A sharp drop in school-by-school grades on the annual 'report card'
mandated by the 1998 Education Accountability Act is disturbing. Yet while
the statewide 2005 marks released last week were negative, the practice of
regularly measuring classroom performance remains a positive endeavor in
the long-term mission to improve South Carolina's public schools. So is
the continuing push for educational innovation - including educational
choice.
Indeed, as required by the 2002 federal No Child Left Behind Act, any
student attending a public school failing to achieve 'Adequate Yearly
Progress' for two or more years in a row has a right to transfer to a
school rated above the 'needs improvement' category. And S.C.
Superintendent of Education Inez Tenenbaum, in a recent visit to this
newspaper, aptly termed the troubling 2005 results 'a wake-up call.'
Ms. Tenenbaum also pointed out the 'increasing rigor' demanded by the
Accountability Act was a major factor in reducing the percentage of
schools attaining an 'average' or above grade from 83 to 74 percent.
Because standards vary from state to state, a student here can fall short
of a 'proficient' rating with the same score that earns such a rating in
Texas.
Less convincing was the superintendent's 'poverty' argument that points
to a slight climb - from 48.3 percent to barely more than half - in the
number of S.C. schools with at least 70 percent of students in poverty.
Though children in poverty are less likely to have strong parental
involvement in education than children who aren't in poverty, that
increase doesn't appear large enough to be a significant factor in the
disappointing report card. And if, as Ms. Tenenbaum told us, last year's
addition of Science and Social Studies to the Palmetto Achievement
Challenge Tests taken by third- through eighth-graders produced a
significant decrease in ratings, that suggests those subjects have not
been sufficiently stressed.
The decline is particularly perplexing in view of the gains of previous
years, including, from 1999 to 2005, increases from 56 to 83 percent in
the number of third-graders scoring 'basic' or better on the math portion
of the PACT.
Meanwhile, regardless of statewide results and trends, some schools
defy the demographic odds that link low-income families to low test
scores. Stono Park Elementary is an inspiring local example of how
dedicated, skilled educators can boost parental involvement - and
classroom performance - in schools with a large majority of students from
poverty by refusing to lower expectations. School officials would do well
to emulate Stono's formula while recognizing the necessity of maintaining
the commitment to higher standards.
Though Gov. Mark Sanford is not optimistic about passing his
long-stalled Put Parents In Charge initiative, the General Assembly - and
all South Carolinians - should keep an open mind on any concept, including
charter schools, that could enhance choice and competition. Even Ms.
Tenenbaum, a consistent foe of PPIC's tax credits for private-school
tuition, told us she favors 'universal choice' among public schools.
Certainly the state can't retreat from the competition of the global
marketplace - a contest that will be decided, in large part, by the
success or failure of our educational system.