District’s achievement scores a sore spot My...
District’s achievement scores a sore spot
My brain always hurts after reading our school district’s
performance results. The headlines say our scores have gone up, but
you have to go to the fine print on page 4 to see that our state
rankings have gone down. So how could this be? It becomes obvious
once you understand the state has changed its testing methods three
times in the last four years. To normalize the scores year-to-year,
they use a Scale Calibration Factor. If this reminds you of
“Enron-style” accounting practices, you are not alone.
Comparing year-to-year results is useless. The only meaningful
result is your state ranking. The average state results have gone up
by 100 points in the last five years. The state average for
elementary schools is now 729. If you have the feeling your school is
being left behind, you’re not alone. So as you look at your schools
ranking, please realize that you have to rank at least a 6 to be
ranked above the 50% mark. The rankings system starts at one, to
avoid ranking any school a zero.
In 1999, our district had five elementary schools that ranked
below 50%. Today, we have 10 schools scoring below 50% and 12 of our
schools rank below their similar school ranking. Speaking of
similar-ranked schools, I have seen the demographic data at some
schools change as much as 80% between the different scores.
If you realize that the city of Costa Mesa’s demographics has
significantly improved, you will realize the schools demographics is
significantly out of alignment with the taxpayers of this community.
If you are beginning to think the California Department of Education
is making a mockery of No Child Left Behind Act, you are not alone.
Accountability also appears to be a problem at the district level.
It is not lost on me that three of our schools this year had to go to
the streets, and to the Daily Pilot, to be heard. The districts
response was to create a civility policy, which threatens the parents
with arrest, if we do not behave. It fails to give the parents any
guidelines on how to escalate issues if we see a problem.
We owe it to the taxpayers, our children, and the dedicated
professionals of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to unite as
one district and address why we have so little success with our
rankings in the state.
JAMES JONES
Costa Mesa
Fight for flights provides insight
Support for nonstop Aloha Airlines flights from John Wayne Airport
to Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C., reveals two dirty
little secrets about our lobbying congressmen and perhaps the rest of
the traveling public: They don’t want to drive up to LAX and they
don’t want to land at Dulles, out in the country.
It is a pleasure to see congressmen cooperating on a
transportation venture, and I hope this spirit of problem solving
will extend to the opening of the much needed, planned El Toro
International Airport. No one is in the noise zone at El Toro, and it
has energy-efficient, crossed runways pointing directly at
Washington, D.C.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
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