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In the
past few years, California has taken some basic but important steps to improve
its public schools by establishing clear and challenging goals for learning,
measuring progress to make sure goals are met, and holding schools accountable
for results. The business community has been a
leading voice in support of this common-sense plan for school improvement
and instrumental in bringing to California one
of the more effective reforms of public education in the nation. However, after
years of preparation, we are facing some of the first major tests of reform
and continue to
encounter a concerted assault on the state's school improvement efforts.
Although they initially supported
the California High School Exit Exam (CAHSEE), the California Teachers
Association (CTA) is sponsoring legislation, Assembly Bill 356 authored by Loni
Hancock (D-Berkeley) and co-authored by Gene Mullin (D-San Mateo), which
proposes to abolish the requirement of high school seniors to pass the
state-adopted, standards-aligned exam in order to receive a diploma. The measure
would also eliminate the Governor's Performance Award Program for schools that
meet their annual Academic Performance Index (API) target growth and the
consequences for those that do not.
California High School Exit
Exam
Signed into law in 1999, the CAHSEE
was part of Governor Davis’ education reform package
and is a key component of the state’s testing and accountability system.
The primary purpose of the exam is to significantly improve student achievement
in public high schools and ensure that students who graduate from public high
schools can demonstrate grade-level competency in reading, writing, and
mathematics. The exam, which is directly tied to the
state’s academic content standards, also ensures the public and businesses that
students graduating from high school have some of the basic skills needed to
compete in today's competitive workforce.
Beginning in the 2003-04 school year, all students will
have to pass the CAHSEE in order to receive a public high school diploma, as
well as having to meet the district's requirements for graduation. The exam
tests reading and writing at about the 10th-grade level, and math at
roughly the sixth-and seventh-grade levels. Students begin taking the exam in
the 10th grade and can pass with scores of 55 percent in math and 60
percent in English-language arts. Those who fail either segment have up to seven
more opportunities to pass it before completing their senior year.
Currently, 17 states require students to pass exit or
end-of-course exams to receive a high school diploma with seven more, including
California, planning to do so in the future.
Standards, Assessment & Accountability
For over a decade, schools, states and national
policy-makers have focused increasingly on improving the level of academic
achievement of all students. Prior to that time, most school systems
awarded diplomas based on Carnegie Units, which generally represented “seat
time” as opposed to a demonstration of essential knowledge and skills. Under the
Carnegie, or credit-based system, postsecondary institutions and employers had
difficulty determining what students had learned as course content varied from
school to school.
In an attempt to raise the level of student learning across
the board and create a more publicly accountable education system, states,
school districts and national organizations began the process of articulating
content standards to define what all students should know and be able to do. In
California and across the country, standards now are the driving force in
efforts to improve equity and excellence. California
has laid a solid foundation for educational improvement focusing on rigorous
standards, quality instruction to those standards and materials aligned to them.
Part of this system is the CAHSEE which is now acting as an impetus for
school districts to take the state academic content standards seriously. Now
more than ever, as our assessment and accountability systems are fully aligned
to state standards, it is important to maintain focus on the standards-based
reforms that are helping our students succeed.
In 1996, only 14 states had standards. Today, 49 states
have both standards and assessment systems to measure achievement of those
standards.
High School Students Lack Basic Skills
The need for the CAHSEE is
simple: too many students graduate from high school unprepared for the
challenges that lie ahead. It is estimated that
U.S. businesses and institutions of higher education spend $16 billion on
remedial education and training each year. The California State University
system provides remedial training in reading, writing, or mathematics to half of
its incoming freshmen. The business community tells a similar story with 34
percent of job applicants tested by major U.S. firms in 2001 lacking sufficient
reading and math skills to do the jobs that they sought.
Broad Public Support
The public welcomes changes that set higher expectations
for students and ensure that all students and schools are accountable for
performance. In a recent poll
conducted by the California Business for Education Excellence Foundation, 78
percent of those polled think the CAHSEE is a good idea, with 92 percent saying
that kids should meet a common standard as a requirement for graduation.
Rewards & Consequences
AB 356 would also dismantle
some of the key accountability and incentive measures that the business
community has fought to get enacted over the past decade in California.
For schools and students to reap the benefits of
standards-based reform, we need appropriate incentives and consequences. We must
continue to hold both students and schools accountable for results by having
clear, predictable rewards and consequences for meeting expectations and for
addressing chronic poor performance.
Where is the Bill?
AB 356 passed its first hurdle
in the Assembly Education committee and is likely to
be approved by the Appropriations Committee in the coming weeks. While AB 356 is
moving through the Legislature, the state Board of Education is reviewing the
fairness of the exam and deciding whether to stick to the current timetable of
having the class of 2004 pass the exam in order to receive a diploma. The board
has until August 1 to determine whether to postpone implementation of the
graduation requirement. A key factor in their decision will hinge on an
independent assessment of the exam, which was mandated by the Legislature two
years ago and must be completed by May 1. This assessment is to be presented to
the state board in the coming weeks.
California Must Stay the Course
Legislative proposals like AB 356 represent a major step
backward for the education improvement effort in California and must be stopped.
California spends $52 billion on education annually and taxpayers have the right
to know how schools and students are performing.
As business leaders, we know
first hand that statewide education improvements do not happen overnight,
and accountability cannot be secured in just a one-year plan of action. The
progress we make in the coming year in defending and implementing these and
other reforms will be vitally important in determining how effective they will
be in the future. We must stay the course. State and
local policy-makers must resist the temptation to tinker with existing reforms
and let them stand the test of time. Doing anything less only cheats
students out of what they need to succeed. |