected by the allegations of testing improprieties,鈥 wrote spokesman Fernando Gallard in a statement, citing ongoing investigations.

Each year, students in grades 3-8 and 11 take the PSSA in reading and math. Their scores are used to determine whether schools meet federally mandated performance targets, known as adequate yearly progress (AYP). In Philadelphia, they鈥檙e also used to make big decisions, including which schools get closed or converted to charters.

In 2010, 75 percent of 11th graders at Comm Tech scored proficient or above in reading. That was a 22 percentage-point jump over the previous year.

In math, 70 percent of Comm Tech 11th graders scored proficient or above, 40 points higher than the year before.

An analysis commissioned by the Pennsylvania Department of 91制片厂视频 suggested the results may be illegitimate. In both 2009 and 2010, a high number of student response sheets at Comm Tech had suspicious patterns of 鈥渨rong-to-right鈥 erasures鈥攁 telltale sign of adult cheating.

Before the 2010-11 school year started, Comm Tech鈥檚 principal, Barbara McCreery, was replaced. That year, under Saliyah Cruz, the suspicious erasures went away. The school鈥檚 scores tanked, dropping 38 points in reading and 45 points in math.

Audio Story

Listen to Saliyah Cruz鈥檚 story in this radio feature.

McCreery, now the principal at Bok Technical High, declined to comment for this story.

Cruz says she wasn鈥檛 sure what to think when she walked into Comm Tech.

鈥淚 thought I was taking the helm of a high-performing school,鈥 said Cruz. 鈥淎lthough there were some red flags.鈥

She says she tried talking to Comm Tech staff to get a handle on what was going on.

鈥溾楪uys, help me understand this. What were we doing last year that accounted for the kind of academic performance the kids had?鈥欌

In response, says Cruz, staff pointed to 鈥淪tudy Island,鈥 a computer-based test prep program used at many District schools.

鈥淚t didn鈥檛 make any sense,鈥 she said.

Despite her skepticism, Cruz says the 2010 PSSA results still led her to believe that only a small proportion of Comm Tech鈥檚 students needed remedial help. Rather than overhaul staffing patterns and course schedules to allow for a schoolwide intervention, she expanded use of Study Island.

But early indicators signaled disaster. Reports generated by Study Island suggested that students didn鈥檛 understand the material. Interim tests used to predict PSSA performance pointed to huge score drops. Cruz鈥檚 own eyes told her that students weren鈥檛 learning.

Some of her staff refused to believe any of it, she says.

鈥淚 got a lot of pushback,鈥 said Cruz. 鈥溾業 don鈥檛 care what all this data is saying, our PSSA scores say something different.鈥欌

Her efforts to get some staff to change their instruction or re-teach content were rebuffed.

鈥淚 felt like I was running into a brick wall,鈥 said Cruz.

As a result, says Cruz, students at Comm Tech got a Band-Aid when they needed surgery.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the kids got the supports they needed,鈥 she said flatly.

Shortly after beginning her second year at Comm Tech, Cruz left the District altogether.

鈥榃辞飞.鈥

Supovitz, the head of CPRE, has studied educational testing for 15 years.

BRIC ARCHIVE

A strong believer in standardized tests, he says that exams like the PSSA provide a reasonably accurate look over time at whether kids across a school or district are learning what they鈥檙e supposed to learn.

Shown the wild fluctuations in Comm Tech鈥檚 test score data between 2009 and 2011, Supovitz offered a one-word reaction: 鈥淲ow.鈥

The sharp spike in the 2010 Comm Tech scores should have provoked a closer look from the central office, he said.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the usefulness of these kinds of data,鈥 said Supovitz. 鈥淎n administrator overseeing 250 schools can look and ask questions.鈥

That鈥檚 not generally how the scores have been used in Philadelphia, however.

Cruz says that if anyone inside District headquarters took a critical look at Comm Tech鈥檚 PSSA results, she wasn鈥檛 aware of it.

鈥淚 was not a part of any conversations like that,鈥 she said.

Instead, District officials held up schools with improbable results as exemplars.

Huge Gains Lauded

Cruz recalls vividly a citywide principals鈥 meeting in 2010 at which former Roosevelt Middle School principal Stefanie Ressler was invited to present on her school鈥檚 astronomical test score gains.

鈥淚鈥檓 sitting there going, 鈥榃ell, how in the heck did she do that?鈥欌 recalled Cruz, who had just been removed as principal of West Philadelphia High. 鈥淚 have the same resources, and I鈥檓 pulling my hair out, and I can鈥檛 make those kinds of leaps.鈥

Several members of Roosevelt鈥檚 staff later accused Ressler, now principal of Wilson Middle School, of cheating. The state-commissioned analysis found overwhelming signs of suspicious erasures in every tested grade and subject at Roosevelt between 2009 and 2011. An investigation is ongoing.

Accounts from the unfolding cheating scandal have been hard to swallow, says Cruz.

Despite making widely praised improvements in the climate when she was at West, she was told during the 2009-10 school year that test scores weren鈥檛 rising fast enough. Superintendent Arlene Ackerman designated the school for a complete overhaul as part of her Renaissance turnaround initiative. Cruz was ousted.

鈥淪low, incremental growth got dismissed,鈥 said Cruz, while questionable results were allowed to 鈥渄istort what鈥檚 actually possible.鈥

Since 2010, 26 schools, including West, have been either converted to 鈥淧romise Academies鈥 or handed over to charter operators, largely on the basis of poor test scores. Last year, the District closed eight schools, based in part on the same scores.

Although it is impossible to undo any of those decisions, it is not too late to 鈥渂uild a system that produces stable data we can have confidence in,鈥 said Supovitz.

No Action Yet From City Or State

To date, though, both the Pennsylvania Department of 91制片厂视频 (PDE) and the School District have declined to address the distorting effects of artificially inflated PSSA scores.

Both continue to use the three years of questionable results to hold schools accountable and guide significant policy decisions.

In September of this year, Secretary of 91制片厂视频 Ronald Tomalis contended that 2012 is the first year in which the public can be confident that 鈥淧SSA scores are a true reflection of student achievement and academic progress.鈥

Regardless, PDE does not appear to have adjusted the past AYP status of any district or school. Roosevelt Middle, for example, is still deemed to have met its performance targets in both 2009 and 2010鈥 which gives it a more favorable AYP status now鈥攄espite the likelihood that its results from those years were tainted by cheating.

Through a spokesman, Tomalis did not respond to interview requests.

In an email, PDE spokesman Timothy Eller suggested that the state is waiting for its cheating investigation to conclude before making any decisions about adjusting AYP determinations.

鈥淭he department is considering the various options, and decisions will be announced when they are made,鈥 he said.

The District has taken a similar stance.

No moves have yet been made to either remove the suspect data from use or to adjust it. Officials in Philadelphia still plan to use AYP status to help determine which schools to close this year. They also will apparently continue feeding questionable PSSA results into their School Performance Index, used to rank schools.

鈥淭he District will wait for the [investigation] findings before providing further comment on this issue,鈥 wrote Gallard.

Saliyah Cruz has been affected by it all as much as anyone.

From her office in Delaware, she still wonders where Philadelphia schools would be now if officials had set a 鈥渞ealistic target鈥 for growth instead of touting implausible test score gains as the norm.

鈥淲hen you set up a system like that,鈥 Cruz concludes, 鈥渋t鈥檚 only a matter of time before you get the issues that we have now.鈥

This story is part of a news-gathering partnership between the Philadelphia Public School Notebook and NewsWorks. Republished with permission from NewsWorks. Copyright 漏 2012 NewsWorks.
A version of this article appeared in the December 05, 2012 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Philadelphia School Inflated Test Scores, Evidence Suggests

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