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A Letter from Phil Kirk

Accountability at heart of school improvement

North Carolina public schools are on the cutting edge of accountability, continually receiving high marks from outside groups who rate states’ efforts at improving schools.

Our state, for example, is the only one to have made any progress in closing the achievement gap between its highest and lowest performers, according to a recent analysis by the National Education Goals Panel. This year, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) presented one of its highest honors, the Daisy Bates Educational Advocacy Award, to the Department of Public Instruction for its efforts to improve access, equity and accountability in education.

President George W. Bush’s education plan draws heavily from the school accountability model in North Carolina, as well as in his home state of Texas.

We believe there is no question that North Carolina schools are better today than they were 10 years ago and that the state’s accountability efforts have played a major role in these improvements. Students are more likely to be at grade level than at any time since end-of-grade testing began in 1993. The curriculum and individual school-level courses are more rigorous, and the number of high schools offering advanced placement courses grew from 42 percent in 1988 to 67.7 percent in 2000.

SAT scores in our state continue to rise. North Carolina has gained 40 points on this important measure since 1990, nearly double the gains of the nation overall, and a larger gain than any other state that tests a large percentage of its students.

The state’s accountability program, which holds individual schools accountable for student achievement growth and for the percentage of students at grade level, has pressed many schools and school districts to more closely examine what they teach, how they teach and how to meet the educational needs of all students.

For a small handful of high-performing school districts, these improvements are not new. But for many districts, this increased focus is new and has provided important dividends in student learning. Even in our most high-achieving school districts, the additional information that North Carolina’s test program has provided about the performance of minorities and other groups has helped these districts recognize that all students may not be learning as well as the averages indicated for so many years.

Having given due credit to the positive results of North Carolina’s accountability model, education officials acknowledge that it is time to step back and take a look at how our testing and accountability model can be improved. Some of this review has been prompted by the recent difficulties in setting the achievement levels for the new mathematics end-of-grade tests given this year. But, much of this impetus also comes from an overall sense that any 5-year-old effort needs review.

Last May, State Superintendent Mike Ward and I wrote a letter to the leadership of the General Assembly expressing our support for their efforts to look at the issue of testing in North Carolina. The State Board of Education has now eliminated three tests that are not a part of the ABCs accountability program.

There is also a concern that the reputation of the entire accountability program has been tarnished by the single recent problem, and an external, third-party audit of the testing and accountability program is now under way. The audit will cover two key phases: a review of the technical, standard-setting process by national experts in this field; and review of the testing and accountability decision-making processes by an independent body.

To return to a time when state standards were loose and accountability virtually non-existent would be a disservice to the students of this state. In a perfect world, accountability and testing would not be needed. Every teacher, every student and every school would master rigorous coursework at a high level without any nudges from a state accountability program. For more than 100 years, we operated as though this were true. It wasn’t, and so we have reached the current bend in the road.

North Carolina must continue to improve and strengthen its accountability program if we are going to serve the educational needs of students, address the testing concerns of parents and teachers, and assure that we are measuring what we intend to measure.

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