How to fix Washington's graduation standards

Test scores are up, but there still are many public-school students who graduate unprepared for college or the workforce. And the WASL test requirement is not really enforced. A co-author of the 1993 law that was intended to reform the system explains how to get standards-based education back on track. Second of two parts


Editor's note: The author is a former state representative and former chair of the state Republican Party. This is the second of two parts. The first part was posted on Tuesday, Sept. 18.


It was always assumed that wholesale reform of public education in Washington would be difficult. As any profession or established system would be, the education community resisted change. Many educators are hostile to the very idea of high-stakes testing. The Commission on Student Learning, which was charged with deciding how to implement a "Performance Based Education System," was comprised mostly of education professionals. So it was always assumed that leadership on this issue would continue to come from the Legislature. Unfortunately, virtually all of us who worked on education reform left the Legislature shortly after those reforms were passed in 1993. The politicians who cared the most about implementing the changes enacted by our bill, H.B. 1209, were no longer there to spur things along.

What really set reform back, however, were the extremely high failure rates in the early years of the Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL). H.B. 1209 required all students to pass the high school assessment. It was a minimum graduation requirement. The bill anticipated that "most students" would pass in 10th grade.

When we started testing, however, most 10th graders did not pass. In 1998, the first year of the 10th grade test, only 51 percent passed the reading portion, 41 percent passed the writing portion, and only 33 percent passed the math test. Scores like these continued for several years. With failure rates this high, resistance to accountability hardened within the education community. Who wants to be held accountable to results like that? Critics questioned the validity and fairness of the WASL, claiming the bar was set too high for a minimum graduation requirement. Deregulation and local control went by the wayside as the state superintendent of public instruction tried to raise scores by aligning local curricula to what were called Essential Academic Learning Requirements and the WASL. In short, the crisis of low test scores distorted the reform process.

Today, test scores are much better. In the most recent WASL testing period, 81 percent of 10th graders passed the reading portion, 84 percent passed the writing portion, and 50 percent passed the math test. Part of this improvement is a result of the state tinkering with the test and essentially lowering the bar a bit. At the same time, it is clear that the intense focus on passing the WASL has raised student achievement somewhat.

As a parent, I can tell you that high school is much more difficult now than it was 30 years ago. We have raised expectations, and there has been some improvement in national test scores. Critics may not trust the WASL, but there is one standards-based test that is widely accepted, the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). Administered by the federal government, the NAEP is known as "the nation's report card." Washington's fourth- and eighth-grade NAEP scores in math and reading have improved over the past 10 years of WASL implementation.

At the same time, in 2005, 25 percent of Washington's eighth-graders failed to achieve "basic" level in NAEP reading and math assessments. The high-school dropout rate remains at 25 percent. Nearly half of our high school graduates who enroll in community or technical college still need to take remedial math courses, and only 30 percent of Washington's high school freshman are going on to college [468K PDF] four years later, far below the 53 percent median percentage of the top five performing states.

This is the real crisis of accountability. Education reform was not intended to help the high achievers achieve more, it was designed to prevent at-risk kids from falling through the cracks. By setting minimum mandatory standards, we intended to prevent schools from passing on from one grade to the next kids who weren't learning the basics and weren't ready for post-secondary education or the workforce. Without the accountability measures called for in H.B. 1209, especially the mandatory graduation requirement, common sense and all available data indicate that practice continues today. Without clear standards and real accountability, we are failing the kids who need help the most.

Unfortunately, the political tide seems to be running the wrong way. Every year, WASL critics get closer to passing legislation to do away with the graduation requirement altogether. This process was begun in the political arena, and that is where the battle will be won or lost.

Our great mistake in 1993 was allowing the Commission on Student Learning to set the bar and define the minimum graduation requirement. We felt that this task was best left to "experts" rather than 147 politicians sitting on the floor of the House and Senate. We were wrong. Reform this fundamental needs to be compelled from without, rather than evolve from within.

It's not too late. It has always been the responsibility of the people's representatives to define what constitutes a basic education. The governor and Legislature need to debate and settle the core issue of what constitutes the minimum we expect of students before we hand them a high school diploma. The elected officials need to ask themselves if they trust the SPI and State Board to fix the math test and complete the rest of the work on standards. If not, there is now a huge body of research from around the country on standards and tests that work. If we don't trust the WASL, the Legislature should pick another existing system and direct the SPI and State Board to align our standards and tests accordingly.

At the same time, the Legislature and governor need to resurrect the issue of educational deregulation and local control. If we are truly going to make the system accountable to results, rather than process, we don't need the bureaucratic time measurements of the Basic Education Act of 1977, and we certainly don't need to force school districts to all teach the same way.

Finally, our elected officials need to fully commit to real accountability. Pass the state intervention and rewards systems that have been studied to death the past 14 years. Most importantly, once we finally have standards and assessments we can trust, enforce the high school graduation requirement. Eliminate the alternatives; either our test works or it doesn't. If kids fail to pass, get them help and hold people accountable rather than lowering the bar or pushing back the deadline. Without accountability, the reform process is nothing but more tests layered onto the existing system.

In 1993, as I stood in the wings of the House floor in Olympia, watching the final moments of the final debate on H.B. 1209, I was sure we had accomplished something that would fundamentally change public education. My son was 2 years old. Today he is two years away from starting college. I am confident that he and his sister are getting an outstanding education. Unfortunately, I am also confident that many other kids continue to move through our schools unprepared for the world after high school. We had the right vision 14 years ago. It's time for this generation of politicians to firmly and finally finish the job.


About the Author

Chris Vance is a public affairs consultant who lives in Auburn, Wash. He was chair of the Republican Party in Washington from 2001-06, a King County Council member from 1994-2001, and a state representative from 1991-93. He can be reached at cvapv@comcast.net.

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Comments:

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 7:33 a.m. Inappropriate

The ghost of Joe Hill...: My children are grown and long since out of the public school system, and my grandchildren (the youngest born just last Saturday) live in North Carolina, so the immediacy of my interest in the WASL is somewhat passing. But I have a strong interest as a taxpayer in both the quality of the products or services my taxes fund and in both the people I pay and whether collectively they're advancing the cause or hindering it.

Unless I missed something, no mention was made of the WEA, its influence on all this, and whether it's seen as a net plus or net minus. What I see from my spot in the peanut gallery the impact has been negative. True or false?

Also, it seems that one great distraction from attaining educational goals - WASL or no WASL - is the increasing amount of time and resources public schools waste on non-educational tasks. The Seattle School District's obsession with political correctness, race (read Seattle Times columnist, Danny Westneat's lament on that subject here ) , and political infighting certainly have nothing to do with teaching the three "R'S."

Additionally, the unwillingness of the educational establishement, first and foremost among them being the WEA, to tolerate experimentation in any meaningful way with charter schools merits some attention. Buried in Crosscut's archives is an article by Matt Rosenberg that mentions this along with several other worthy-of-consideration reforms that always seem to geet nipped in the bud by many in the educational establishment and...the WEA.

With a labor relations attitude that's a throwback to the days of the IWW, albeit cloaked in an advanced degree, the WEA displays a NO-NO-NO obstinancy to innovation, reform, and productivity reminiscent of the cigar-chomping refusals of organized labor generally to understand the necessity to be competitive, produce excellence, achieve results, and think outside the box rather than merely hunkering down on behalf of its members.

Do schools exist to teach children, or provide jobs?

Sometimes I'm left to wonder whether the inherent structure of public education isn't a Titanic-wannabe with the WASL being today's effort to use shotglasses to bail out a sinking ship.

As an aside (I am a frequent asider), I graduated from a large Eastside high school in 1968 from which three of my five children also graduated. This high school, at least at the time of my oldest daughter's graduation in 1998, purported to send more of its graduates to the University of Washington than any school in the state. While I have the greatest respect for the principal and some of the faculty at that school, I disagree with the comment that high school is tougher now than 30-years ago - or, in my case, nearly 40-years ago.

When I was a senior, my civics teacher, a very liberal gentleman, encouraged his students to seek after truth, whereas too often with my children teachers encouraged them to seek after opinion...of a particular stripe. Certainly, a results and tailored-oriented approach like that can't be considered an improvement over the way it was back in the dark ages when Pops was in school.

Also, while there may be more issues on a kid's plate today than when I was in school (you'll have to admit, however, that Viet Nam was a pretty big issue), the availability of tools, resources, and options is greater still. Given this, it is both sad and puzzling that we're still asking ourselves why Johnny can't read, which brings me back to why we don't ask questions more foundational than whether the WASL is good, bad, or indifferent.

Given the structure of the system itself, will Johnny ever be able to read?

The Piper

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 8:36 a.m. Inappropriate

WASL Mistake: The Iowa Test of Basic Skills (grades 1-8) has been around since 1935 and the Iowa Test of Educational Development (grades 9-12) has been around since 1942. These tests are widely used, time tested and proven. They have widespread acceptance and an established base against which current scores can be compared. They can be used for tracking and helping individual students that are struggling and they are affordable. But that wasn't good enough for us. We needed to reinvent the wheel with the WASL and have plunged ourselves into years of needless, expensive controversy. The decision to create the WASL was a tragic mistake with profound negatives for our children and ourselves. It reminds me of the absurdity of every school district having its own curriculum development department. Tell me when they have come up with a way to figure the circumference of a circle that is different than the one I learned in 1950.

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 10:24 a.m. Inappropriate

You tried to heal the wrong wound: Mr. Vance and his colleagues in the legislature saw that students were graduating high school unprepared for college or careers. They believed this was due to a problem in the schools, so they instituted reforms to try to hold the education community accountable for student achievement. The reforms were a strong message: stop graduating inadequately educated students - get them all schooled up to a minimum standard.

Mr. Vance is disappointed to report that the package of reforms has failed. He thinks they have failed due to a lack of political will among legislators and a lack of integrity among the education community. I think he is wrong. I think that this education reform effort failed because while it was well-intentioned, it was misdirected.

These reforms have failed for a very simple reason. The problem that Mr. Vance wants to fix didn't arise in the schools and it cannot be fixed in the schools. It is not the schools who are failing to serve the students; it is their families. The primary determinant of a child's academic achievement is the active involvement in the student's education by an adult in the child's home. Without support at home, it is extraordinarily difficult for a student to achieve even to the minimum standards set by the state. With that support, it is unlikely that the child will fail.

Think of this. In classrooms all across the state, some students are passing the WASL and some are failing. If the teacher or the curriculum are inadequate, then why do some students pass? If the teacher or the curriculum are perfectly good, then why do some students fail? Obviously, the difference is outside the classroom. Obviously this difference is having a greater impact than what is happening inside the classroom, otherwise the distribution of skills and knowledge among the students would be much narrower than it is.

While we can blame the schools for social promotion (advancing students to the 4th grade despite the fact that they haven't learned the lessons they were supposed to get in the 3rd grade), we cannot hold the districts, schools or teachers responsible for the negative influence of the students' families.

Your patient came to you with open wounds on the arm and the head. You bandaged the arm, but the patient hasn't recovered. Now you're saying it's because other doctors and nurses didn't change the bandages like they were supposed to. No. The patient isn't getting better because the head wound has not been treated.
coolpapa

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 10:53 a.m. Inappropriate

Distribute This: Chris Vance's two part history of the WASL and related issues is the best summary of what has happened in the drive for accoutability and reform in Washington's public schools. I suggest a Crosscut tab to an easily printed and forwarded combination of the two pieces.

ctb

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 11:24 a.m. Inappropriate

The accountability horse is a powerful one: But not enough attention is paid to funding. Chris acknowledges that the legislature and several governors have punted on the question of funding. Do we think it's an accident that Washington ranks so poorly in the percentage of kids going on to college AND also ranks well below national averages in per-student funding? How do we expect miracles when the class sizes here are among the largest in the country?

The reason we keep studying funding, rather than doing something about it, is that we're talking about really big numbers just to bring Washington up to the average. We seem to be caught in the chicken-and-egg debate between people who want more funding now and those who want to see achievement and accountability BEFORE we spend more money.

If we went ahead and failed all the students who don't pass the WASL, would this improve the quality of their education, or would it simply increase the dropout rate? Who is being held accountable here?
pianoboy

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 11:36 a.m. Inappropriate

The WASL is for at risk kids?: So, from what I can tell, your reasoning is roughly this: At risk children are being allowed to graduate from public schools without basic skills. The reason is that the schools, for some unspecified reason (laziness? incompetence? communist infiltration?) have conspired to shortchange these kids. By imposing the WASL, we force the schools to educate these kids so they can realize their full potential.

Chris, I will set aside my skepticism and assume that you actually believe this story. It's obvious to me that you've had little exposure to at risk kids, which is puzzling given that your are claiming to be their benefactor. If you got to know even a few of these kids, you'd see the real problem is in their homes (or in some cases the lack thereof), and that the decline in standards beginning in the late 80's and early 90's can be explained in two words - crack cocaine. (No, crack didn't invent at risk kids, but it has multiplied their numbers by the thousands, as has meth, putting an incredible strain on the schools.) How exactly are public schools supposed to compensate for the abuse and neglect that continually undermines these kids at home? Shouldn't we be holding their parents accountable?

To get a better insight into the challenges these kids pose to the public school system, read this article from the Seattle Times. Obviously, I don't have the solution to these problems, but it's clear to me that the WASL has absolutely no relevance.

The WASL is a waste of money that could be spent on proven benefits like smaller class sizes, after school programs, guaranteed health care for kids, and better facilities.
Sean

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 12:24 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: You tried to heal the wrong wound: I couldn't agree more.

Sean

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 1:07 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: The ghost of Joe Hill...: Piper, you've proven the WASL does have at least one purpose - as Republican ammunition against their longtime political nemesis, the teacher's union.

Sean

Posted Wed, Sep 19, 4:33 p.m. Inappropriate

what is not being said: what people are not saying
Posted by: Spike on Sep 19, 2007 4:31 PM
I found the Vance items very interesting and well written, and the comments are as well, but I don't see any focus on the two big subjects around the water cooler of schools when WASL comes up. One is the simple fact that schools have turned largely into classes wherein the only goal is to teach to the upcoming WASL tests. There is no flex, no response to issues or needs as they arise, just a deadening emphasis on the test. Nothing else is of importance.

The other is the utter destruction of any capacity in classrooms for the inspiring teacher. SPS and Bellevue Schools are now taking total and intrusive control of the curriculum. Teachers are expected to be on the same page in all classes at all times. Teachers as professionals are not able to speed up or slow down or change direction as student needs arise. In Seattle elementary schools all math teachers are being forced to teach the same (deficient) curriculum, even when they know and can teach other approaches more effectively. Rumor has it that Bellevue teachers are running away from the district as fast as possible, the intrusion into the classroom is so offensive and depressing.

Someone might speak out and say that the best education is in classrooms with passionate and intense teachers who work with willing and responsive students. The comments above about the sad damage bad home lives can do are all totally on target. But great teachers can sometime reach and inspire those damaged children.

Just think of your own education. All of you can remember those special teachers who demanded work, who showed passion, who cared about their students, who brought intensity and devotion to the lives of the kids. We can all remember those people. Many of us are doing what we do today because of them.

The WASL narrow vision of education is forcing those people out the profession and leaving us with teachers and students who are stunted by education today, not inspired by it.

For me reading these thread is like the Emperor's New Clothes. Nobody wants to say the horrible truth, though everybody knows it.
Spike

Posted Thu, Sep 20, 9:12 a.m. Inappropriate

The life of the mind begins with...: Chris Vance's articles present a tragically mistaken view of how children learn, and how they can be helped to learn. It's as though he imagines that children are widgets, and the Legislature can mandate inputs which add desired features to said widgets. Vance seems to imagine that the problem is that the Legislature wasn't controlling enough. The best teachers I know, on the other hand, are struggling with the very real problems inherent in WASL, which does indeed crowd out the space for creativity and sensitive responsiveness to the actual children in the classroom.

As a former widget myself--who attended public school in a very poor neighborhood in Chicago where many of my classmates ended up in gangs or prison--I can tell you that no force on earth can make a child learn on command. Education has to make sense to a child, as an extension of the child's family life and culture. Children thrive when they experience a good-enough balance between strictness and nurturance, rules and freedoms, "no" and "yes"--when there's room for curiosity as well as compliance, and a lot of basis for real hope about their own lives and futures. What we teach children has to make sense to them; far too often, school feels to children--it often did to me, and I was a "gifted," motivated bookworm--as a bewildering, boring waste of time, an exercise in mindless compliance.

One challenge our education system has today is that many children come to school coping with enormous, traumatic cultural disruption--due to, yes, drugs and the conditions that foster their abuse; due to the alienation of communities by our nation's history of racism; due to changes in the workforce, overworked or absent parents; displacement by war and immigration; malnutrition; etc. In this kind of context, WASL can feel like just another burden for teachers and students.

Conservatives accuse liberals of being too soft or too sympathetic, but let me tell you--some liberals actually bother to get to know people before judging them. You can't convince me that it's better to judge from afar than to be curious and empathetic about people you're concerned about. And, as conservatives in this country used to understand, government can't force people's minds to open on command--certainly not children's.

Posted Fri, Sep 21, 11:06 a.m. Inappropriate

RE: You tried to heal the wrong wound: You nailed it. The problem isn't with the schools, it's with the parents and with the culture in which the kids are raised. There are Seattle schools that have outstanding WASL scores and academic success, but they are the ones where the parents are involved in their kid's education.

You can pump millions into a school, but unless mom and dad emphasize education at home you're just wasting money.
sean98125

Posted Fri, Sep 21, 5:24 p.m. Inappropriate

WASL Stupidity: Public education use to 'work'. There were involved parents who viewed raising children as the most important full time profession that it is. There were
teachers who were competent in their field of teaching. Learning was understood to be a task, and as such, not necessarily a 'fun' thing. Rather, learning required work - original effort and dedication by the
student. Such a concept was actually instilled by the public school system. It was also stressed by parents. Students took periodic tests in each of the core fields of education over a period of years, thru middle and high school. Measuring progress over a period of time for a process that took a period of time worked for the great majority of students. Students learned enough basic math to be able to perform integer addition, multiplication and even division 'in their heads'. No batteries required.

What is there now ?

A teachers union whose first priority is to protect teachers who are not competent in their fields.

School administrators who only promote school as a place to be culturally immersed and rewarding of thought that is not logical but rather, correct because it is 'individual'.

A WASL test that has created a system of 'drill and kill' for the sole purpose of passing THAT test only - and silence from the deriders of the traditional method by their branding of it as 'drill and kill' where now, in desperation, it is what in fact they are preaching to pass the WASL.

A superintendent of public instruction who is a complete failure as measured by the 'current state of public instruction'.

Adults who create children and only give an afterthought to sticking around and being full time parents. Adults who lack the morals, time, finances or patience to be full time parents ALL THE TIME.

A state governor whos only response is to throw more money at a system that is failing. A state legislature that simply goes along, knowing that it certainly won't hurt them in the standing of a very large union and it's voting block.

And yet, there are still those who champion the WASL ! Perhaps public education has been broken now for sufficient decades that graduates who are now adults are in continuum of the little/only what they 'know'.

Posted Sun, Sep 23, 4:45 p.m. Inappropriate

Teachers Unions vs the WASL - LOL: steptoe.fan wrote, "A teachers union whose first priority is to protect teachers who are not competent in their fields."

As a former employee of the Seattle School District, I'd say that's true; the Seattle Education Association does protect some pretty amazing slugs, many of whom can be characterized as union whores.

The flip side is that the union frequently does not protect GOOD teachers. In fact, many of the best teachers were driven out of education long ago.

Incidentally, I recall the Seattle Education Association surveying members regarding the WASL, then passing a resolution against it. Inspirational?

Hardly. That's about all they did. They passed a token resolution, then went back to bed. Now I'm sure there are folks who will tell you some union rep or another drove down to Olympia to speak out against the WASL, but that's still little more than tokenism.

The fact is, the WEA and SEA have never really rallied their members to fight the WASL. If they really cared about kids, they'd orchestrate a statewide teachers strike and a never-ending WASL boycott - and I'd support them every step of the way.

By the way, Mr. Vance, I really enjoy running for public office under the new rules you clowns implemented. No blanket primary, the primary election moved up a month, mail in ballots and on and on. So when are your colleagues going to take the final step and just abolish elections altogether?

TRAITOR.

David Blomstrom
www.seattle-mafia.org

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