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Monday, November 22, 2010

Seattle School District Used False Data To Show College Readiness

Posted by on Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 6:31 AM

Yesterday's Seattle Times Truth Needle had an interesting story about how the Seattle school district has been using incorrect data since 2008 to show the number of high school graduates who were meeting 4-year college requirements.

The district reported that number to be 17 percent, and changed it to 46 percent when it released its district scorecard Nov. 9. That low number was one of the statistics used by district leaders to "justify the district's five-year plan that included a new system of assigning students to schools, more testing for students, and new teacher and principal evaluations."

Former Seattle PTSA Council President Ramona Hattendorf said that the change in the statistic was the first thing that caught her eye in the Nov. 9 report, according to the Times.

Brad Bernatek, the district's director of research, assessment and evaluation, who arrived at the 17 percent number in 2008, told the Times that "it was supposed to be a measure of how many high-school graduates were prepared to succeed in four-year colleges, not just get admitted."

Although the district eventually stopped using the number in some of its own reports, it never acknowledged the fact publicly.

Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson says that was a mistake.

"We should have changed the public conversation," Goodloe-Johnson said Friday.

While staff understood what the number was supposed to be, she said, she acknowledges the district didn't make its meaning clear to the public, especially after it decided to quit using it.

"We should have come forward sooner," she said.

School Board President Michael DeBell said 17 percent always seemed too low to him. He raised questions about the number from the beginning, was told that staff would look into it, but said he never received a satisfactory answer.

"Every time I heard it, I cringed," he said. "I knew it was way too low. We were doing much better than that. I couldn't understand why we were putting that kind of data out."

Once again, this makes me wonder about the state of our school district. If folks were skeptical about the data, why didn't they keep questioning it until they received an answer? Why couldn't the superintendent have used a minute from her state of the district address to acknowledge that the district had screwed up? Surely, that's not asking for too much?

 

Comments (5) RSS

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1
The district administration will never admit any wrongdoing unless they're called out on it. The mantra of "data-driven" is a joke because the higher-ups don't know what the word data means or choose to ignore it if it doesn't fit into their narrative (and an advanced degree in education doesn't make one good at math).

For example, one memorable meeting - a school fighting to keep an innovative program, one that led to the lowest achievement gap and best attendance in the district. High level official axing the program: "I wish I had had access to this data sooner". HER NAME WAS ON THE STUDY. She had coordinated all of the data collection but didn't bother to look at it or let what it told her drive her decision making. The meetings, the data collection was just theater.

It's still just theater.

Posted by numbers are tough, ethics are tougher on November 22, 2010 at 7:07 AM
Jigae 2
I recommend the unregistered comment above me. Data falls prey to a combination of ideology and dollar signs in our schools these days. What is it... Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics?
Posted by Jigae on November 22, 2010 at 9:01 AM
3
15 percent of Americans are college graduates. 17 percent of kids' being prepared for college sounds on track to me.
Posted by keshmeshi on November 22, 2010 at 11:21 AM
Jigae 4
@3: Sarcasm?
Posted by Jigae on November 22, 2010 at 1:15 PM
5
So understand. The Superintendent lied. Her staffers lied. They sat in public meetings and told this over and over (and it's about 48% are college ready, not 17%). Both the School Board president and PTSA president asked her about this and were told "we'll get back to you."

Our Superintendent couldn't have used a minute of her precious State of the District speech to say this because she can't EVER admit she's wrong. Mistaken, misspoke, but wrong? No.

She did this to push her ed reform agenda down our throats. She and the Alliance for Education and the Seattle Foundation all know best, no dissents, no other opinions, no "what if we try this instead?"

Her hubris is going to be the end of her.

Posted by westello on November 22, 2010 at 2:27 PM

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