State lawmakers sent to Gov. Mike DeWine a bill that would replace the A-F grades on report cards for Ohio’s more than 600 school districts with a new rating system.
DeWine has hinted he will sign the bill, the second major overhaul for the school report cards in less than a decade.
State Sen. Andrew Brenner (R-Delaware) said the House bill, sponsored by Reps. Don Jones (R-Freeport) and Jon Cross (R-Kenyon), scraps the A-F grades and replaces them with a rating system of five stars.
“The five components that would be rated are achievement, progress, gap closing, early literacy and graduation rate," Brenner said.
College, career workforce and military readiness would be non-graded for three years but could be adopted by lawmakers as a sixth component of the new system.
The A-F grades were instituted under Republican former Gov. John Kasich in 2012 because critics said designations such as “effective” and “academic watch” were confusing. But the A-F system has been called misleading, arbitrary and simplistic. The move to get rid of that system started in 2018, and a study of report cards put out by a group of lawmakers in 2019 pushed the idea further.
Report card ratings are important not only for parents and teachers, but also for those who might seek state-paid vouchers. Students in school buildings that are considered failing are eligible for EdChoice vouchers. The proposed Senate budget increases those EdChoice vouchers, and both the House and Senate versions of the budget would have the state directly funding them, rather than money for each student be deducted from a school district when a student leaves the district.
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