Tennessee
2022 Spring TCAP Annual Assessments Launch Statewide Next Week
Annual Testing Outcomes Drive Strategic
Choice-Making to Finest Assist College students
Nashville, TN— With one of many longest operating summative evaluation applications within the nation, Tennessee’s 2021-22 Spring Tennessee Complete Evaluation Program (TCAP) testing window will start on Monday, April 18th and shut on Friday, Might sixth. College students in faculties throughout the state will take state summative assessments typically schooling topic areas—together with English language arts (ELA), math, science, and social research— to gather invaluable information to tell strategic decision-making on the best way to greatest help Tennessee college students.
In the course of the 2020-21 faculty yr, the state achieved a 95% participation price in state summative assessments, which far exceeded the 80% purpose established by Public Chapter 2, which was handed in the course of the January 2021 Particular Legislative Session. Whereas state-level outcomes from the 2020-21 Spring TCAP assessments present that pandemic-related disruptions to schooling led to anticipated declines in scholar educational proficiency throughout all topics and grade bands, these declines have been mitigated as a direct results of the laborious work of Tennessee’s districts, faculties and educators.
“Tennessee academics, districts and faculties persistently put the wants of their college students first to make sure they’re studying each day and are on pathway to success,” stated Commissioner Penny Schwinn. “For folks and academics particularly, annual evaluation information is a useful measure of scholar progress that helps help studying and achievement yr after yr.”
Annual TCAP assessments are an important a part of Tennessee’s public schooling system and serves a number of functions for the state, together with:
- Offers suggestions about college students’ educational progress and the way it aligns with grade-level expectations
- Offers households and academics a high-level perspective about how a scholar is progressing in comparison with friends throughout the district and state, together with a scholar’s strengths and development alternatives
- Builds confidence and transparency about college students’ readiness for postsecondary and the workforce amongst Tennessee faculties, universities, and employers
- Helps educators strengthen instruction and replicate on their observe
- Highlights exemplar districts and faculties to be taught from throughout the state
Over the previous two years, Tennessee has launched a whole lot of free and non-obligatory evaluation sources to help educators with a statewide formative platform, Schoolnet. Moreover, the division is constant so as to add enhancements to the TCAP Household Portal, which offers mother and father and caregivers with on-demand entry to their college students’ state check outcomes. Enhancements can be obtainable within the coming months and embody simpler to know graphics and language, historic check data and progress over time, personalised movies of their college students’ outcomes, and connections to literacy sources.
Mother and father and households have shared their gratitude and suggestions for the TCAP Household Portal:
“It fairly actually provides me details about my son’s present testing capabilities and his educational progress and breaks that data down into specifics about what he could or will not be having points with.” – Tennessee Guardian
“In my thoughts, the very cause a report like this exists is to tell – this type does an excellent job of this. As the aim of testing is to measure the place a scholar is, observe progress, and advocate motion, outcomes must be communicated successfully. This report does this successfully – each visually and thru textual content. I stroll away with a transparent understanding of what I wished to know.” – Tennessee Guardian
“I believe the detailed descriptions are nice – they might function a stable place to begin for a dialog about the place he’s struggling and what we will do to get him over these challenges/take motion” – Tennessee Guardian
TCAP contains summative assessments for English language arts (ELA), math, science, and social research for grades 3-8, highschool end-of-course (EOC) exams in English I and II, Algebra I and II, Geometry, Built-in Math I, II, and III; Biology, and U.S. Historical past. TCAP additionally contains the TCAP-Alternate Evaluation for college kids with disabilities, and the non-obligatory TCAP Grade 2 Evaluation in math and ELA.
For extra data on the state’s assessments, click on right here. To be taught extra concerning the TCAP Household Portal, rating experiences, and see pattern check questions, go to Finest for All Central’s Featured Household Sources.
For Tennessee Division of Schooling media inquiries, contact Edu.MediaInquiries@tn.gov.
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Tennessee
Tennessee reading law: Less than 1% of third graders held back in 2024
Just 0.88% of Tennessee public school third graders were held back this year under the state’s controversial reading law, despite 60% of the class falling short of a state reading benchmark this spring.
With around 74,000 third graders enrolled in the 2023-24 school year statewide, that works out to 655 students who were retained, according to data from the Tennessee Department of Education. The state reading law took effect last year and led to the retention of 1.2% of third graders in 2023, which came out to 898 students.
The law primarily determines children’s reading proficiency by their English language arts scores on the standardized Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program, or TCAP, test.
The 60% who fell short on this year’s TCAP represent roughly 50,000 students. However, that number does not include students who were exempt from being held back. Here are those exemptions, including how many students met them:
- 11,468: Students with disabilities or suspected disabilities that may impact their reading
- 3,511: Students who are English learners with less than two years of English language arts instruction
- 2,596: Students who were held back in a previous grade
- 2,345: Students who had other exemptions determined by their local education leaders
Exemptions were up to the districts to sort out. The remaining students had to successfully take one of the state’s many “pathways” to avoid being held back.
Here’s a look at how those students fared.
How Tennessee third graders moved on to fourth grade
Third graders who scored “below” or “approaching” expectations on the English language arts section of the TCAP had several options to avoid being held back.
Retakes were offered to third graders shortly after the spring TCAP. A total of 3,274 made a passing score and moved on to fourth grade. Another 99 students won an appeal because they faced a catastrophic circumstance around the time they took the TCAP.
Third graders who scored as approaching proficiency had three options to move on to fourth grade. Here’s how many qualified for each one:
- 1,124: Enrolled in summer school, met 90% attendance and showed adequate growth
- 7,426: Opted into state-provided tutoring for the entirety of fourth grade
- 3,262: Scored in the 50th percentile or higher of a state-approved universal reading screener and opted into state-provided tutoring for the entirety of fourth grade
- 2,895: Won a parent appeal and opted into an academic remediation plan in fourth grade, which includes tutoring
Third graders who scored as below proficiency had one option to move on to fourth grade. Here’s how many qualified:
- 3,411: Enrolled in summer school, met a 90% attendance rate and opted into state-provided tutoring for the entirety of fourth grade
Students who qualified for tutoring in fourth grade must meet an individualized growth goal by the end of fourth grade. This growth goal does not apply to two groups who opted into tutoring: Those who won an appeal, or those who scored as “approaching” on the third grade TCAP and scored in the 50th percentile or higher on the third grade universal reading screener.
A total of 1,950 third graders who fell short on the spring TCAP either did not enroll again or had data that has not been reported to the state. The data reflects reports from districts as of Sept. 6, according to the state department of education.
How the Tennessee reading law affected fourth graders
Fourth graders who enrolled in yearlong tutoring to avoid being held back in third grade must pass the English language arts section of the TCAP or hit individualized growth goals set by the state. However, the reading law does not mandate that they be held back if they do not meet those goals.
Instead, it requires the student’s parents or legal guardians, principal and English language arts teacher to determine what’s best. They can either decide to retain the child or promote them to fifth grade with state-provided tutoring in place.
According to the state department of education, here’s how fourth graders enrolled in tutoring this year fared:
- 5,389: Promoted to fifth grade with tutoring in place
- 3,996: Met adequate growth goals
- 1,740: Scored proficient on their spring TCAP English language arts section
- 132: Retained in fourth grade
A total of 906 fourth graders either did not enroll again or had data that was not reported by their district, according to the state education department.
Where can I learn more?
More information on the third grade reading and retention law from the Tennessee Department of Education can be found at tn.gov/education/learning-acceleration.
Tennessee
Former Titans Coach Named Top Candidate for Jets
Former Tennessee Titans head coach Mike Vrabel remains a hot name, and he may have another head-coaching job as soon as next season.
Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated recently named a bunch of potential candidates for the New York Jets job in 2025, and Vrabel was at the top of his list.
“Mike Vrabel makes the most sense to me, mostly because he won’t stand down to an owner, and that’s exactly what the New York Jets need,” Breer wrote.
The problem with that is Jets owner Woody Johnson is known to be a meddler, so he a Vrabel-Johnson partnership may never actually come to fruition.
Still, Vrabel could end up being a perfect fit for the Jets from a stylistic perspective given that New York is built upon a strong defense.
It’s not the first time that Vrabel has been linked to Gang Green, either.
Vrabel actually did a very solid job during his time with the Titans, going 54-45 while making three playoff appearances—including a pair of AFC South titles—across five seasons.
Things went south over Vrabel’s final two years in Tennessee, with the Titans going just 13-21 during that span. However, it is becoming increasingly obvious that the problem was not with Vrabel.
Vrabel is currently serving as an assistant for the Cleveland Browns, but it seems like only a matter of time before he lands a better job elsewhere.
The 49-year-old also had a 14-year NFL playing career from 1997 through 2010, spending time with the Pittsburgh Steelers, New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs. He won three Super Bowls with the Patriots and also made a Pro Bowl with the squad in 2007.
The Jets have been one of the league’s most disappointing teams this season, as they are just 3-8 in spite of having one of the most star-studded rosters in the sport.
Make sure you bookmark Tennessee Titans on SI for the latest news, exclusive interviews, film breakdowns and so much more!
Tennessee
Tennessee man convicted for Jan. 6 riot found guilty of plotting to kill FBI agents who investigated him
A Jan. 6 rioter who breached the U.S. Capitol was convicted of trying to have law enforcement personnel, including the FBI agents and employees who were investigating him, murdered, the Justice Department said Wednesday.
Edward Kelley, 35, of Maryville, Tennessee, who was convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers and other crimes during the Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021, was found guilty on Wednesday of conspiracy to murder employees of the United States, solicitation to commit a crime of violence, and influencing or retaliating against federal officials by threat.
The jury agreed on a verdict after an hour of deliberation following the three-day trial, WBIR-TV reported.
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Federal prosecutors at his trial in Knoxville, Tennessee, said Kelly developed a “kill list” of FBI agents and others who participated in the investigation into his conduct on Jan. 6 while awaiting trial for his involvement in the Capitol riot.
He distributed the list, as well as videos containing images of FBI employees identified on the list, to a co-conspirator as part of his “mission,” authorities said.
SUPREME COURT RULES IN FAVOR OF JAN. 6 CAPITOL RIOT PARTICIPANT WHO CHALLENGED OBSTRUCTION CONVICTION
Kelley’s co-defendant Austin Carter, who pleaded guilty in November 2023 to conspiracy to kill FBI agents and is awaiting sentencing, testified that Kelly said he needed to “take out” the FBI. He said that he and Kelley planned attacks on the Knoxville FBI Field Office using car bombs and incendiary devices appended to drones.
He also testified that the conspirators strategized about assassinating FBI employees in their homes and in public places such as movie theaters.
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Recording introduced by prosecutors showed Kelley directing the plan, and giving instructions to “start it,” “attack,” and “take out their office” in the event of his arrest. He was also recorded stating: “Every hit has to hurt. Every hit has to hurt,” authorities said.
Kelley is scheduled to be sentenced on May 7, 2025. He faces up to life in prison.
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