UPDATED:
Young's Group Recommended Measured Progress,
Not Pearson
Jessamine County Schools Superintendent Lu Young told KSN&C, by phone from Washington DC today, that her involvement with a panel called together to recommend a test vendor for Kentucky schools was not influenced by a prior Australian trip sponsored by the AASA, but partially funded by the Pearson company.
Young told KSN&C that the invitation to take the trip came in Spring 2010. She traveled in July 2010. She was asked to serve on the KDE committee in February 2011. It was then that she learned Pearson was a bidder but said she was "not conflicted in the process." At no point did [the trip] haunt me, she said.
Young explained the KDE process to KSN&C saying that she served on one of three groups. Her group looked at technical issues related to the test. As the tally sheet below shows, her group did not recommend Pearson. But after all three groups' scores were tallied, Pearson came out on top.
(See RFP determinations at the end of this post.)
Young said she shared the information with New York Times reporter Michael Winerip, but to no avail.
She recently sat down with the Jessamine Journal to go over the details.
This from the Jessamine Journal:
A national story this week examining possible connections between an education publishing company and trips for state education officials zeroed in on Jessamine County’s schools chief, Lu Young. Young spoke candidly about the matter Tuesday, giving her side of the story and filling in what she called “glaring omissions.”
The New York Times piece by Michael Winerip began by questioning Young’s integrity, pointing to her involvement in a state committee recommendation of Pearson, Inc. for a contract after she participated in a trip to Australia sponsored by the Pearson Foundation, a nonprofit branch of the company.
Young made the trip to Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney in July 2010 with nine other superintendents from around the country. The visit featured an “international symposium” and focused on a dialogue about “21st-century skills” and collaboration as members of the group looked at Australia’s education system.
While the Pearson Foundation provided grant funding for the trip, Young attended at the request of Daniel Domenech, the executive director of the American Association of School Administrators (AASA). She was invited as part of the just-formed AASA Council of County Superintendents.
“Pearson did not contact me and say, ‘Hey, do you want to go to Australia?’” Young said. “The director of my professional association invited me to attend, and I did that — as a learning experience, just exactly as it was described to me.”
Winerip downplayed the seriousness of the trip, writing there was “ample time for play” and citing Young’s quote in a promotional video that kangaroos were a “highlight” of the visit to Canberra. Young also met with education leadership from the local, regional and federal levels during the trip, learning about national standards, expanding broadband use in education and 21st-century learning.
“The story made it sound like they were kind of junkets, and I was embarrassed by this article that sounds like the only important thing I got out of it was pictures of kangaroos,” Young said. “There was a lot of really, really good learning going on.”
The group was accompanied by Kathy Hurley, a vice president of both Pearson Education and the Pearson Foundation. Young said every interaction she had with Hurley focused on impacting American education and there were never any “sales pitches” for Pearson products or services.
“There wasn’t ever any quid pro quo, any expectation that we were going on this trip and then we would do something for them in return,” Young said.
The superintendent returned from the trip and went back to work for the new school year. It was in February 2011 when she stepped into the water she saw as clear but Winerip saw as muddy in the Times article.
With a dozen or more others, Young was asked to serve on a technical scoring group for assessment vendors at the state level. She received proposals from three companies — Pearson, Measured Progress and CTB/McGraw-Hill — before the committee met to go over the proposals.
“It was at that point that I knew that Pearson was one of the three, and even then, in all candor, that did not in any way conflict me,” Young said. “I wasn’t making any connections to Australia at all, (and) had not been contacted by Pearson or any of the vendors, and still to this day have not since.”
The committee’s recommendation came from the accumulation of three scores: a technical score, a cost score and an oral-presentation score.
Winerip’s story suggested that Young favored Pearson, citing the Australia trip and that Young and her fellow committee members recommended Pearson despite McGraw-Hill’s lower bid. But Measured Progress was the company that came out on top in the two scores Young judged, according to the final scoring sheet, a public record Young provided.
The technical scoring group graded each proposal based on a rubric, agreeing what number to assign for each section of the scoring guide. Measured Progress received 2,220 points out of 2,400; Pearson and McGraw-Hill scored 2,180 and 1,800, respectively. The three finished in the same order in oral-presentation grades, in which Young was also involved.
The third score, based on cost, was the responsibility of staff in the Kentucky Department of Education (KDE) Office of Administration and Support and did not involve Young. Cost scores also had Pearson second, with McGraw-Hill on top with the lowest price and Measured Progress third with the highest. The grand-total scores out of 4,600 possible points were Pearson with 3,884, Measured Progress with 3,579, and McGraw-Hill with 3,467.
The state department of education announced April 15 that it had contracted with Pearson to provide content-area tests and writing assessments. The $7.66 million contract period ends June 30, 2012, with the possibility of three additional two-year renewals for a total of $57.8 million, according to KDE documentation.
Winerip’s story ran in the Times earlier this week and included one quote from a statement Young had e-mailed to him in which she said the trip and contract selection were “completely unrelated.” The article hit closer to home when it was reprinted in the Lexington Herald-Leader on Tuesday; Young said the Herald-Leader did not contact her for comment.
“I’d be happy to answer any questions anybody has about it, because I didn’t feel like I had a chance to really tell my side of the story after the article was reprinted,” she said.
Young said she welcomes the scrutiny that comes with her position but that the insinuations of corruption “sting a little bit.”
“We are in positions of trust and authority, and I think the community has a right to know what our activities are, but I don’t think that anybody has a right to just imply any kind of misconduct or bad behavior,” she said.
Winerip did not immediately respond to an e-mail Wednesday morning.
Young was one of three finalists for the Fayette County superintendency — Kentucky’s second-largest — over the summer and was named the state superintendent of the year by the Kentucky Association for School Administrators in November. She is in her 29th year working in the Jessamine County district, her eighth as its superintendent.
“I have legitimate, reasonable, honest responses to things that could look like allegations against my integrity or ethical behaviors,” Young said. “The Australia trip was not frivolous; it was not done in exchange for any influence on my part at all — none whatsoever. And my participation in the state in (the review) process was exactly as it was prescribed and designed to be: one of 13 or 14 people who went through a very regimented process to review those proposals and to rank-order those for recommendation in the procurement process.”
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