Manning vs. school labels


Wake County Superior Court Judge Howard Manning doesn't think much of nonsensical school labels. 

Manning, who is overseeing the state's response to the Leandro education lawsuit, heard reports from education officials on funding and efforts to improve schools with lots of failing students. 

Under the state system, failing schools that are labeled "low performing" get extra help from the state to improve. But the state has schools where 60 percent or more students fail standardized tests yet escape the "low performing" tag. That's because student performance at those schools improves enough from one year to the next so that the schools show student growth.

 "It's still a fraud," said Manning. "It's still an educational escape from reality."

Manning said the schools know how to take students who barely fail one year and get their performance up enough to pass their tests the next year. A few students' scores improve, he said, but the school as a whole is no better off. 

He said the schools "hide behind the, quote, growth joke situation."

 The hearing continues today.

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