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Education Advocacy Groups Want To Simplify Ohio School Report Cards

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Two national education advocacy groups say Ohio could be doing better when it comes to its annual school report cards. Both groups say they’re too complicated.

In its review, the Data Quality Campaign says Ohio’s school report cards are written at a college reading level. And for the group's policy director, Brennan Parton, that’s a problem.

“Even for my staff that reviewed it, often with master’s degrees, it was hard to understand what these report cards were conveying,” Parton said.

Parton says complicated language makes it difficult for parents to use the data placed in front of them. The Thomas B. Fordham Institute is also recommending simplification.

Right now, Ohio report cards contain as many as 14 letter grades for a school or district.

“That’s a little bit, I guess you could say, overboard when it comes to school ratings. If you look at a kids report card, they might have five or six that are important to parents,” Fordham’s Ohio Research Director Aaron Churchill said,

He suggests Ohio reduce the number of letter grades to six areas, including an overall grade, graduation rates and student growth.

Ashton Marra covers the Capitol for West Virginia Public Radio and can be heard weekdays on West Virginia Morning, the station’s daily radio news program. Ashton can also be heard Sunday evenings as she brings you state headlines during NPR’s weekend edition of All Things Considered. She joined the news team in October of 2012.
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