Wagner v. Haslam

112 F. Supp. 3d 673, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76443, 2015 WL 3658165
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 12, 2015
DocketCase No. 3:15-CV-115
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 112 F. Supp. 3d 673 (Wagner v. Haslam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Haslam, 112 F. Supp. 3d 673, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76443, 2015 WL 3658165 (M.D. Tenn. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ALETA A. TRAUGER, District Judge.

Pending before the court are two motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). Defendants Tennessee Governor William Haslam, Tennessee Commissioner of Education Candace McQueen, and Members of the Tennessee Board of Education Allison Chaneey, Mike Edwards, Lillian Hart-grove, Cato Johnston, "Carolyn Pearre, Lonnie Roberts, B. Fielding Rolston, Teresa Sloyan, and Wendy Tucker (collectively, the “State Defendants”) have filed a Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 31), to which the plaintiffs have filed a Response in opposition (Docket No. 35), and the State Defendants have filed a Reply (Docket No. 42). Defendant Metropolitan Nashville Board of - Public Education (the “MNBPE”) has filed a Motiop to Dismiss (Docket No. 40), to which the plaintiffs have filed a Response in opposition (Docket No. 48), and the MNBPE has filed a Reply (Docket No. 51). For the reasons stated herein, the 'motions will be granted arid the case will dismissed with prejudice as to all defendants -other than the Anderson County Schools Board of Education (the “ACSBE”).1

BACKGROUND

I. The First to the Top Act and the TVAAS

A. The Act

In January 2010, Tennessee enacted the “First to the Top Act” (the “Act”) which, among other things, changed the way that Tennessee public school teachers are evaluated.2 This case involves a challenge under the United States Constitution to the implementation of that Act-at the state and local levels.

The Act has been amended several times, but one of its basic features has remained constant: the Act requires that teachers be' evaluated in part based on measures of “student achievement data,” including (1) “student achievement data” generated by the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System (“TVAAS”) or some “other comparable measure of student growth” and (2) “other measures of.student achievement.” Tenn.Code Ann. § 49 — 1—302(B) (ii) - (iii) (as of April 15, 2015).3

[678]*678The Act' contemplates that these performance measures must include some form of value- added assessment (“VAA”), which the Act defines as “[a] statistical system .for. educational outcome assessment that uses measures of student learning to enable the estimation of teacher, school, or district statistical distributions[.]” Id. § 603(a)(1). The Act -requires that the VAA “will use available and appropriate data as input” to estimate the “impact” or “effect” that a teacher, school, or school district has “on the educational progress of students.” Id. § 603(a)(2). The Act also states that any VAA utilized to measure the performance of Tennessee teachers, schools, and school districts must “covert ] the total range of topics covered in the approved curriculum” and “should have [a] strong relationship to the core curriculum for the applicable' standard grade level and subject.” Id. § 603(c).4

The Act created a fifteen-person “teacher evaluation advisory committee” (the “TEAC”). Id. § 302(d)(1). By statute, the TEAC is composed of a diverse group of people, including the Tennessee [679]*679Commissioner of Education, the executive director of the State Board of Education (the “State Board”), the chairpersons of the Tennessee Senate and House of Representatives education committees, one K-12 public school teacher appointed by the speaker of the Senate, one K-12 teacher appointed by the speaker of the House, and nine members appointed by the Governor, including three public school teachers, two public school principals, one director of a school district, and three members representing “other stakeholders’” interests. Id. The membership of this committee must “appropriately reflect the racial and geographic diversity” of Tennessee, and at least one member of the committee must be a parent of a currently enrolled public school student. Id.

The TEAC was (and remains) responsible for developing and recommending to the State Board “guidelines and criteria for the annual evaluation” of Tennessee’s teachers. Id. § 302(d)(2) (A). As set forth in § 302(d)(2)(B)(ii), the Tennessee legislature contemplated that the TVAAS would constitute an appropriate form of “student achievement data” for evaluating teachers, provided that it met the criteria set forth in § 603. The Act also provides that the “other measures of student achievement” must include “measures developed by the [TEAC] and adopted by the [State Board],” which “shall be verified by the department of education to ensure that the evaluations correspond with the teaching assignment of each individual teacher. ...” Id. § 302(d)(2)(B)(iii).

The Act contains specific provisions relating to the use of testing data that form the basis for the VAA of each teacher’s performance.. Section 606 requires that “data from the Tennessee comprehensive assessment program (TCAP) tests, or their future replacements,” be used to evaluate “teacher effects on the educational progress of students within school districts for grades three through eight (3-8).” Id. § 606(a). Section 608 requires that “[t]he development of subject matter tests will be initiated to, measure performance: of high school students in subjects-designated by the state board of education and reviewed by the education committee of the senate and the education committee of the house of representatives.” These tests “must cover the complete range of topics covered within the list of state approved textbooks and instructional materials for that subject.” Id. “As soon as valid tests have been developed, the testing of students will -be initiated to provide for value added assessment^]” which must be conducted annually. Id.

The Act also states that tests in additional subjects should be initiated in the future: “Value added assessment may be initiated in other subjects designed by the state board of education and reviewed by the education, committee of the senate and the education committee of the house of representatives at such times as valid tests can be developed that effectively measure performance in such subjects.” Id.

In other words, the Act required that teachers be evaluated in substantial part based on a value-added assessment (the TVAAS, if implemented in time), created a special committee to develop teacher evaluation standards for review and approval, by the State Board, and envisioned that additional value-added assessments would continue to be developed, and implemented over time, with input from the TEAC (which includes legislative and executive appointees and.the Commissioner of Education herself), the State Board, and the relevant legislative committees of both branches of the .Tennessee legislature;

B. The TVAAS, Individual Scores, and School-Wide Scores

According to the plaintiffs’ Complaint,the TVAAS is a statistical model owned by [680]*680a private, for-profit company that has not disclosed its precise methodology. To the plaintiffs’ knowledge, the TVAAS-utilizes students’ performance on past standardized tests to project how those students will perform on a subsequent standardized test.- The TVAAS methodology compares the students’ actual performance on a recent standardized test to the students’ predicted performance.

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112 F. Supp. 3d 673, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76443, 2015 WL 3658165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-haslam-tnmd-2015.