Friday, May 9, 2008
Fosters
DOVER — Local schools and school districts are seeing small successes among the continued struggle to meet the federal standards of Adequate Yearly Progress.
Rochester, Portsmouth and Dover were among several districts listed as needing improvement in reading or math. Rollinsford is a first-year district in need of improvement in reading and also missed math for the first time.
Farmington and Barrington each made AYP in reading this year, bringing those districts back to academic success in that area after missing last year.
According to the state Department of Education, Adequate Yearly Progress is accomplished only if a school or district meets performance targets established for students in reading and mathematics, as well as state targets for student participation, attendance and graduation. Student performance as a whole is measured, as well as the performance of specific subgroups, which are broken down by ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational disability and no or limited English proficiency.
If a district or school does not meet standards in both grade groupings in the same target area, they are listed as needing improvement and do not make the Adequate Yearly Progress list. A school or district can miss AYP in one of the target areas for one year without being listed as in need of improvement in that area, but if it is missed a second consecutive time, they become in need of improvement.
Rochester has been listed as needing improvement almost every year the federal AYP has been released. While the district improved over last year and made AYP in reading this year, thus clearing it of being in need of improvement in reading, the district missed AYP in math for the fourth year in a row. Also, six of its schools are schools in need of improvement. Rochester Middle School made AYP this year but remains a school in need of improvement in reading for the third year and in math for the second year. The Chamberlain Elementary and East Rochester schools also made AYP, but remain schools in need of improvement. The McClelland School is a school in need of improvement for the second year in reading and math, and Spaulding High School is a school in need of improvement in reading for the first year and in math for the fourth year.
After two consecutive years of not meeting AYP, parents have the option to send their children to other public schools. In the third year, students from low-income families are eligible to receive supplemental educational services, such as tutoring or remedial classes, from a provider approved by the state and selected by parents. If a school fails to make AYP for four consecutive years, the state can replace teachers and a new curriculum can be put into place. In the fifth year, the state can take control of the school, reopen as a charter school or be turned over to a private company.
Rochester Superintendent Mike Hopkins said the important thing for people to understand about the district is that it made AYP in reading and that “significant progress” has been made in each of the district’s schools.
But like many other districts, Rochester is consistently listed as needing improvement because of subgroups identified by the federal program, including special education and economically disadvantaged students. The larger population of the district also increases the likelihood of having such students who cannot perform at the level of an average student, but are still tested as such.
While progress was made in the economically disadvantaged subgroup, Rochester missed the Black or African Americans subgroup in math this year for the first time.
AYP in all subgroups must be met for the district to meet AYP.
“Unfortunately it becomes, ‘The district didn’t make a subgroup’” instead of the focus being on success in the other testing areas, Hopkins said. “It’s easy to focus on that one thing.”
As many of the district’s schools made AYP this year and “incredible progress” has been made at the middle school, Hopkins said the plans put in place for improvement are having an impact.
Portsmouth has advanced to a second year of being a district in need of improvement in reading but made AYP in math again. The New Franklin School made AYP in reading but missed math for the second year in a row, making it a school in need of improvement in math.
Some districts that met AYP last year and were cleared of their status of being in need of improvement are once again back on the list.
Districts must make AYP two years in a row in order to be cleared of the status of being a district in need of improvement.
Dover made this accomplishment last year. This year, the district is in need of improvement in reading for the first year. It also missed math.
Superintendent John O’Connor said there has been an effort to improve reading as the district has instituted a new language arts curriculum that focuses on spelling and grammar. The district also is piloting a series of reading programs that should begin next year.
“If what we’re doing is getting the same results, then we need to change what we’re doing and I’m trying to impress that upon our teaching staff,” O’Connor said.
Several school districts, including Somersworth, Governor Wentworth, Strafford and Milton, are celebrating academic success as they are not listed as districts in need of improvement.
“We’re pleased we’re not a district in need of improvement,” said Somersworth Superintendent Karen Soule. “We’ve already met and begun to look at the results.”
However, both Maple Wood and Hilltop Elementary schools are listed as schools in need of improvement. Hilltop School is a school in need of improvement in reading for the second year and in math for the first year. Maple Wood is in need of improvement in reading for a third year and missed AYP in math for the first time this year.
Soule said those schools are considering appealing their “in need of improvement” designations, but could not elaborate further.
Somersworth Middle School is in need of improvement in reading for the second year and in math for the first year.
While Somersworth High School is in need of improvement in reading for the first year, it exited that status for graduation rate.
Soule said the dropout rate going down at the high school “really helped” and the district will continue to look at reading for improvement next year.
Rollinsford, which is a one-school district, is listed as a first-year district in need of improvement in reading, and Soule said she thinks the school will “take this as a real opportunity to look at what they are doing.”
She noted Rollinsford Grade School’s “great staff and hard work” and said they only missed AYP because of one subgroup.
Rollinsford needs to make AYP in math next year to avoid becoming a district in need of improvement in math.
Farmington can celebrate clearing its status as a district in need of improvement in reading. It did, however, advance to its second year as a district in need of improvement in math.
Statewide results show that of the 162 districts where reports were issued, 86 districts made AYP and 75 did not. This number is up from just 13 districts in need of improvement in 2006 and about 30 last year.
According to Barrington Superintendent Mike Morgan, school officials there are “very pleased” with the results this year as they made AYP in reading. The district must make it next year to be cleared of its status as a district in need of improvement in reading.
“That’s major for Barrington, especially in reading, because that’s where we put our effort,” Morgan said. “It shows we’re taking No Child Left Behind seriously.”
The district is “really trying to consistently get better” at what it does by increasing professional development and instituting an updated math program, Morgan said.
Like Rochester, Barrington missed math this year because of the special education subgroup.
“We have to do better with them,” he said.
Educators have said since No Child Left Behind began in 2001 that it sets an impossible goal and the program is having an opposite effect. The goal of the federal No Child Left Behind Act is that all students demonstrate 100 percent proficiency by 2013-2014, and the performance targets increase every two years. This year, schools and districts must have 86 percent of their students successful in reading and 82 percent in math.
“There is no way 100 percent of schools and 100 percent of districts can have 100 percent proficiency levels,” Barrington’s Morgan said. “It’s going to keep going up.”
O’Conner said, “You’re always concerned about the repercussions” of No Child Left Behind guidelines. “There’s a lot of criticism, but really the bottom line is there needs to be some measure of accountability and we need to at least meet those standards.”
The N.H. Department of Education is using its Follow the Child initiative to track the individual progress of students. Those scores also have been made available along with the No Child Left Behind results on the Department of Education website at www.ed.state.nh.us/education/