Latest State Achievement Index shows 365 schools are failing Washington children

PRESS RELEASE
|
Apr 18, 2017

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                 CONTACT:

April 18, 2017                                                                                                                        Molly Sheerer (206) 937-9691

 

Seattle– Officials at the State Board of Education have announced their latest findings on student learning at more than 2,000 Washington public schools in the Achievement Index for 2015-16, available here.  

A review of the index shows:

  • Nearly half of Washington public schools, 916 schools (45%) received a D ranking or lower
  • 827 schools, (41%) received a B or C ranking
  • Only 91 schools (4.5%) received an A ranking
  • 192 schools (9%) were not rated

These results are somewhat skewed compared to past years.  In 2013, members of the State Board of Education changed how they rate schools under the Achievement Index.  Details on the changes are described here.  Results from previous years can be found here.

Public charter schools generally maintain a higher learning standard, and officials at private schools give no indication of lowering standards for their students.

The School Achievement Index ranks public schools as Exemplary, Very Good, Good, Fair, Underperforming, Lowest 5% and Not Rated, similar to a standard A, B, C grading system.  Governor Jay Inslee has said he wants public schools to receive a letter grade each year so parents and the public can be informed about how well school officials are educating children.  

Category

Letter

grade

Number of

Schools

% of all Schools

Number of students

Exemplary

A

91

4.5%

45,500

Very Good

B

276

13.6%

191,640

Good

C

551

27.1%

338,866

Fair

D

551

27.1%

286,675

Underperforming

F

256

12.6%

121,094

Lowest 5 Percent

F-

109

5.4%

41,077

Not Rated

 

192

9.5%

40,492

 

State figures show that education officials have sent 202,662 students to underperforming, lowest 5% or Not Rated schools.  Officials assigned a further 286,675 students to schools the state rates as only Fair.  Officials send most students to public schools based on zip code, regardless to the school’s standing or academic quality.  Alternatively, some 1,800 public education students attend one of the state’s public charter schools.  Students at charter schools, especially in underserved communities, are assigned based on selections made by parents, not by a child’s zip code.

Nearly all school districts in Washington operate as local monopolies.  While a child’s public school may be rated Underperforming (F), there is little the family can do about it.  For this reason many states are allowing more family choice in education, with programs like charter schools, online courses, after school tutoring, transportation to an alternative school and Education Savings Accounts.  One proposal would offer students whom local officials have assigned to a low-performing public school up to $9,000 in state aid to attend a better school.

Research shows that family choice in education promotes public accountability.  Allowing parents to act on the information the state provides through the Achievement Index would give administrators a strong incentive to serve the needs of families first, ahead of vested political interests.  Greater parent choice allows families to focus on the needs of children, letting them avoid much of the controversy and union strikes that predominate in today’s public education system.

On a positive note, three more charter schools will open this fall, providing a quality learning alternative for children whom administrators had previously sent to failing schools.

To find out more about family choice in public education, visit our website here: https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/centers/detail/center-for-education.

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