Georgia Department of
Education releases 2019 CCRPI reports
Gov. Kemp, Supt. Woods:
Need measurement that fairly and accurately captures schools’ performance
NOTE: The state-level 2019 CCRPI scores have been updated; please click here for the most up-to-date scores. Please note that district- and school-level scores did not change; this is an update to the state scores only.
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CONTACT: Meghan
Frick, GaDOE Communications Office, 404-463-4246, mfrick@doe.k12.ga.us
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All data: 2019 CCRPI Public Reports (Web
Link) | 2019
CCRPI Scoring by Component (Excel Spreadsheet) | 2019
School Climate Star Ratings (Excel Spreadsheet)
Note on comparability: As part of Georgia’s state plan for the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) –
the replacement for No Child Left Behind – the state made changes to the CCRPI
calculation. The 2018
CCRPI was the first to use the new calculation. Comparisons between the
2018 and 2019 CCRPI are valid; comparisons to prior years are not.
October
25, 2019 – The
Georgia Department of Education today released the 2019 College and Career
Ready Performance Index (CCRPI) scores.
Statewide,
the scores show an increase at the high school level, and decreases in
elementary and middle school.
CCRPI
Overall Scores – 2019 vs. 2018
State |
2019 |
2018
|
Elementary
Schools
|
77.1
|
77.8
|
Middle
Schools
|
72.1
|
76.2
|
High
Schools
|
77.0
|
75.3
|
All
Schools
|
75.9
|
76.6
|
CCRPI
scores are based on five separate components – Content Mastery, Progress,
Closing Gaps, Readiness and, for high schools, Graduation Rate. While the state
averages for Content Mastery, Readiness, and Graduation Rate increased for
elementary, middle, and high school, there were slight decreases in Progress
scores, and larger decreases in the Closing Gaps component – which requires
schools to meet elevated achievement targets for all subgroups.
Governor
Kemp and Superintendent Woods’ Remarks – Refinements Needed to CCRPI
Together,
Governor Brian P. Kemp and State School Superintendent Richard Woods
acknowledged that work still needs to be done to support students and improve
student achievement, while expressing a need to refine the CCRPI measurement to
ensure it is a fair and stable measure that accurately captures school
performance.
“I
am a strong supporter of holding schools accountable for increased student
achievement, but in a year when we’ve seen nearly across-the-board increases in
national test scores and graduation rates as well as Georgia Milestones scores,
seeing the CCRPI show a decrease instead raises concerns about the measurement
used to determine school and district achievement,” Governor Kemp said. “I
believe that we need to engage in a thoughtful process to create an
accountability system that paints a true picture of what’s happening in a
school. With unprecedented alignment between my office, the Governor’s Office
of Student Achievement, and the Department of Education, I’m confident that
we’re finally in the right position to make long-needed refinements to this
measurement.”
Superintendent
Woods emphasized his commitment to work with state and federal partners to
reduce the weight of standardized test scores in the CCRPI and move toward a
wider and deeper measurement of performance that reflects the true mission of
K-12 public schools: preparing students for life.
“As
we aim to lessen the number of high-stakes tests our students take, we need the
weight of testing in CCRPI to reflect the same priorities,” Superintendent
Woods said. “Georgia’s parents, taxpayers, students, and educators deserve
a fair measurement of performance that lifts up, rather than labels, our public
schools. Working with Governor Kemp and the Governor’s Office of Student
Achievement, the time is right to make that shift.”
“Georgia’s
public education system continues to receive both national and state-level
recognition for its K-12 performance,” said Dr. Curtis Jones, the
current National Superintendent of the Year and Superintendent of the Bibb
County School District. “Now the State School Superintendent and the Governor’s
Office are working hand-in-hand alongside local districts, which finally
affords us the opportunity to develop a measurement that fully captures the
success we’re seeing across multiple metrics.”
About
the CCRPI
Under
the federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) – the replacement for No Child
Left Behind (NCLB) passed in 2015 – states are required to have a “statewide
accountability system” that provides information on how well schools are
performing. Similar accountability systems were required under the No Child
Left Behind waivers many states operated under before ESSA was passed, but ESSA
gives states more authority over the process.