Students in Michigan’s state-run district for the lowest-performing schools are making “impressive” strides.
At least, that’s how officials with the Education Achievement Authority are interpreting new test data.
The third set of online Scantron Performance Series tests administered to EAA students this year show what Chancellor John Covington calls “phenomenal” progress in reading and math.
District officials say 56% of all students demonstrated at least a year’s worth of progress in reading, and 65% did so in math.
Covington says most EAA students start out way behind, so it makes sense to measure growth rather than specific benchmarks.
He says these scores prove the district’s philosophy of “student –centered learning” and “meeting students where they’re at” is yielding results.
“Children aren’t able to move from one level to the next until they have clearly demonstrated they have mastered those standards and those requisite skills they need to move to the next level,” Covington says.
The district for the lowest-performing 5% of schools is only operating in 15 former Detroit Public Schools right now.
Governor Snyder is pushing to take the EAA statewide. But it’s faced considerable questions and opposition from Democrats and other critics, as legislation to codify the district in state law recently stalled in the State Senate.