Current:Home > reviewsChanges to Georgia school accountability could mean no more A-to-F grades for schools and districts -Wealth Harmony Labs
Changes to Georgia school accountability could mean no more A-to-F grades for schools and districts
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:45:10
ATLANTA (AP) — It’s getting more complicated to tell how Georgia public schools are faring.
The state Department of Education on Thursday released a full spectrum of school accountability numbers for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic. But there isn’t a single number to sum up the performance of any one school or district. And that could ultimately mean the end of Georgia’s A-to-F letter grade system for schools and districts.
Discarding that single number accomplished a long-held goal of state Superintendent Richard Woods, who says it’s unfair to measure schools on just one yardstick. Woods won approval from the U.S. Department of Education in October to stop calculating a single number in the College and Career Ready Performance Index.
Georgia was one of a number of states nationwide that adopted A-to-F letter grades for schools. But the system has faced backlash as putting too much emphasis on standardized testing and labeling lower-performing schools as failing.
Woods, a Republican elected statewide, said in a statement that the old 100-point single score “vastly oversimplified the complicated factors that influence school quality.”
“With this change, the CCRPI is more like the ‘report card’ it was always intended to be — encouraging schools, families, and communities to dig into the data and both celebrate achievements and address issues that tended to be obscured by the single score,” Woods said.
Instead, Georgia now publishes only the component parts of the index: academic content mastery, readiness, progression, on-time high school graduation, and whether underperforming groups are closing academic gaps.
And even for those measures, there is no single number to sum up how a district is doing on any component, only separate measures of performance for grades prekindergarten to 6, grades 6-8, and grades 9-12. That also means a single school with students from more than one of those grade bands, like one with students in grades K-8, gets multiple measures for different grade levels.
Content mastery in the 2022-2023 school year showed increases from the 2021-2022 year, in line with standardized test results released earlier this year. They showed test scores rose, but haven’t returned to where they were before the pandemic. Content mastery rose most in elementary grades and least in high school grades.
Deputy state Superintendent Allison Timberlake said the state doesn’t calculate measures of statistical significance for changes in the scores, but said she regarded the increase in content mastery scores as “practically significant” across a statewide enrollment of 1.75 million students.
Woods said progress and readiness scores reached their highest-ever levels. However, readiness scores are not comparable to earlier years because of changes in how the number is calculated. Timberlake said there are also small differences from previous years in the measure of whether students are closing gaps.
A separate agency, the Governor’s Office of Student Achievement, is required by state law to calculate the 100-point scale, and has been the one that assigns letter grades. Joy Hawkins, the office’s executive director, said it’s unclear whether that office will be able to calculate a 100-point scale or issue letter grades. Those A-to-F grades were last issued following the 2018-2019 school year.
The Governor’s Office of Student Achievement “is seeking ways to provide useful continuity of research and comparability with past years of CCRPI reporting for all audiences,” Hawkins wrote in an email to The Associated Press.
veryGood! (97)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- 'Splashdown confirmed!' SpaceX Starship successful in fourth test launch
- 2 more charged in betting scandal that spurred NBA to bar Raptors’ Jontay Porter for life
- Cucumbers linked to salmonella outbreak that has spread to 25 states
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- A court ruling will allow new student housing at University of California, Berkeley’s People’s Park.
- Angel Reese back in action: How to watch Chicago Sky at Washington Mystics on Thursday
- D-Day 80th anniversary: See historical photos from 1944 invasion of Normandy beaches
- Drones warned New York City residents about storm flooding. The Spanish translation was no bueno
- Ryan Anderson Reveals What Really Led to Gypsy Rose Blanchard Breakup
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Wisconsin warden, 8 staff members charged following probes into inmate deaths
- What in the world does 'match my freak' mean? More than you think.
- Brazil unveils $4 million supercow, twice as meaty as others of her breed
- Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets
- Lawyer wants to move the trial for the killing of a University of Mississippi student
- 'Splashdown confirmed!' SpaceX Starship successful in fourth test launch
- 'Big Little Lies' Season 3: What we know
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Kentucky Democratic governor pushes back against Trump-led attacks on electric vehicles
Adam Levine is returning to 'The Voice' for Season 27: See the full coaching panel
Colorado: 'Hidden' elk charges, injures 4-year-old boy in second elk attack in a week
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
Israeli settlers in the West Bank were hit with international sanctions. It only emboldened them
Chanel artistic director Virginie Viard to depart label without naming successor
D-Day 80th anniversary: See historical photos from 1944 invasion of Normandy beaches