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Michigan Department of Education Continues to Fail Lansing Area Students, Parents

Posted at 2:16 PM, Dec 16, 2019
and last updated 2019-12-16 22:50:13-05

LANSING, Mich. — The Michigan Department of Education has for more than 100 consecutive days broken the state’s reporting law, failing to meet transparency requirements and refusing to publish easy to understand school report cards.

Last month GLEP presented the state Board of Education and every member of the state Legislature a new, comprehensive report including A-F letter grades for public schools in the state, calculated using the Michigan Department of Education’s publicly available 2017-2018 School Index data [mischooldata.org].

While the Department hides local school performance from parents, GLEP used the guidelines found in the state’s reporting law to craft report cards, measuring each school’s performance for students’ math and reading proficiency; math and reading growth; performance with English language learners; graduation rates; and a comparison to like schools.

The details behind the report cards [glep.org] illustrate the need for parents to receive information about the performance of their kids’ schools. Unfortunately, these details paint a bleak picture when examined alongside 3rd grade reading proficiency [mischooldata.org] statistics and SAT scores that measure college readiness. [mischooldata.org]

The A-F report cards for Ingham, Eaton and Clinton County schools indicate:

  • 50% of schools received a C or lower in math and reading proficiency.
  • 18% percent received a D or lower in math and reading proficiency.
  • 53% received a C or lower in growth since the last school year.
  • 80% of applicable schools scored lower than 50% in SAT college readiness.
  • 59% of applicable schools saw less than half of students reading proficiently by 3rd grade.
  • Only 2 area schools received straight A’s on their report card.

It is important to note that a “C” may denote an average score based on performance of other schools in Michigan, but does not denote acceptable performance for our students. As the data behind the grades shows, an elementary school may be graded at the “C” average yet still fail to help half of their 3rd grade students achieve proficiency in 3rd grade reading. The same is true for our high schools in SAT preparedness.
“Our kids get report cards so we can measure their progress, praise their successes and get them the help they need, and state law says our kids’ schools get report cards, too,” said Beth DeShone, Executive Director of the Great Lakes Education Project. “The results show that the education bureaucracy is standing in the way of preparing our students in the most basic subjects. Students at far too many local schools are not receiving the education they deserve, they’re not reading proficiently, and they’re not ready for college. Failing our kids cannot be allowed to continue. Until parents are presented with clear information and we all face these challenges honestly, our schools will continue to fail to overcome them.”

Michigan public school report cards are available for review by parents, policymakers, and voters at www.glep.org/a-f [glep.org].

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