Karen Bowyer-Lilly: Another school year & more low scores

Published 10:29 pm Wednesday, September 13, 2017

By Karen Lilly-Bowyer

Special to the Salisbury Post

When Dr. Lynn Moody addressed the Rowan-Salisbury Schools’ state testing results, she said the schools should be held accountable for their results. I could not agree more.

Dr. Moody pointed out that test scores are not the only important measure of a school’s effectiveness, and in fact, our schools tend to show a slow growth.

What she didn’t point out is the widening gap between our school scores and the average state scores.

We hear about the poverty in our schools and how it affects testing results. Yes, that is true, but poverty exists all over the state; therefore, it is not a factor when comparing our scores to the state averages.

The bottom line, the situation where accountability needs to be addressed, is why are our students performing so far below the state average?

Dr. Moody never seems to address that fact. In her first year as superintendent, she told us she was just watching and evaluating.

In her second year, we heard about an implementation curve. Teachers had to get used to using the computers.

Last year, we heard that things were getting better even though there was no statistical change in our students’ performance. It was “Wait until next year.”

Well, next year is here, and our schools are further behind the state average than they were when Dr. Moody took the helm.

The statistics don’t lie.

The low-performance trend is even more stark in math. Our students are not maintaining; in fact, they are losing ground. The decrease in performance as our children advance from one grade to the next is frightening.

When composite EOG scores are examined, (all grades, all EOG tests) the state average is 58.8 percentage of students at grade level. The RSS average is 44.9 which is 13.9 points below the state average. That is a significant number.

In summary, it is obvious that Dr. Moody’s digital conversion of our school system has not been successful. The Rowan County taxpayers have spent millions of dollars on her scheme and the results have been dismal. Dr. Moody has received some nice awards from the Apple Corporation for spending so much money, and she has fattened up her resume, but our students have suffered.

Three years ago, the teachers and others who said the digital conversion was not a good idea were called old fogies and naysayers. We did the research and discovered that school systems across the country have not found full digital conversions to be successful.

Well, once again, the old fogies and naysayers were right, but being right is not what is important. What is important is finding a way to resolve the problem.

Karen Lilly-Bowyer is a retired teacher.