Schools

L'Anse Creuse District Fails to Meet AYP, Chippewa Valley, New Haven and Utica Pass

Because Adequate Yearly Progress now has more stringent requirements for a school district to pass, L'Anse Creuse Public Schools failed to meet the mark, even though its neighboring school districts did.

Today the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) released its school report cards, which includes the list of schools meeting state standards through Adequate Yearly Progress. And among the most successful are Cherokee, Green and Carkenord Elementary schools in Chippewa Valley and L'Anse Creuse districts, respectively. 

All three are listed as "reward schools" – a new designation from the state – meaning they are in the top 5 percent of schools in Michigan and have made  significant gains in academic progess during recent years.

“We applaud the hard work and achievement of the educators and students in our Reward Schools because they are zeroed in on improving learning,” said state Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan in a press release. “We need to instill that goal in so many more schools, in order to help all kids be career and college-ready and successful in life.”

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The changes this year may not matter in the long run. Because of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) , the state in 2012-2013 will no longer be measuring districts based on AYP. Starting next year, school districts will receive accountability scorecards that use five different colors to recognize varying levels of achievement and accountability for each school and district.

L'Anse Creuse among districts failing AYP

While most schools in the district passed AYP, the L'Anse Creuse district as a whole did not, failing to meet standards in math and reading, according to the MDE.

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It is among a surprising list of southeast Michigan school districts that have gone from a passing AYP designation a year ago to failing today. In total, 262 districts (48 percent) statewide did not make AYP, compared to 37 (6.7 percent) last year. At the school building level, 82 percent of schools made AYP across the state, compared to 79 percent last year.

The increase of schools not making AYP is due in part to the now used on the MEAP (Michigan Educational Assessment Program) and MME (Michigan Merit Exam) tests. In addition, the state now factors graduation rates for all students into the calculations and also now includes the achievement of certain student populations who previously may have not been counted.

In the past, districts only needed to meet AYP targets at one of three levels - elementary, middle and high school. Now, they are required to meet them at all three.

Jan Ellis, a spokeswoman for the MDE, said this year's designations put a focus on the achievement gaps between students and really tries to highlight the need for all students to achieve success.

"The goal is to have all students proficient, not just some," she said, adding that in the past there was the ability to mask poor student peformance because the focus was on those students who were doing really well.

The only school within the L'Anse Creuse district to not make AYP was LCPS Riverside North. In Utica Community Schools, Utica Learning Academy and AdvancePath Academy failed to make AYP, as did Mohegan Alternative Education in Chippewa Valley Schools. All New Haven schools made AYP.

Another measure of peformance on the report cards is the Education Yes! grade, which is based on student achievement, achievement growth and self-assessments from schools. 

Utica's Monfort, Messmore and Duncan elementary schools received the highest grade of the four districts serving Macomb Township, with an "A," while all other schools in Utica, Chippewa Valley, New Haven and L'Anse Creuse earned "B" or "C" grades. Most of the "C" grades came to the areas high schools. 

New school designations

While AYP was designed to measure student achievement as required by the federal NCLB, the waiver, received last month, frees Michigan from following some of the NCLB rules.

As a result of the waiver, the MDE has identified three new school designations: reward schools, priority schools and focus schools. Not every school fits into one of these categories.

Reward Schools: The top 5 percent of all Michigan schools in the annual top-to-bottom ranking and the top 5 percent making the greatest academic progress over the past four years.

Priority Schools: Previously called persistently lowest achieving schools, these are now identified as those in the bottom 5 percent of the annual top-to-bottom ranking and any high school with a graduation rate of less than 60 percent for three consecutive years. There were 146 priority schools identified this year. These schools will be required to come up with a plan to improve. Glen H. Peters School in the Macomb Intermediate School District was identified as a priority school in Macomb Township.

Focus Schools: The 10 percent of schools with the widest achievement gaps, meaning the academic disparity between the top 30 percent of students and the bottom 30 percent. That list includes 358 schools, many who in the past would be considered high-achieving. The schools are now charged with bridging the gap. In L'Anse Creuse, L'Anse Creuse Middle School Central and Marie C. Graham Elementary have been identified as "Focus" schools, although both made AYP.

“We are committed to closing the achievement gaps in all of our schools for all of our students,” Flanagan said in the release. “With this measure of transparency, schools will be identified and held accountable for the achievement of all of their students.”


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