Accountability adjustments
Meeting in Tallahassee today, the Florida Board of Education tweaked the state’s school grading formula and nixed a new FCAT graduation requirement.
Until today, a school dropped a full letter grade whether at least half of its lowest performing students losed out to construct gains in reading and math. Now, a school will not face that penalty whether it gets at least 40 percent of its lowest-performing students by the hump and that percentage is higher than the year before. plus, a school with less than 40 percent making gains will not be penalized whether it improved by at least five percentage points from the prior year.
The board approved the change following a recommendation from the FCAT external advisory committee, which was created
The board additionally gave Education Commissioner Eric J. Smith the go-ahead to scrap a new provision requiring high school students to pass the writing portion of the tenth grade FCAT to graduate. that year’s tenth-graders would have been the first to face that hurdle.
Smith cited “technical issues” and pending budget cuts for his recommendation. As in the past, high school students must still pass the reading and math portions of the FCAT to graduate.
- Ron Matus, state education reporter
Original post by Jeff Solochek
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