The New York State Department of Education has released the final versions of its professional evaluations for teachers and principals throughout the state for the 2012-2013 school year. And for the first time, parents can contact their school district and find out how their child’s teacher was evaluated. 

Some parents and school officials are going to be happy with the reports. If your child attends school in Brighton, Pittsford, Fairport, Webster, or Penfield, there’s a good chance that his or her teacher received an evaluation of “effective” or “highly effective.”

But if you’re a parent of a city student, you might be wondering if your child’s teacher is even suited for the profession. About 58 percent of the district’s 2,368 educators received an evaluation of “effective,” but about 40 percent received evaluations of “developing” or “ineffective.”

The city evaluations are almost the reverse of their colleagues in suburban schools. A similar pattern shows up in the Syracuse area.

According to state law, every teacher and principal in the state’s public school system must receive an evaluation. And those who receive ratings of developing and ineffective over a two-year period can be terminated when the evaluation system is fully implemented.

It’s important that we understand why there are such discrepancies between teacher performances in pricier communities and poor ones. Do teachers in Rochester’s schools need to brush up on their skills? Are they pursuing the right professional development courses?

Are suburban districts snapping up the best and brightest teachers? Or do suburban students have higher attendance rates and lower suspension rates?

We don’t seem to know; and worse, we don’t seem to care.

I was born and raised in the Rochester area, but I lived in California and Florida before returning home about 12 years ago. I'm a vegetarian and live with my husband and our three pugs. I cover education,...

One reply on “Teacher report cards show performance discrepancies, but why?”

  1. Is this a serious post? Are we really aksing if better teacher training is the answer. Or maybe, duh, just hire better teachers like suburbs. whew, crisis solved!

    How can anyone be surprised that the scores turned out this way? If test scores are used to measure performance, what other outcome can possibly be expected? Anyone rationale, intelligent person knows that city school district test scores are not driven by hoards of horrible teachers. There are good and bad teachers in both the city and suburban school districts. If we only consider the issue of teacher evaluations (and put aside the dismal perormance of the city schools), there is a very simple solution. Have teachers measured by thier boss (the school admin) based on the subjective criteria that the rest of us get judged on. Set objectives locally, get measured on them. This is how the rest of the world works w/o having mathmatical, standardized performance goals. If you think that is unfair, great!, join the rest of the world. As long as we rate teachers on unobtainable, non variable objectives, city teachers will always appear to have lesser performance.

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