The ABCs of ESSA: Agenda
Chicago • October 6–7, 2016
Presentation materials and audio recordings are linked in this schedule.
Thursday, October 6
Breakfast
8:00 a.m.
Welcome
8:45 a.m.
- Caroline Hendrie, Education Writers Association (moderator)
Tweet to @chendrie
A is for Accountability
9:00 – 10:00 a.m.
The new federal education law hands states far more discretion over accountability, including how the academic progress of schools and students is measured and the consequences for poor performance. Although the outcomes of required annual testing will remain a key tenet, ESSA also stipulates that states use at least one more measure beyond test scores and (in high school) graduation rates in their accountability systems, such as school discipline or student engagement. What direction are states heading as they revamp their accountability systems? What questions should journalists keep in mind as they cover developments?
- Liz King, Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Tweet to @civilrightsorg (Organization) - Charmaine Mercer, Learning Policy Institute
Tweet to @LPI_Learning (Organization) - Chris Minnich, Council of Chief State School Officers
Tweet to @minnichc - Tony Smith, Illinois State Board of Education
Tweet to @ISBESupt - Erik Robelen, Education Writers Association (moderator)
Tweet to @ewrobelen
Finding Equity in ESSA: A Conversation
10:15 – 11:00 a.m.
Although ESSA was approved with strong, bipartisan support, actions taken by the Obama administration since then to implement the new law have sparked intense debate. Critics, including leading Republicans in Congress, argue that the administration has overreached on key issues, such as accountability and spending federal aid. The U.S. Department of Education shares its perspective on the law’s potential for improving education, particularly around its efforts to promote educational equity.
- Emma Vadehra, U.S. Department of Education
- Caroline Hendrie, Education Writers Association (moderator)
Tweet to @chendrie
Intervening in Low-Performing Schools
11:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
ESSA calls for states to use “evidence-based” interventions in the bottom 5 percent of high-poverty schools. The prescriptive provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act and federal School Improvement Grants called on states and districts to close schools, fire principals, replace faculty, or take other tough steps. Will states continue the practices shaped by previous education law or will states and districts pursue fresh approaches?
- Eric Guthertz, Mission High School
- Carlas McCauley, WestEd
Tweet to @WestEd - Elliot Ransom, University of Chicago Urban Education Institute
- Sarah Carr, Teacher Project (moderator)
Tweet to @sarah_e_carr
Lunch
12:15 – 1:00 p.m.
Top Story Ideas to Steal on ESSA
1:00 – 2:00 p.m.
NPR Education Editor Steve Drummond and Chalkbeat Indiana Bureau Chief Scott Elliott offer story ideas on ESSA for national and local reporters alike. They also offer tips on selling the stories to editors.
- Steve Drummond, NPR
Tweet to @SDrummondNPR - Scott Elliott, Chalkbeat
Tweet to @ScottElliott_IN - Stephanie Banchero, Joyce Foundation (moderator)
(Presentation Slides)
Tweet to @sbanchero
Small Group Discussions
2:00 – 2:30 p.m.
A Journalist’s Roadmap to ESSA
2:45 – 3:45 p.m.
National journalists explain the ins and outs of the new K-12 law and accompanying federal regulations. They also offer guidance on covering the ESSA rollout, from the federal to state and local levels. How do you find the gems in 392 pages of law and hundreds of pages of regulations to inform reporting? How do you monitor what your states are doing to fulfill the law? A journalist offers practical tips of the trade.
- Alyson Klein, Education Week
(Presentation Slides)
Tweet to @PoliticsK12 (Organization)
Speed Dating With Experts
4:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Small-group discussions dive deep into additional ESSA topics, including early childhood education, English language proficiency, testing, parent and “stakeholder” engagement, and social and emotional learning provisions.
- Bibb Hubbard, Learning Heroes
Tweet to @BeALearningHero - Elliot Regenstein, Ounce of Prevention
Tweet to @eregenstein - Rebecca Vonderlack-Navarro, Latino Policy Forum
Tweet to @latinopolicy (Organization) - Marie O’Hara, Achieve
Tweet to @AchieveInc (Organization) - Roger P. Weissberg, CASEL
Friday, October 7
Breakfast
8:00 a.m.
ESSA and Reframing Accountability
8:45 a.m.
- Sara Ray Stoelinga, Urban Education Institute
What Is an Effective Teacher?
9:00 – 10:00 a.m.
ESSA requires states and districts to report on how many “ineffective” educators teach in low-income schools. The law also provides funding to encourage the training, recruitment and retention of “effective” teachers and encourage equitable access to such educators. In addition, ESSA frees states from using student test scores as part of their teacher-evaluation systems. What will states do with this newfound freedom, and how will they define ineffective — and effective — teaching?
- Tequilla Banks, TNTP
Tweet to @TNTP (Organization) - Angela Minnici, American Institutes for Research
Tweet to @minniciangela - Lynn Osborne-Simmons, Chicago Public Schools
- Rob Weil, American Federation of Teachers
- Emily Hanford, APM Reports (moderator)
Tweet to @ehanford
Dollars and Cents: New Reporting Mandates
10:15 – 11:15 a.m.
Under ESSA regulations released by the Obama administration, states must include school-level, per-pupil spending on state, district, and school report cards. These expenditures must be reported by funding source (federal, state, and local), and include personnel salaries, not district or state averages. Are states equipped to handle this, and what are the implications of providing this type of detailed information on spending? What is the current state of Title I spending before the law changes?
- Lindsey Cook, U.S. News & World Report
(Presentation Slides)
Tweet to @Lindzcook - Michael Griffith, Education Commission of the States
(Presentation Slides)
Tweet to @edcommission (Organization) - Emily Richmond, Education Writers Association (moderator)
Tracking the Data Under ESSA
11:30 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
The new law requires states and districts to collect and report all sorts of new data they didn’t have to before, such as the number of inexperienced teachers and school-by-school breakdowns of funding. The Data Quality Campaign explains the information states will have to produce and how journalists can tap that data for their own stories.
- Rachel Anderson, Data Quality Campaign
(Presentation Slides)
Tweet to @rachelbarrer7
Lunch
12:15 p.m.
Planning Your Stories
1:00 – 2:00 p.m.
Map out your next-day, next-month and long-term stories about ESSA.