Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

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Your Guide To Florida's Ever-Changing FCAT

Background

The Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test is the foundation upon which the “Florida model” of education reform was built, serving as the basis for school and district report cards. FCAT result will also comprise half of teacher evaluations once districts design their legislatively required merit pay systems.

Florida rolled out the standardized test in 1998, and in 2010 tested students on math, reading, writing and science. School and district grades are based on both student scores and their improvement on the test from previous years.

An updated version of the test, known as FCAT 2.0, began phasing out the original version in 2010. The new test will be given to students as young as 3rd grade, and increases the difficulty of the math, science and reading tests.

The updated test will eventually include end-of-course exams for Algebra, Biology, Civics, Geometry and U.S. History.

Critics have argued tying standardized tests, such as the FCAT, to teacher pay encourages teachers or districts to cut corners or cheat to achieve better schools. In 2011, Florida asked 14 districts to review FCAT test with a high number of similar answers.

Latest Posts

Explaining Why More Florida Schools Will Earn Failing Grades

Florida is getting stricter about the way it grades schools, and the proposed rules could mean a spike in the number of elementary, middle and high schools earning ‘F’ grades. The state Board of Education is considering a new grading system next week. Before that meeting, state education officials made projections on the number of F […]

Why Poverty Is Not Included in the Mathematical Equation for Teacher Merit Pay

Florida teachers will soon be judged on how much they improve student scores on a standardized test. Part of their pay is going to be based on a new formula created by the state. But the formula doesn’t take into account what researchers say is one of the strongest indicators of student success: poverty. The […]

Inside the Mathematical Equation for Teacher Merit Pay

Miami Herald reporter Laura Isensee contributed to this report. Read her story on Florida’s merit pay formula here.  School has always been about grading students. But now 24 states are starting to grade teachers. Florida is using a mathematical formula to calculate how well teachers are doing their jobs. The grade it spits out will help […]

Should Students Repeat Third-Grade if They Can’t Read Well?

Florida has been holding back third graders who fail the state reading exam since 2003. Now Colorado, Iowa, New Mexico and Tennessee are trying to mirror Florida’s policy, according to The Wall Street Journal. But is Florida’s policy a good one? Jaryn Emhof, with the Foundation for Florida’s Future said third grade is the most important […]

Five Changes To Expect From Florida’s ‘No Child’ Waiver

So you’ve just been granted a waiver by the U.S. Department of Education — congrats on being one of the lucky 10. You’re ready to take your first steps toward Leaving No Child Left Behind, well, behind! But what does the waiver mean? How will it change things for Florida schools, students and parents? Here’s […]

How Does Arne Duncan Feel About Florida’s New School Ranking System?

Last month, Gov. Rick Scott told the Florida Department of Education to rank all of Florida’s 3,078 schools from best to worst. That list was released last week — to criticism that it relied mostly on FCAT scores and did not take poverty into account. So, my colleague John O’Connor and I wondered how U.S. […]

Who Tops Florida’s School Rankings?

Schools in Brevard, Miami-Dade and Okaloosa counties were the top rated elementary, middle and high schools, respectively, according to a school rankings the Florida Department of Education released Monday. The agency followed up on its evaluation of state school districts by ranking all 3,078 schools from first to worst. Local school officials have criticized the […]

Explaining Florida’s High School Grading System

Yesterday we asked why there were so many A and B high schools, according to the latest grades. The folks at the Jacksonville Public Education Fund have an answer in the chart at right. It’s because the state grades have very narrow ranges on a 1,600-point scale and many school found a way to quickly […]

Five Things We Learned From Florida’s High School Grades

Florida high schools learned their grades from the Department of Education Wednesday. StateImpact Florida learned a few lessons in the data: 1) Grades are going up — More high schools than ever earned an ‘A’ or ‘B’ grade on last year’s report cards. The biggest surge came in schools earning Bs — up to 207 […]

Education Commissioner Defends Tougher FCAT Standards. Would You Pass The Test?

fcat.fldoe.org Florida’s education commissioner is defending his decision to toughen the standards for tenth grade reading. Commissioner Gerard Robinson acknowledges more students are likely to fail that portion of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT). He is seeking a passing score that’s two points higher than a panel of school and business experts recommended. Robinson […]

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