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  • March 2015: Teacher Evaluations

    April 2, 2015

    March 2015: Teacher evaluations

    District Trendline, previously known as Teacher Trendline, provides actionable research to improve district personnel policies that will strengthen the teacher workforce. Want evidence-based guidance on policies and practices that will enhance your ability to recruit, develop, and retain great teachers delivered right to your inbox each month? Subscribe here.

    For this month’s Trendline, we closely examine teacher evaluation policies in the largest
    districts across the country. Specifically, we take a look at the major
    components within evaluations, frequency and teachers’ ability to grieve their evaluation
    ratings.

    Evaluation components

    Evidence of student growth
    or achievement

    Perhaps the most debated
    component of teacher evaluations is whether to factor in any evidence of
    student learning based on objective student achievement data. The vast majority
    of districts, approximately 72 percent, use some kind of measure of student growth
    or student achievement data in some part to determine a teacher’s evaluation
    rating.

    While most of the districts
    in our database do include evidence of student learning within teacher
    evaluations, it’s important to note that they do so in a variety of ways, not
    just through value-added measures. Most districts measure student learning
    through various measures, like scores on standardized assessments, student
    learning objectives (SLOs) and other growth goals.

    Over a quarter of large
    districts in the Teacher Contract Database (28 percent) still do not include such measures in
    teacher evaluations, despite a flurry of state and federal policies the past
    few years moving districts in this direction. This number should come down in a
    few years as a number of districts have explicitly stated this year that they plan
    to include such data in teacher evaluations in future years: Anchorage, Austin, Denver, Elgin U-46
    (IL)
    , Granite (UT), Greenville
    County (SC)
    and Laramie (WY).

    While 86 districts currently
    include student growth or achievement data in teacher evaluations, these
    districts do not all incorporate this measure in the same way. Nearly half (48
    percent) have established that 50 percent of the overall evaluation is measured
    by student growth/achievement data for tested subjects (usually math and
    reading). Another 21 percent of these districts do not give a specific weight
    to how much student growth/achievement data will count in the total evaluation. 

    How are districts dealing
    with teachers in non-tested subjects? When we take a look at whether or not
    student growth/achievement is considered in teacher evaluations for teachers in
    non-tested subjects, we find that 75 percent of large districts do use
    objective measures of student learning in evaluations assessing teachers of
    non-tested subjects.

    Peer review and student
    input

    When it comes to other
    components of teacher evaluations—peer review and student input—we find more
    variety in how districts do or don’t incorporate these measures.

    With peer review and student
    input, many districts make it a choice individual schools can choose to
    include.

    Peer review, however, is a
    much more widely used measure in teacher evaluations than student input. Almost
    half of our districts either require peer review or allow it as an option. Just
    a third of districts require or allow student input.

    Evaluation frequency

    In the vast majority of
    districts, nearly 77 percent, non-tenured or beginning teachers are evaluated
    once per year. One district—Clark County
    (NV)
    —is an outlier, formally
    evaluating non-tenured teachers three times per year.

    Eleven
    districts are not included in the chart above, including six Florida districts
    (Broward
    County
    , Lee County, Miami-Dade, Palm Beach, Pinellas
    County
    and Polk County) and Oakland, where teachers in their first year are evaluated two
    times per year and annually thereafter. In Orange
    County (FL)
    , the district
    evaluates beginning teachers even more frequently, with evaluations twice a
    year for teachers in their first through third years of teaching, and annual
    evaluations thereafter.

    Columbus
    (OH)
    , Greenville
    County (SC)
    and St. Paul also have distinctive evaluation policies. In Columbus, first-year teachers are
    evaluated once.  Thereafter, the frequency
    of their evaluation is based on their performance.  In Greenville,
    first-year teachers receive only informal feedback about their practice and are
    not formally evaluated. In St. Paul,
    first-year teachers are evaluated three times per year; second- and third-year
    teachers are evaluated twice per year.

    While
    non-tenured or beginning teachers tend to be evaluated more frequently, tenured
    teachers are almost always evaluated less frequently.

    While over half of the
    districts evaluate tenured teachers annually, nearly a quarter of districts (23
    percent) formally evaluate teachers at most once every three years.

    Not included above are five California districts, (Fresno, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Sacramento and San Diego), where teachers are initially evaluated once every
    two years, until they gain 10 years of experience, after which they are
    evaluated only once every five years.

    Grievances

    After the evaluation rating
    is assigned, teachers can, in some districts, grieve the rating under certain
    circumstances even if there are no previous procedural violations in how the
    evaluation was carried out. 

    Over two-thirds of large districts
    (42 districts) allow teachers to grieve or formally appeal their evaluation
    rating even if there are no procedural violations that took place. Of those
    districts, seven (Billings
    (MT)
    , Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Montgomery
    County (MD)
    , Polk County (FL), Prince
    William County (VA)
    and Richmond
    (VA)
    ) only allow a formal appeal
    or grievance to be filed if the teacher in question received one of the lowest
    evaluation ratings.

    From just last year, we’ve
    found districts have changed or clarified many aspects of their evaluation
    systems and in the years ahead, we expect this trend to continue; so check back
    on our Teacher Trendline often to read about those changes, or run your own
    report on teacher evaluation policies in the Teacher Contract Database to see for yourself.

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