The Delaware Gazette

US school kids showing slight improvement in math

KIMBERLY HEFLING

AP Edu­ca­tion Writer

WASHINGTON — Some progress. Still needs improvement.

The nation’s report card on math and read­ing shows fourth– and eighth-graders scor­ing their best ever in math and eighth graders mak­ing some progress in read­ing. But the results released Tues­day are a stark reminder of just how far the nation’s school kids are from achiev­ing the No Child Left Behind law’s goal that every child in Amer­ica be pro­fi­cient in math and read­ing by 2014.

Just a lit­tle more than one-third of the stu­dents were pro­fi­cient or higher in read­ing. In math, 40 per­cent of the fourth-graders and 35 per­cent of the eighth-graders had reached that level.

The fig­ures were from the National Assess­ment of Edu­ca­tional Progress.

“The mod­est increases in NAEP scores are rea­son for con­cern as much as opti­mism,” said Edu­ca­tion Sec­re­tary Arne Dun­can. “It’s clear that achieve­ment is not accel­er­at­ing fast enough for our nation’s chil­dren to com­pete in the knowl­edge econ­omy of the 21st century.”

There were few notice­able changes in the achieve­ment gap between white and black stu­dents from 2009. While the gap is smaller than in the early 1990s, the new test results reflect a 25-point dif­fer­ence between white and black fourth– and eighth-graders in read­ing and fourth-graders in math.

How­ever, His­panic stu­dents in eighth grade made some small strides to nar­row the gap with white stu­dents in both math and read­ing. In read­ing, the gap was 22 points in 2011 com­pared to 26 in 1992 and 24 in 2009.

The read­ing test asked stu­dents to read pas­sages and recall details or inter­pret them. In math, stu­dents were asked to answer ques­tions about top­ics such as geom­e­try, alge­bra and num­ber prop­er­ties and measurement.

The Edu­ca­tion Department’s National Cen­ter for Edu­ca­tion Sta­tis­tics admin­is­ters the test. On a 500-point scale, both fourth– and eighth-graders scored on aver­age one point higher in math in 2011 than in 2009 and more than 20 points higher than in 1990, when stu­dents were first tested in math. In read­ing, the score for fourth-graders was unchanged from two years ago and four points higher than in 1992, when that test was first admin­is­tered. Eighth-graders in read­ing scored on aver­age one point higher in 2011 than in 2009 and five points higher than in 1992.

The results come as states are clam­or­ing for waivers to No Child Left Behind, the 2002 law that was her­alded as a way to pri­mar­ily help low-income and minor­ity chil­dren. Pres­i­dent Barack Obama in Sep­tem­ber said that since Con­gress had failed to rewrite the law, he was allow­ing states that meet cer­tain require­ments to get around it. Forty states, in addi­tion to the Dis­trict of Colum­bia and Puerto Rico, have said they intend to seek waivers, accord­ing to the Edu­ca­tion Depart­ment. Mean­while, there has been some progress in both the House and Sen­ate in rewrit­ing the law, although it’s unclear whether Con­gress will act this year.

Bruce Fuller, a pro­fes­sor of edu­ca­tion and pub­lic pol­icy at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley, said the tests indi­cate stu­dents showed more growth in read­ing dur­ing the 1990s when states had more con­trol over school account­abil­ity efforts, and that is likely to stoke the debate over whether states should again have more control.

This was the first year that test admin­is­tra­tors sep­a­rated Asian stu­dents from a broader cat­e­gory that pre­vi­ously included Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander stu­dents. In both read­ing and math, the aver­age scores for Asians were higher than for other eth­nic or racial groups. Nearly two-thirds of Asian fourth-graders and nearly 60 per­cent of Asian eighth-graders posted scores at or above pro­fi­cient in math. About half of all Asian stu­dents in both grades scored at the pro­fi­cient level or higher in reading.

Among the states:

  • Hawaii was the only state in which fourth– and eighth-grade stu­dents improved from 2009 to 2011 in both read­ing and math.
  • New Mex­ico, Rhode Island and the Dis­trict of Colum­bia showed gains in math among both fourth– and eighth-graders over the same period.
  • Maryland’s fourth– and eighth-graders showed improve­ments in reading.
  • New York was the only state to score lower in math among fourth-graders in 2011, com­pared to 2009.
  • Mis­souri was the only state where eighth-graders posted a lower score in math from two years earlier.
  • Mis­souri and South Dakota had lower scores among fourth-graders in read­ing from 2009 to 2011.

Tom Love­less, an edu­ca­tion expert and senior pol­icy ana­lyst at the Brook­ings Insti­tu­tion, said any gains from 2009 to 2011 were minus­cule and wouldn’t even be noticed “in the real world.” He said what counts is long-term growth. “Stu­dents have had a lot harder time mak­ing the gains in read­ing than they have in math,” Love­less said.

There was no clear rea­son why.

David Driscoll, the chair­man of the National Assess­ment Gov­ern­ing Board, noted that when the board set achieve­ment lev­els around 1990, the per­cent­age of stu­dents at or above pro­fi­cient was far higher in read­ing than math — the oppo­site of today.

Some spec­u­late it’s sim­ply because read­ing isn’t as much of a pas­time with stu­dents as it was years ago.

Fuller said another the­ory is that read­ing is much more depen­dent on the rich­ness of Eng­lish being used at home, while math has more of a level play­ing field that’s almost like a for­eign lan­guage to all stu­dents when they learn it.

Michelle Rhee, the for­mer chan­cel­lor of the schools in the city of Wash­ing­ton who now leads the edu­ca­tion advo­cacy group Stu­dents­First, said teach­ers have told her that the con­cepts that need to be taught in math are eas­ier to define.

‘I’ve heard teach­ers say it’s eas­ier to do that in math, and eas­ier to sort of define here are the spe­cific skills that the kids need help on … and go back and reteach those things,” Rhee said.

The math assess­ment was given this year to 209,000 fourth-graders and 175,200 eighth-graders. The read­ing test was given to 213,100 fourth-graders and 168,200 eighth-graders.

AP News Posted by on Nov 1 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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