View in your browser.

Welcome

Which North Carolina schools deserve kudos?  Which do not?  Find out below!

CommenTerry

Last week, the N.C. Department of Public Instruction released student performance data for all schools and school districts in the state.  The release included school performance grades, end-of-course and end-of-grade achievement level results, school accountability growth data, the 4-year and 5-year cohort graduation rates, and a number of other metrics that give North Carolinians an imperfect but valuable estimation of the health of our public schools.

My preferred measure is school accountability growth or "value-added" data.  Value-added assessment is a measure of student growth from one point in time to another.  Naturally, we expect all students to attain at least a year’s worth of academic growth through the course of each school year.  The Education Value-Added Assessment System (EVAAS) is a superb tool that predicts and measures academic growth based on the performance of each student on state standardized tests.

The major advantage of using EVAAS is that the characteristics of the student, including socioeconomic status, do not play a significant role in determining academic growth.  According to EVAAS developers at SAS, "EVAAS analyses show no correlation between students’ growth and their socioeconomic status. Therefore, whether students are designated economically disadvantaged or not, they are equally likely to make good progress."  Thus, it is preferable to other measures, such as the school performance grades, that appear to be associated with differences in family income.

I examined EVAAS data for the 2014-15 school year and found schools with the lowest and highest growth indices (See Table 1 and 2).  Schools can meet growth expectations by earning a growth index of between -2 and +2.  Schools over +2 have exceeded their growth expectation.  Those below -2 have not met growth.  Alternative schools were excluded from the list.

Table 1. Highest Growth Schools, 2014-2015

District Name

School Name

Grade Span

EVAAS Growth Index

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

Independence High

09-12

22.08

Cumberland County Schools

Jack Britt High

09-12

21.95

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

Community House Middle

06-08

16.35

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

South Mecklenburg High

09-12

16.32

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

Ardrey Kell High

09-12

16.09

Wake County Schools

Middle Creek High

09-12

15.52

Carteret County Public Schools

West Carteret High

09-12

14.85

Wake County Schools

Cary High

09-12

14.85

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

South Charlotte Middle

06-08

14.35

Robeson County Schools

Red Springs High

09-12

14.05

Asheboro City Schools

North Asheboro Middle

06-08

13.90

Johnston County Schools

Cleveland Middle

06-08

13.77

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

William Amos Hough High

09-12

13.59

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

Butler High

09-12

13.31

Carteret County Public Schools

Croatan High

09-12

13.26

The list of the top fifteen highest growth scores includes seven schools from Charlotte-Mecklenburg, two from Wake, and two from Carteret.  Interestingly, there is a sharp contrast between the two largest school districts in the state, Wake County and Charlotte-Mecklenburg.  The latter is clearly outperforming the former on EVAAS measures of student growth, despite the fact that Charlotte-Mecklenburg enrolls a much higher percentage of low-income students than Wake.

Table 2. Lowest Growth Schools, 2014-2015

District Name

School Name

Grade Span

EVAAS Growth Index

Newton Conover City Schools

Newton-Conover Middle

06-08

-17.54

Lee County Schools

Lee County High

09-12

-17.35

Nash-Rocky Mount Schools

Northern Nash High

09-12

-16.04

McDowell County Schools

McDowell High

09-12

-15.66

Rowan-Salisbury Schools

North Rowan High

09-12

-15.55

Nash-Rocky Mount Schools

Nash Central High

09-12

-15.02

Nash-Rocky Mount Schools

Southern Nash High

09-12

-14.35

Rowan-Salisbury Schools

Erwin Middle

06-08

-13.94

Burke County Schools

East Burke High

09-12

-13.90

Lenoir County Public Schools

Kinston High

09-12

-13.47

Iredell-Statesville Schools

Statesville Middle

06-08

-13.28

Harnett County Schools

Overhills High

09-12

-12.98

Iredell-Statesville Schools

West Iredell Middle

06-08

-12.64

Surry County Schools

Meadowview Magnet Middle

06-08

-11.74

Rowan-Salisbury Schools

West Rowan High

09-12

-11.63

On the other hand, school performance data suggests that the schools listed above have failed to deliver a sound, basic education to the children assigned to them. The list of the fifteen lowest growth scores includes three schools from Nash-Rocky Mount, three schools from Rowan-Salisbury, and two schools from Iredell-Statesville. Taxpayers, school board members, county commissioners, administrators, and teachers in these communities have some soul searching to do.

Accountability growth measures only capture particular state-administered grade and subject tests, including math, English Language Arts, and sometimes science.  It is possible that subjects not included, such as social studies, would show more promising growth trends.  It is also possible that this year’s results are an anomaly for schools that experienced a change in district or school leadership. 

Indeed, value-added data are not the last word.  The reasons why a school under- or out-performed its peers are best determined and addressed locally.  Only when a locality chooses to disregard or dismiss accountability results should taxpayers demand corrective action from state education officials, the legislature, or the courts.

Acronym of the Week

EVAAS — Education Value-Added Assessment System

Quote of the Week

"North Carolina’s school districts, public schools and charter schools receive web-based reporting through the Education Value-Added Assessment System (EVAAS). EVAAS offers an objective way to measure student progress and the value schools add to students’ educational attainment. EVAAS is a statistical analysis of North Carolina (NC) state assessment data, and the system provides NC schools with growth data to consider, in addition to achievement data. Educators are able to make data-informed instructional decisions to ensure academic growth and achievement of all students by using EVAAS."

– SAS and the N.C. Department of Public Instruction, "About EVAAS"

Click here for the Education Update archive.

You can unsubscribe to this and all future e-mails from the John Locke Foundation by clicking the "Manage Subscriptions" button at the top of this newsletter.