
Berkshire district to flout MCAS rule
By Michele Kurtz, Globe Staff, 2/21/2003
A sixth school district has decided to award diplomas to
high school students who don't pass the MCAS - a move state education officials
say is illegal.
The Berkshire Hills Regional School Committee voted
9-1 last week to give the so-called local diplomas to seniors who meet other
graduation requirements but have not passed both the English and math sections
of the 10th-grade MCAS.
Beginning with this year's seniors, students are required to
pass the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System exam to graduate.
But a handful of districts, including Cambridge, have said they'll give their
own diplomas despite the state's mandate.
''These students have been in our school and if they do pass
all their courses, it does seem like they should be able to get their diploma,''
said school committee Chairman Stephen Bannon. ''We're not snubbing our nose
at the Department of Education. We're just in disagreement over what the
correct way of handling this is.''
State Education Commissioner David P. Driscoll has said that
districts that award local diplomas are breaking the law and could lose state
funding or worse.
''They'll be handing out really worthless diplomas. The commissioner
has called this the height of irresponsibility,'' said Heidi B. Perlman,
spokeswoman for the Department of Education. ''There are two main consequences
- they could lose state aid, or if they persist we can refer the whole thing
to the attorney general's office for noncompliance.''
The issue in Berkshire Hills came up at a meeting last week
when the principal of Monument Mountain Regional High School proposed awarding
state-endorsed certificates - but not diplomas - to students who fail MCAS
but meet other requirements. Nine of the school's students have not passed
both sections of the test.
Some committee members instead suggested giving two types of
diplomas - ''MCAS-certified'' and ''non-MCAS-certified,'' Bannon said, adding
that officials felt their high school program is sufficiently rigorous to
determine which students should graduate. ''I think in the long run we need
to take a stand and say what's wrong with our education, what's wrong with
our school district?''
Bannon said he was aware that the school district could lose
state funding if it bestows the diplomas on students who fail MCAS. ''I think
we probably will reconsider if it comes down to withholding funding,'' he
said.
About 10,500 seniors statewide - or 18 percent - have yet to
pass both sections of the MCAS. That number may drop when retest results
are released next month.
This story ran on page B5 of the Boston Globe on 2/21/2003.
© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.