Indiana

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Teachers See Evaluation System Less Favorably Than Administrators

As Indiana’s academic standards and statewide assessments change, educators are being tasked with adjusting what they teach while still continuing to help students succeed. How students perform in class and on standardized tests is a key factor in how those teachers are evaluated — and in turn, how they’re paid.

And when compared to the state’s administrators, teachers are still generally more skeptical about the state’s evaluation system, according to a study brief issued by the Center on Education and Lifelong Learning (CELL) at Indiana University.

Teachers are a bit more skeptical about their evaluation system than the administrative counterparts in their districts, according to a new study.

Kyle Stokes / StateImpact Indiana

Teachers are a bit more skeptical about their evaluation system than the administrative counterparts in their districts, according to a new study.

CELL researchers conducted a large-scale survey of Indiana public school administrators and teachers regarding feelings about the state’s teacher evaluation system and how it has been implemented in their districts.

Results showed that superintendents are most favorable of the evaluation system, followed by principals and lastly teachers. Principals generally say they have more confidence in their knowledge of the system and their ability to conduct effective evaluations than do the teachers they’re rating.

These response patterns are consistent with findings in similar studies from around the country, including Georgia and New Jersey.

“Uneven training and different access to information, involvement in the development phase and understanding of the evaluation process may offer an insight for why teachers feel less positive about the evaluation process,” the study says. “Additionally, the new era in teacher evaluation represents, for many teachers, a significant change from the way their performance was evaluated in the past.”

State lawmakers passed new educator effectiveness legislation in 2011, but schools didn’t have to start evaluating teachers until the 2012-13 school year.

The new law mandated that Indiana school districts evaluate teachers and other licensed staff annually. Most of the process is individualized to each school district, but state law does require schools to use some kind of student growth data (i.e. standardized test scores) to rank teachers into one of four categories: highly effective, effective, improvement necessary and ineffective.

A district can typically get rid of a teacher if they score in the “ineffective” category two years in a row.

Teacher evaluations must also be linked with pay.

Some key numbers that illustrate the split in confidence among the survey groups:

  • Eighty-six percent of superintendents say they feel the changes in the law improved teacher evaluation in their district. A majority of principals (65 percent) express similar feelings, but only 19 percent of teachers are in the same camp.
  • All three groups generally agree that teacher effectiveness affects student achievement, and that student achievement and growth can be validly measured. However, when asked whether their district’s own assessments can accurately measure student growth, only half of teachers say yes. Superintendents and principals appear more optimistic (83 and 73 percent responded yes, respectively).
  • About 60 percent of superintendents feel that evaluation should be tied to compensation, and a little less than half of surveyed principals agree. A much larger majority of teachers feel the link is inadvisable: only 19 percent say their merit and pay should be linked to evaluations.
  • Almost everybody concurs that Indiana’s evaluation system needed fixing, prior to the new law: 87 percent of superintendents, 79 percent of principals and 49 percent of teachers.

About 2,000 educators responded to the survey, which was administered during the spring and early summer of the 2014 school year.

While differences among the three survey groups may be easy to latch onto, researcher Hardy Murphy points out that its their commonalities – for example, the consensus that effective teaching affects student achievement – that provide some positive momentum.

“Those [commonalities] represent an opportunity for us to build trust as these new systems develop in Indiana and across the nation,” Murphy says. “It’s an opportunity through education to create more support about these systems, which ultimately have to be about improving instruction, so that we improve student learning outcomes.”

“How we come up with consensus on the ways to measure student learning represent the challenges that we’re being faced with,” Murphy adds. “What we’re trying to do is help reframe the discussion about public education. Right now, what we believe is dominating the conversation are issues that in some ways are not bringing us together, and we’d like to change that.”

CELL Director Sandi Cole agrees. She says people should take away a “glass half-full” message from this research, because all parties can benefit from being involved in the broader conversation around teaching and learning.

“While the teachers’ beliefs and perceptions are less positive than administrators, they are still within this range where they can in fact be a part of the conversation and continue to play a role in its improvement in a way that makes it more positive for them,” Cole says.

This brief is the first in a two-part series. The second brief, to be released later this month, will present a comparison of the attitudes and beliefs of Indiana superintendents from the current survey with those of the 2012 survey.

Comments

  • mara jones

    The problem for teachers is that with this new rubric system is that if the evaluator does not see something on the rubric on the day they are there we can get marked ineffective. Some of those items just don’t have “evidence” for us to upload. It is frustrating to know that you routinely do something but it wasn’t in the plans that particular day so we get marked down. All we can do is “comment” but it still doesn’t erase the negative mark. As far as tests…at the high school level…if kids don’t study and put time into the class they are not going to do well. And there are only so many hours in a day. The year my daughter had me she never studied one time for any of my tests…she had too many AP classes to worry about investing time in mine. So there are times she didn’t do as well as she was capable because she ran out of study time. Her friends did the same thing to me. They prioritize classes and spend the time on their hardest classes or AP classes. How is that an effective measure of my teaching? Or the kid who decides to get high on way to school and comes in 1st period and fails? Or the girl who falls asleep during a test because she was up all night taking care if a sick parent or sibling and then just cannot think clearly. How about the one who is reveling against mom and dad and fails tests on purpose so they cannot get into the college their parents want and they have no desire to attend? How is any of that an effective measure of how we teach?

  • Jorfer88

    Of course those farthest from the classroom with the power to rig the system would be most likely to say teacher evaluations are going well. They aren’t going to admit (or maybe even recognize) if personal bias is affecting their decision making about what growth measures to use and how to use them for non-tested subjects. There is one large Indiana district that changed the way it has decided to evaluate teachers every year for the past three year after the school year was over (including this year). Are teachers crazy for thinking that is a seriously flawed measurement? Are teachers crazy for thinking that measures that disproportionately hurt teachers of refugee ELL populations can’t be trusted? Or ones that punish those that have high percentages of students of top performers? Or ones that punish those that have students on the borderline between growth categories? Add in that being tied in for compensation and you have a potential recipe for catastrophe among the most vulnerable populations in the state. All in all, I think districts love the freedom they have in hiring and firing populations but hate the responsibility. The validity of this survey to today is questionable, however, since so called Rise 2.0 gave districts flexibility that the INSBOE has since cut down on, so I’m sure they don’t like the fact that the flexibility of the weighting has been taken from them as well (just like it seems set to do the same with virtual snow days at the upcoming meeting).

  • Merry Juerling

    What this, and many, articles fails to acknowledge is that standardized tests are not designed or purposed for assessing individuals, only groups. When used to assess individual students, and thereby their teachers, it fails to meet the ethics code of the testing profession, yet billions of $ is being made off of this unethical system of assessment. In addition, the results of standardized testing of students is statistically predictable in catagories of race, wealth/poverty, disability status and zip code. So why are we using unethical assessments of children. Continuation of unethical assessments and rewards/ consequences based on them is child abuse.

    • Jorfer88

      The report itself while trying to stay neutral actually does a pretty good job of indicating teachers concerns in its recommendations:

      page 10:
      “Support the development and testing of common assessments for “non tested” personnel, especially at the secondary level and explore the development and use of formative assessments that will inform instruction during the teacher evaluation process…Districts should create other measures or opportunities to capture important information about teachers’ contributions to student learning that go beyond student achievement score gains.”

      “A review of the methodology, use and weights for student growth in the evaluation process should be undertaken. Currently, the debate is centered upon the appropriate weight. However, the more important conversation could be about the appropriate and effective use of student growth rather than the “right” weight.”

      page 11:
      “Review and revise how teacher evaluations are linked to compensation…The current framework could be seen as unfair and punishing for those rated improvement necessary but who have a chance to become effective or highly effective teachers with additional professional growth opportunities. Similarly, given concerns about accurately rating instruction and measuring student growth with validity and reliability, it could be that educators feel that there will be instances when a teacher’s rating may not reflect their level of effectiveness. School districts enter into a “value proposition” with their employees that are broader than salary and include professional growth and career opportunities, work-life balance structures, work place climate and recognition (ERS, 2012). The intent of teacher evaluation should be to support a teacher’s professional growth in ways that lead to higher levels of student learning. To that end, reframing the relationship between professional growth, compensation and teacher ratings so that it becomes a reward for commitment and performance could help to motivate and create greater educator support for the new evaluation expectations, standards and processes….”

  • Mouse Rat

    The funniest thing is that those conducting the survey asked the participants to self-describe whether they worked in a rural, suburban, or urban environment. They could have used Census information based on ZIP code to identify where their respondents worked, but they did not.

    Such a loose classification question, so open to subjective response, really makes the whole survey look ridiculous.

    In turn, it makes the new teacher evaluation demands, built on subjective ever-changing school grading formulas, subjective standardized testing, and subjective administrator observation look equally ridiculous.

    The more that community outsiders try to wrest local control of education from said community, the more they try to control local tax dollars and systems of government, the worse things get. Time and money is wasted on shifting political and financial ground.

    Give the decision-making back to the localities. Let them succeed or fail on their own

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