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Senate panel begins negotiations with the House over how to scrap the STAAR test
Senate panel begins negotiations with the House over how to scrap the STAAR test

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Senate panel begins negotiations with the House over how to scrap the STAAR test

A Senate panel early Friday unveiled its rewrite of the House bill that would scrap STAAR, the state standardized test widely criticized for taking instructional time away from teachers and putting pressure on students. The Senate changes kick off formal negotiations with the lower chamber as the clock is running out on the legislative session. The Senate Education Committee's rewrite reflects a gap in what the two chambers want to see out of the new state assessment — and the A-F accountability ratings that are largely calculated based on assessment results. House Bill 4 would swap the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness test for a shorter test that aims to better support student learning. Students would be tested at the beginning, middle and end of the year to monitor their progress. 'By the time we get to a shorter end-of-year test, we are not concentrating this into a high-stakes anxiety game that basically has teachers and students walking a tightrope,' said Sen. Paul Bettencourt, the Houston Republican sponsoring the bill. 'I know there'll be more of this coming out of my House counterparts as we move this bill on.' The Senate amendments to the legislation absorbs much of the language from Senate Bill 1962, the Senate's own bill on testing and accountability. The House had started the session with much of that language but moved away from it after public testimony and closed-door meetings with school leaders. The House wants to grade Texas students by comparing their performance to their peers around the country in what is called a 'norm-referenced test.' Proponents of this kind of test say it allows students and their families to get results back faster. The Senate panel does not specify what grading would look like, which would allow the state to continue a rigid scale to track students' academic performance. The House also eliminated a mandatory standardized test on social studies, while the Senate chose to retain it. Students' STAAR performance is a key metric in the state's ratings of school districts and school campuses, which are graded on an A-F scale each year. School performance ratings were held up in court because of two consecutive years with lawsuits. The House's bill also left an avenue for districts to sue to challenge the Texas Education Agency in the future, but set up a fast-track court process so those lawsuits do not halt the release of the ratings. The Senate's bill, meanwhile, doubled down on discouraging schools from taking legal action again. It gives the TEA commissioner, for example, the option to appoint a conservator to districts that initiate a lawsuit. Bettencourt has repeatedly slammed districts who joined the lawsuits over the A-F ratings in the past, calling the action 'lawfare.' The Texas Tribune partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage. First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!

School districts stay quiet as lawmakers push to limit when they can sue the state
School districts stay quiet as lawmakers push to limit when they can sue the state

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

School districts stay quiet as lawmakers push to limit when they can sue the state

The Texas Senate passed a bill last week taking aim at school district leaders who used lawsuits to halt the release of the state's school performance ratings for two consecutive years. Senate Bill 1962, which now heads to the Texas House for consideration, would make it more difficult for districts to use the courts in a similar way again, effectively taking away a tool district leaders have leaned on to push back against state changes to the ratings system they believe are unfair. Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, tried to give district leaders a say at a hearing on the bill earlier this month: Would anyone involved with or in support of prior suits speak up? 'There's got to be someone here,' West said. But there was no one. Every witness who testified at the hearing was in support of SB 1962, frustrated that families have gone years without information on how their local schools were performing. In backdoor conversations with lawmakers, superintendents have conveyed their fears that the bill would limit their ability to defend what they think is best for them and give the head of the state education agency unchecked power to change school performance rules. 'What we believe was a check and balance now doesn't exist,' said Gabriel Zamora, the superintendent of the Fort Stockton Independent School District, which joined both lawsuits. 'They don't want people who are going to come against the grain, even if we're trying to do the right thing. Instead, what they want is yes-men and people who are just going to kick the can down the road." The Texas Tribune spoke to seven school leaders who criticized the proposed legislation but said they declined to testify against it because of what they described as a growing hostility among Republican lawmakers, particularly in the Senate, toward public education. Many of the school leaders interviewed by the Tribune asked not to be identified out of fear of turning their school districts into a target. It is illustrative of the more muted attitude schools are taking toward advocacy at a time when they worry any misstep could compromise some of the gains they hope to make around school funding this legislative session. The state's school accountability ratings, calculated by the Texas Education Agency, provide Texans a simplified and critical look at schools' performance. Many parents consult them when making choices about where to enroll their kids, and businesses can use them to assess what communities to invest in. The TEA grades school districts and individual campuses on an A-F scale based on metrics like students' standardized test scores and their preparedness for life after high school. But for two years, a pair of lawsuits from districts across the state have blocked the release of ratings. In 2023, more than 120 school districts argued that the TEA did not give them adequate notice before rolling out stricter college and career readiness benchmarks for their A-F ratings. They said the agency had applied the new standards to evaluate students who had already graduated, which meant districts did not get a chance to come up with additional measures to meet the new goalposts. Last year, about 30 districts sued again to block the ratings, this time saying a third party should have verified the new computer grading system used to calculate STAAR test scores, another big metric that affects ratings. Superintendents who joined in on the lawsuits say they support a statewide ratings system that holds districts accountable and agreed that the standards for the accountability system should be updated periodically. But they sued, they said, because TEA Commissioner Mike Morath had broken state education rules. Texas lawmakers have not been impressed. Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, accused the school districts of 'hiding behind lawsuits' to 'shield failure' of their poor ratings. Bettencourt filed SB 1962 to send a message to those districts: The lawsuits must end. 'I'm frustrated and really disappointed in these 100 school districts … or the 30 that did it two years in a row,' Bettencourt said. 'No offense, you jump on the state twice, I consider that lawfare.' SB 1962 would impose restrictions on how school districts pay their attorneys' fees for suits related to their performance ratings. Those that sue would open the door to increased TEA oversight. The bill would also change state standardized testing to move away from the long-criticized, end-of-the-year STAAR test and replace it with shorter exams. The House has a nearly identical bill, House Bill 4, but the lower chamber has not advanced it. Texas' 15th Court of Appeals recently permitted TEA to release the 2023 ratings, ruling that Morath did not overstep his authority when he changed the scoring metrics. Parents will be able to see their districts' 2023 ratings on Thursday. In a rare move, a top jurist used the ruling to weigh in on the legislation. Chief Justice Scott Brister nodded to HB 4, saying he 'shared' the Legislature's frustrations. 'This bill may or may not pass, but it illustrates a truth that courts too often forget: if current laws are not followed, the Legislature may enact more drastic ones,' Brister wrote in a court opinion. 'I would make it the law in our statewide district that lower courts should not entertain disputes about school performance ratings.' The seven superintendents the Tribune spoke to represent big and small school districts across rural, suburban and urban regions of the state. The superintendents said SB 1962 would erect so many barriers for districts wanting to challenge performance ratings that legal action would become largely unviable. For example, districts that sue would risk having TEA appoint a conservator to oversee district operations. In extreme cases, a conservator could replace school board members or superintendents who do not follow their directives. The superintendents worry that the bill, along with the appeals court ruling, would translate into unrestricted power for the TEA commissioner when creating rules and regulations around the schools' rating system. One superintendent from a suburban district worried the commissioner's growing authority means anyone in that position could make unchecked, politically motivated decisions. 'There's no protection from it becoming political. It puts a lot of power into a non-elected official role,' said the suburban district superintendent, who spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear of putting his district in state officials' crosshairs. 'It basically makes the commissioner king.' The TEA commissioner is appointed by the governor. SB 1962 'is an overstep by the legislative process to take away checks and balances,' said a superintendent of a rural school district, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation. 'That is fundamental to our democracy.' The rural superintendent said the expansion of TEA's authority would come at the expense of local school board officials and school superintendents, who usually enjoy broad independence to make their own regulations. He called it an ironic shift in power in a GOP-led state since limited government has long been a key conservative principle. Lawmakers and the justices on the 15th Court of Appeals have said school districts should have input on how performance ratings are calculated, but insist that input should be provided through administrative, internal appeals processes. A TEA spokesperson said districts involved in the lawsuit deliberately chose not to use the agency's appeals process. The spokesperson also said the agency communicated to them as early as January 2023 that changes to the ratings system would be coming. Bruce Gearing, the superintendent of Leander ISD, said he was not a 'big believer in lawsuits.' Leander and about 200 other districts first raised their concerns in a letter to Morath about the changes to the ratings system standards, but they didn't feel like they got adequate relief from TEA. Individual district leaders also tried and failed to get the commissioner to respond to their concerns informally in closed-door cabinet meetings, he said. Joining the lawsuit was a last resort, Gearing said. 'We met a dead end every time,' he said. 'We had no recourse to any other mechanism, other than challenging the state through a lawsuit. We had no choice.' The school leaders said they did not testify against the bill because they feel senators have not seriously considered their input for years. They described a hostile climate toward them that reflects a broader, growing skepticism of public schools. Since the pandemic, public schools have faced criticism from conservative groups and some families over health restrictions and the way children are taught about sex and race. Schools have gone for years without a significant increase to their base funding at a time when inflation has sent some of their costs skyrocketing, leading many districts to adopt deficit budgets. Last session, Gov. Greg Abbott refused to approve a boost to districts' base funding as school vouchers, his top legislative priority in recent years, failed to advance through the Legislature last session. His office has argued that Texas' public school funding is at an all-time high and accused some school districts of spending it on 'administrative bloat.' A Tribune analysis recently found the state's share of the funds that schools receive per student significantly decreased in the last decade until recently. Many superintendents said they did not feel like their testimony would affect senators' votes or their willingness to amend the bill's language. 'The political climate does not seem to be welcoming. At some point you kind of see the writing on the wall,' one superintendent said. 'We have districts to run. We're trying to get ready for STAAR. We need to be here for our districts and our students.' School leaders have focused their efforts elsewhere. They say they have had closed-door conversations with House lawmakers, whom they are now counting on to advocate for changes to SB 1962. Public school leaders in general have opted to take a less combative approach to their advocacy this year, a shift from previous sessions. Last month, House Democrats criticized school leaders for not being more aggressive about their funding needs. School leaders say they don't want to risk the gains they hope to make this year or put a target on their backs. On the same day the Senate approved SB 1962 last week, the House passed an $8 billion piece of legislation that would increase teacher pay and make new investments in special education. If this year's legislative session ends with them securing more funds for schools in exchange for some of their local power, they said that's a concession they have to be willing to make. Tickets are on sale now for the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Texas' breakout ideas and politics event happening Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Get tickets before May 1 and save big! TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.

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