Avoiding Plagiarism

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Step One:  No measure is perfect, but the estimates of value-added and other “growth models,” which attempt to isolate the “true effect” of an individual teacher through his or her students’ test scores, are alarmingly error-prone in any given year.

Step Two:   Assessments of teachers change from year to year.  A teacher with a high ranking one year may receive a lower ranking the next year.

Step Three:  The scores can change between years.  A teacher’s ranking one year is likely to receive a different ranking the next year.  There will always be changes in these rankings, and sometimes the changes will reflect actual performance changes (Ravitch, 270-271).

Step Four:  It is difficult to hold teachers accountable for their students’ success because there is no easy way to assess a teacher’s progress.  This is because the current models of assessment are unreliable (Ravitch 270-271).

Step Five:   It is difficult to hold teachers accountable for their students’ success because there is no easy way to assess a teacher’s progress.  This is because the current models of assessment are unreliable.  Diane Ravitch says, “No measure is perfect, but the estimates of value-added and other ‘growth models,’ which attempt to isolate the ‘true effect’ of an individual teacher through his or her students’ test scores, are alarmingly error-prone in any given year (Ravitch, 270-271).

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