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Standards & Accountability

Hello McFly, One More Time: South Carolina鈥檚 1998 Standards Push

By Andrew Ujifusa 鈥 June 04, 2015 2 min read
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In this week鈥檚 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛, I wrote about South Carolina鈥檚 adoption and implementation of new standards intended to replace the Common Core State Standards. But one of my editors here, Kathleen Manzo, beat me to a similar story by about 17 years. Let鈥檚 go back in time!

In November 1998, Manzo wrote a story about the new focus Palmetto State K-12 officials were putting on accountability. As she wrote at the time, that year lawmakers approved the Education Accountability Act that was designed to pinpoint school performance using a battery of standardized tests. This change was designed in part to give the state鈥檚 new academic standards 鈥渟ome teeth鈥 by attaching rewards and punishments for schools based on their students鈥 performance on these exams. And it made teachers and schools very nervous.

鈥淚鈥檓 in panic mode,鈥 said Terri Butts, a 3rd grade elementary school teacher.

The changes highlighted in the 1998 story were, in turn, rooted in education initiatives from former Gov. Richard Riley in the 1980s鈥攂y the time Manzo wrote her story, Riley was serving as U.S. secretary of education. As governor, Riley increased funding for schools and also introduced basic skills tests, which students took for the first time in 1981. These moves were generally deemed 鈥渋nadequate鈥 at the time but led to the increased focus on testing as a key element of South Carolina education policy.

Today, testing is again a subject of anxiety in South Carolina schools. The state doesn鈥檛 yet have a test aligned to the new standards it just adopted. It remains to be seen if schools will know what test will be given when the 2015-16 school year begins later this year.

Transitions Now and Then

The major effort by the state education department in 1998 to prepare schools for the changes also has at least an echo this year, as the state department releases guidance on how schools can shift to the new standards (which are closely aligned in many ways to the common core).

In a broader K-12 context, South Carolina鈥檚 activities were among several praised by supporters of standards, such as Matthew Gandal of Achieve, one of the groups that later became instrumental to the common core. Gandal said back in 1998 that states that agreed to make standards truly count through strong accountability measures would ensure that standards wouldn鈥檛 be just 鈥渁nother fad.鈥

But this transition in 1998 was difficult in many schools. Some of the most challenging work was ensuring that teachers鈥 curricula around the state matched these standards. The director of the state鈥檚 office of assessment, Susan Agruso, said preparing teachers for this standards-related work was a 鈥渕ind-boggling task鈥 and added: 鈥淚t鈥檚 getting it into the classroom that is making us crazy.鈥

This year, a shift to grade-by-grade standards isn鈥檛 a concern. But the state has said that roughly a quarter of districts still have a lot of work to do to make sure they鈥檙e implementing the new standards properly.

And one other thing ran through the state鈥檚 K-12 debate back in 1998: South Carolina鈥檚 position as a laggard in academic performance. As then-state chief Barbara Nielsen said at the time: 鈥淚f you are running for dog catcher in this state, you talk about how bad the schools are.鈥

A version of this news article first appeared in the State EdWatch blog.