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Focus on the WASL:
PSD takes steps to improve test scores
By Danna Webster
KP News
What’s the WASL? (Circle the correct answer).
An enemy
An opportunity
All of the above
None of the above.
The WASL is not a test of right and
wrong answers, true or false, multiple-choice. It is a
test of student performance. The reading test may
require comparison and contrast skills to examine
complex paragraphs. In writing, students are evaluated
on how they construct paragraphs for essays. In math,
students must know which applications are correct to
use; and in science, students are not asked for
memorized classifications of plants and animals, but
rather, they must demonstrate the application of the
scientific method.
But the WASL is much more than a
way to measure student performance. The standardized
test, mandated by the state Legislature in 1998, is
necessary for high school students to receive their
diploma, starting with the class of 2008. For school
districts, it is a measure of whether they meet federal
mandates under the No Child Left Behind Act signed by
President Bush in 2002.
In 2005, Peninsula School District
(PSD) ranked No. 1 in Pierce County and achieved some of
the highest scores in the state on the WASL. Reading
scores in fourth, seventh and tenth grades were 82.9
percent proficient, compared to the state average of
73.8 percent.
PSD is dedicated to high
performance scores on the WASL, according to Assistant
Superintendent Bob Connelly. But, as Connelly focuses
his attention on a chart showing 11.7 percent of fourth
graders not proficient in reading, he says the district
must now target the non-proficient students.
“From the school district’s
standpoint, we’re very proud of teachers in the district
and their work to provide students [the skills] to be
successful on the WASL,” Connelly says.
But the bar has been raised. “It’s
no longer the challenge to get most kids to standard,”
he says, “it is…to get all kids to standard.”
Getting 80 percent of PSD students
to standard was no easy task. It took nearly a decade of
staff development, curriculum revision and acquiring
support programs, Connelly says. In addition, there was
public resistance to the WASL to overcome; while the
Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI)
applied pressure for proficiency.
One of the schools that felt the
pressure was the middle school on the Key Peninsula. The
school’s scores were low in 1998. Reading scores in the
building were only 45.7 percent proficient and math
scores were at 19.7 percent.
Sharon Shaffer is the new principal
at Key Peninsula Middle School. Behind her office door,
a chart hangs on the wall. It shows the percent of
students who passed the WASL each year for the past
eight years of testing. On the chart, reading scores
climb from 45.7 percent to 74.4 percent and math scores
climb from 19.7 percent to 50.3 percent from 1998 to
2005. When asked if the scores are indications that
teachers teach to the test at KPMS, both Shaffer and
Vice Principal Thom Worlund reply, “Yes, of course.”
The WASL “is about what we teach at
the school,” says Shaffer. The scores are school scores.
They are a “measure on how we are doing on standards,”
she says.
Shaffer and Worlund explain that
the WASL is a test of student performance. Students are
expected to know what is taught, to practice what they
learn, and to perform at a passing level.
According to Shaffer and Worlund,
standards’ testing has brought a transformation to all
public schools over the past 10 to 15 years. They
compare their building’s education program to a business
model. The targets are clear and instruction is aligned
to reach them. The WASL scores are about “how we serve
the public — how we do business; and we do it much
better than we used to,” Shaffer says.
KPMS score improvements reflect a
strong supportive structure composed of staff,
volunteers, students and families. Shaffer especially
appreciates the KP families. She has worked in three
middle schools in the district and the “parents out here
are incredible,” she says.
The staff, volunteers and students
are a team that has been well-supported by materials and
resources from the district, according to Worlund. “And
that’s why I love working in this district,” he says,
“…huge support.”
The chart on the wall is viewed as
a work of art, a masterpiece illustrating the many
support structures that served to build success on the
WASL at KPMS. The school’s success was even noted by
state officials: Superintendent of Public School Terri
Bergeson chose KPMS as one of three middle schools
across the state in her “Student Success 2005 report”
highlighting year 2005 WASL achievements.
“We know we are impacting a greater
number of kids over time — no matter how they come to
us,” Shaffer says.
When the staff saw the scores on
this chart, there were “actual tears in the eyes of some
teachers,” according to Worlund.
Worlund is convinced that teaching
to the WASL prepares students for an “information-rich
world where they have to make decisions and where they
have to make choices.”
The WASL meets the needs of today’s
students who must use their skills to “understand and
think — to be critical about the information they are
going to be flooded with throughout their life,” he
believes.
“(The WASL has) such a good impact
on kids and the region,” says Worlund. “To have it go
away would be the worst thing to happen in public
education.”
The PSD administration agrees. The
WASL is seen as an opportunity for both students and the
school district to take a regular checkup on where
things may stand when the students venture out into
competition with the citizens of other nations.
Connelly says passing the WASL
assures students they are “learning to be successful —
to perform to standard with all kids across the nation —
To be able to compete equally.”
The WASL “equals the playing
field,” he says.
Special thanks to Keith Stiles,
past-president of PSD Board of Directors 1993 to 1995,
and KGHP radio (89.9 FM) founder and Saturday morning
disk jockey, for his contributions to the story.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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