California DOE Pushes Forward on ESSA-Based Improvement System
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 05/24/16
Testing is out; "whole child outcomes" are in. California  is working through the impact of the Every  Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), which places responsibility for figuring out  how to evaluate schools and districts on the states themselves. Recently, a Department of Education task force  handed in its recommendations for building an accountability  and continuous improvement system that emphasizes three themes:  performance, equity and, most prominently, improvement.
The overall result, as the Los  Angeles Times reported in its coverage, is a model that moves beyond  testing scores and incorporates such factors as "suspension rates,  graduation rates, attendance and the rate at which students who are still  learning English are becoming proficient."
At the heart of the new system are two sets of outcomes:
    - Whole child outcomes with indicators that  demonstrate the extent to which children are "healthy, safe, engaged,  supported, challenged and valued"; and
- School and district academic outcomes with  indicators that show the extent "to which students achieve meaningful  learning outcomes, including the acquisition of the knowledge, language and  lifelong learning skills needed to succeed in today's world."
The emphasis on improvement is an important one to the task  force. As the report stated, "The value of improvement lies in both the  importance of striving to increase student and system outcomes, and the  opportunity that improvement provides for shared learning across the  system."
"User-friendly" dashboards would allow people to  monitor progress and pinpoint areas for improvement at each level of reporting.  State-mandated indicators, for example, would be used for required state and  federal purposes, including proficiency on annual high-stakes assessments, high  school graduation rates and progress in achieving English language proficiency.  But they'd also include some indicator of school quality or student success  such as suspension or expulsion rates, school climate survey scores, chronic  absenteeism or college and career readiness indicators.
Some of those measures would also show up in state-reported indicators,  which would complement the required measures in order to gain a "holistic  picture of performance, equity and improvement." In that category, college  and career indicators and school climate survey scores would be included,  alongside an equity measure, such as school facilities quality or access to  curriculum materials.
Local education agencies — districts and school systems —  would also have the chance to throw in their own indicators, appropriate to  their needs, such as parent engagement or kindergarten readiness assessments.
The report acknowledged that building the new system will  take time because, for example, data isn't being collected to support the  indicators laid out by the task force. "Now is the time, however, to take  meaningful steps in the direction of what we know will work," the report  stated, "and away from what has failed us, and our children, in the  past."
In the next meeting, which takes place in July, the state  school board will face the job of approving the final design and descriptors  for the local education agency performance indicators. The early draft of the  ESSA state plan is expected to be submitted to the United States Department of  Education by January 2017, which has up to 120 days to review the proposal. The  new accountability system is scheduled to be in place by August 2017.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.