Kentucky began implementing a new
state accountability system in 2011-12. The system is called Unbridled Learning. It was built on the requirements of Senate Bill 1 (2009) and is used to
meet both state accountability requirements as well as the federal requirements of the
Elementary and Secondary Education/No Child Left Behind Act.
The system has been very successful
in pushing improvements in the percentage of students who graduate from high
school ready for college and career. The system has also been successful in
increasing high school graduation rates and the percentage of students who are
ready for school when they enter kindergarten. We have also started to see
significant improvement in areas such as ACT, grades 3-6 reading and math and closing of achievement gaps for several of our student groups.
While we have seen success in some
areas, we have not improved in 7th- and 8th-grade math and language arts
achievement and we have not improved as quickly as needed to close the
achievement gap and boost student performance on high school end-of-course
tests.
We originally committed to a three-year window for implementation of the Unbridled Learning model before we made
any significant changes. School year 2013-14 completed that three year cycle
and we are tentatively scheduled to share results publicly on October 2.
This summer, we began gathering
feedback from our stakeholders so that, at the October Kentucky Board of
Education (KBE) meeting, we could provide recommendations for any changes to
the Unbridled Learning system. We have met with advisory groups representing
students, parents, business, teachers, principals, school boards and numerous
advocacy groups. We had an online tool for the public to provide feedback
also. This week we gathered superintendents from all of our 173 school districts
and provided them with the results of the feedback and polled the
superintendents on their support for the numerous recommendations we had
received.
What happens now? Next month, the
KBE will review all of the feedback and the results of the superintendent
survey on recommendations. Kentucky Department of Education staff will take direction from KBE on what
changes need to be made to the accountability system and will modify existing
regulatory language to reflect those changes.
In December, staff will present proposed revisions of the regulatory
language for a first reading. Second reading of regulatory changes will occur
in February and, if approved, the regulatory changes will start moving through
the legislative review process. There are many opportunities for public comment along the way. If the revised regulation becomes law, the changes will not
take effect until the 2015-16 school year. School districts will continue to
operate under the existing Unbridled Learning accountability model for the
2014-15 school year.
This process sounds complicated and,
at times, it can be confusing to teachers, parents, and administrators.
However, it is critical to engage all stakeholders in gaining feedback. The
strength of our Kentucky education improvements has been and will continue to be collaboration
and communication with all stakeholders.
Kentucky education results will
continue to improve as long as we listen to concerns from all groups and make
improvements. Feedback and action on the feedback are critical to the success
of our students, schools and districts, and meeting our goal of college/career-readiness of all students.
No comments:
Post a Comment