Wednesday, March 7, 2012

NYC Teacher Speaking Out on Teacher Data Reports

NYC Math and English language Arts teachers recently had the dubious honor of having their names printed alongside a "ranking" of their performance for the world to google at. My first reaction was to sample the omnipotent list and see how a good friend of mine had ranked. After all what good could this list serve besides satisfying my and other peoples need for a good scandal or juicy gossip? Since leaving his first profession in finance to teach Math for a fraction of his salary, I have always considered him a "super teacher", due to my knowledge of who he is as an individual and the constant success his children achieved. As I expected from my own past experience as a NYC educator and the idea that a mathematical equation could evaluate the "ART” of teaching; my good friends teaching skills were designated as "Below Average". After some review and investigation it was determined that the “Below Average” rating was generated due to his students’ constant high level of achievement. He had been stigmatized in his profession and publicly humiliated because his students had consistently aced all standardized test thrown at them. His students “rate of achievement” was off due to their constant high marks. To hear the full story right in the teacher’s wprds, please do read the post he recently put on EdWise expressing his frustration. I hope the following post helps to inform everyone about the gross injustice done to him and all NYC teachers.

Gregory

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The recent release of NYC’s Teacher Data Reports has stirred up a wide range of responses from all of the relevant stakeholders in our city’s school system. As a teacher whose name was published in the local media with a corresponding characterization of “Below Average,” I am upset, angry, even demoralized. After a great deal of personal reflection, I felt compelled to reach out to fellow teachers and, especially, to the parents of the students I teach.

For me, it is important for people to know that I teach in the same school that I attended as a child; it is the same school that both of my siblings went to as well. As three children of immigrant parents, we owe a debt of gratitude to our alma mater, and I strongly feel that the experiences that we had at PS 122 were instrumental in paving the way to a life of higher education. Needless to say, I would do anything for my school.

Furthermore, it is critical for one to understand that all of my students meet the standards promulgated by New York State, and all but a small few actually exceed those standards. And yet, even though my students consistently outperform the vast majority of their peers throughout the city and state, the Teacher Data Report concludes that I am an ineffective teacher. What the report fails to take into account is that when students are near the ceiling of achievement, it is impossible to have a rate of growth that is as impressive or steep as may be demonstrated by students at the lower tiers of the spectrum. In other words, if students are already achieving perfect or nearly perfect scores on a test, they have little if any room for improvement on such a test. But because of a flawed system of data reporting, I am being judged on the rate of improvement of my students, rather than on their actual performance.

Over the course of my years at PS 122, I have voluntarily helped to start and organize a math team. We consistently perform very well in the NY Math League Contest even though budgetary constraints have not permitted us to utilize any after-school time in order to prepare for it. On the occasions that we participated in this contest, our school has been the top rated school in our county, and we have been placed second in the state. In 2009, one of my students was the top scoring student in the entire state of New York. All of these accomplishments took place during the years for which the recently released data claims that I was “Below Average.”

During these same years, approximately 90% of my eighth graders were admitted into high schools that required a special screening process. Of these, about half were accepted into Stuyvesant High School, Bronx High School of Science, and/or Brooklyn Technical High School. The remainder of these students goes on to other very prestigious high schools such as Bard High School Early College and Fiorello H. Laguardia High School of Music and Art and Performing Arts. Anyone that is familiar with the Specialized High School Admissions Test (SHSAT) that city students must take in order to get accepted to some of these schools knows that there is a very rigorous mathematics component to it. Given these statistics, even the staunchest of TDR advocates must admit that the inherent flaws of the reporting are serious to say the least.

It has been somewhat encouraging to witness the degree to which many news outlets are finally willing to warn their readers or listeners about the inaccuracy of these reports. However, this refreshingly balanced approach to the conversation cannot overshadow the destructive impact that these inaccurate reports will have on the lives of all our city’s educators.

As with many things in life, teaching cannot be simplified into an algorithm. This may seem somewhat ironic coming from a mathematics teacher. However, I am only iterating what everyone already knows. Even city officials are starting to openly admit this, but unfortunately, it may be too late. The damage done to a teacher’s reputation and morale may be irreparable.


Vasilios Biniaris

Teacher at PS 122 in Queens

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Link to a great web site related to educational issues;

http://www.edwize.org/speaking-out-on-teacher-data-reports#more-11313


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is so sad. What it proves is that those judging teachers are clueless about what makes a good teacher, what makes children learn, what real education is all about. When the truly good teachers get discouraged and leave the classroom, who will be left? The ones in the "rubber room"???

Anonymous said...

Hi,
I an in exact same situation in Texas. Highest scoring students from the first test (I differentiate instruction). High scores all year = shows almost no improvement = bad teacher. Nobody ever says thank you, or what strategies are you using

Anonymous said...

The general public has no idea the hoops that teachers have to go through just to teach their students. As a NYC teacher, there is so much useless paper work that is required by both students and teachers, that the instruction time is almost cut by a quarter. I think it would be better for the students if the time was used more productively rather that for data gathering.