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Metro Nashville Public Schools has most students with two consecutive ineffective teachers


Photo: U.S. Army
Photo: U.S. Army
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NASHVILLE, Tenn.--A new report from the Tennessee Comptroller's Office finds public school students taught by ineffective teachers two years consecutively affected their performance.

TCOT conducted the study at the request of Senator Dolores Gresham. The study found over 8,000 students -1.6% of all students in the study- had a teacher with low evaluation scores in the 2013-14 and 2014-15 school years in math, English, or both subjects.

In English language arts, grade 6 to grade 7 students had the highest number and percentage of students with consecutive ineffective teachers. In math, grade 8 to grade 9 students had the highest percentage of consecutive ineffective teachers. Statewide, Algebra I students overall had the lowest access to effective teachers.

The study found the district with the highest number of students with two ineffective teachers was Metro Nashville Public Schools. The district was found to have 1,055 such students representing 2.78% of the population. Hamilton County Schools was second with 3.60% of students.

Percentage-wise, Decatur and Johnson counties led the state with 10% or more of students having two consecutive ineffective teachers.

The study found students with such teachers were less likely than their peers to be proficient or advanced on state assessment testing when students had ineffective teachers for two consecutive years.

Students who were English language learners, in special education, or in high-poverty schools were 50% more likely to have two consecutive ineffective teachers.

SEE THE FULL REPORT: HERE

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