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SAT Reading Scores Fall To Lowest Level On Record

By JUSTIN POPE   09/14/11 12:08 PM ET   AP

Exam

-- Scores on the critical reading portion of the SAT college entrance exam fell three points to their lowest level on record last year, and combined reading and math scores reached their lowest point since 1995.

The College Board, which released the scores Wednesday, said the results reflect the record number of students from the high school class of 2011 who took the exam and the growing diversity of the test-taking pool – particularly Hispanics. As more students aim for college and take the exam, it tends to drag down average scores.

Still, while the three-point decline to 497 may look small in the context of an 800-point test, it was only the second time in the last two decades reading scores have fallen as much in a single year. And reading scores are now notably lower than scores as recently as 2005, when the average was 508.

Average math scores for the class of 2011 fell one point to 514 and scores on the critical reading section fell two points to 489.

Other recent tests of reading skills, such as the National Assessment of Education Progress, have shown reading skills of high-school students holding fairly steady. And the pool of students who take the SAT is tilted toward college-goers and not necessarily representative of all high school students.

But the relatively poor performance on the SATs could raise questions whether reading and writing instruction need even more emphasis to accommodate the country's changing demographics.

Roughly 27 percent of the 1.65 million test-takers last year had a first language other than English, up from 19 percent just a decade ago.

Jim Montoya, vice president of relationship development at the College Board, said the expanding Latino population was a factor, as well as greater outreach to get minority students to take the test. But there are others, too.

"It's a lot of little things," he said. For example, he said, the number of black students taking a solid core curriculum – a strong predictor of success on the test – has fallen from 69 percent to 66 percent over a decade.

The College Board, a membership organization that owns the exam and promotes college access, also released its first "College and Career Benchmark" report, which it said would eventually be used to help show states and school districts how well prepared their students are. Based on research at 100 colleges, it calculated that scoring 1550 or above on the three sections of the test indicated a 65-percent likelihood of attaining a B-minus or above average in the freshman year of college.

Overall, 43 percent of test-takers reached that benchmark.

The SAT and rival ACT exam are taken by roughly the same number of students each year. Most colleges require scores from at least one of the exams but will consider either. In recent years, some colleges have adopted test-optional policies allowing applicants to decline to submit test scores at all.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canadiananana
Let me collect dust...
11:58 AM on 09/22/2011
4 real? R U kidding?
12:13 PM on 09/21/2011
Reading is so important. I have instituted a Lets Read campaign to try to encourage youth and adults to read more. Not only are the SAT numbers low but literacy as a whole needs to be addressed not just in youth but adults alike. Take an opportunity to look at these facts. http://www.perspectivestv.com/lets-read
03:35 PM on 09/19/2011
I know what happened: NCLB. It has been in use quite a few years now, and with this graduating class in their SATs we are seeing its horrible effects. Teachers are teaching to the test when they should really be teaching real reading and critical thinking skills. Ridiculous and sad for these students.
09:48 PM on 09/19/2011
Because of NCLB and requirements to teach only out of books, teachers have been leaving the profession. They aren't given the flexibility to be creative. Every day math does not work, as some of the reading programs. I know many don't like Rep. Bachamm, but I believe she is right when she said to get rid of the DOE. They have no clue what a little town in New Mexico or in northern Alaska can do to improve the quality of education. Time for real change, Wash. D.C. needs to get out o education business.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reality-2011
12:42 AM on 09/24/2011
Some of your info is NOT correct. I know of some schools near me teaching out of kindles instead of books this year. i am a recently retired teacher and you are mostly right about No child left behind. The first year it went into effect I told my administrators that it looked like the NCLB would would force every school into failure at some point since it mandated every single child must succeed. I asked what would happen if a group of Special Ed kids decided they did not want to make an effort on the tests. They had no answer. 3 years later that is exactly what happened and the school got put on probation for a while. One of the very top countries on the International test scores is Finland. Instead of all the additional tests we are doing they left the teachers to be creative and figure how to do a better job. They also added an extra aid or teacher to all the tougher classes. Despite what many "education experts" in this country have said about class size/student teacher ratios not being important, this strategy led to success. Class size may be important to highly motivated top tier students but it absolutely is true of the slower and less motivated kids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reality-2011
12:45 AM on 09/24/2011
add below - Class size may NOT be important to highly motivated top tier..
03:23 PM on 09/19/2011
If you learn to read - you can teach yourself anything - What is happening to America?
12:15 PM on 09/21/2011
I certainly agree with your comment. Proficiency in reading helps to develop the mind. http://www.perspectivestv.com/lets-read
12:16 PM on 09/19/2011
What is the correlation, I wonder, between underfunded school libraries who aren't able to provide reading material for their students. AND, what's the impact of not having certified librarians (not aides) in those buildings to guide and work with students who need to check out books from their school libraries because they DON'T have books at home and have no way to get to the public library. Study after study reveals that a well-stocked, well-funded school library has a direct and positive impact on student achievement. Why don't administrators get this? To see the studies.... http://www.lrs.org/impact.php
09:54 PM on 09/19/2011
That's only tip of the iceberg. Teachers are leaving the profession because they have to teach out of the books they are given, and can't be creative. This stymies any student's growth in education. Also, go to any impoverished home and see what kind of reading materials are there. Don't be too surprised if you see only porno books and videos, or no reading material at all. It has taken years for so called educators to realize the problems of low achieving students. The home and its environment has to be improved.
12:52 AM on 09/19/2011
There is no point blaming the teachers for this one. If you look at the actual data, you see that the "Whites" have not slipped in reading. "Asians" have been gaining but are a bit less than "Whites". "Latino" and "Black" numbers are significantly lower, if anything, the "Black" numbers have been slipping a bit. Thus the decrease in average scores is explained by increasing numbers of "Blacks" and "Latinos" taking the SAT reading test.

As for why the reading scores are so low in some population groups, that is a different question.While the schools require some reading, the amount of reading you do affects your reading level. At my son's orientation in middle school this year I saw a paper in the English classroom. To reach a particular reading level, kids needed to average 2 hours a day of youth/adult level reading. If you don't do it, you don't get it. That level of reading is a home issue, not a school issue.
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martigras
09:29 PM on 09/18/2011
Schools have stopped teaching the "classics" which entail difficult vocabulary and challenging sentence structure. The reasoning in our district was that new teachers hadn't read them and the kids wanted to read 'fun stuff". A decision was made by the administration against the wishes of the teachers. What a surprise now that Johnny can't read. He's up all night playing video games and never reads anything more difficult than Harry Potter.
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JDM73
male, 38, writer/draughtsman/ex-musician
09:05 PM on 09/18/2011
Yes, this is the end result of harping on the importance of math and science (to the near-total exclusion of literacy) for more than twenty years. Internet- and cellphone-ese don't help, either.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blacksmithn
Iron, cold iron, is master of them all...
02:25 PM on 09/18/2011
This is a situation where I firmly believe the problem-- and the solution-- lies with the parents. Read to your kids. Take them to the library and get them their own card as soon as practicable. Make weekly (or more often) trips there a part of your routine. Let them see you reading for enjoyment. Take them on expeditions to the local bookstore. Make reading a fun part of their daily routine.

Or plunk them in front of the TV while you play your video games or indulge in other vapid pursuits and then complain that it's the fault of the schools and teachers when little Johnny or Janie turns out to be functionally illiterate.
12:30 AM on 09/18/2011
There are many to blame. Far too many teachers are themselves poorly educated, and retain their jobs despite their substandard performances. Too many parents will not insist upon their children's good behavior and attention in school. Schools will not flunk a poorly performing pupil, nor remember that the primary mission of a school is to teach, not to entertain. Children are children. They are what they are permitted to be, and we are failing them. One thing can be done immediately. Abolish multiple choice questions. The one in three chance of getting it right method of testing a child's knowledge is pathetic. It makes life easy for the teacher or examiner, but the child does not have to actually know the answer, nor be obliged to write it down in clear and rational language. Multiple choice is a lazy and pernicious test tool.
03:37 PM on 09/19/2011
Good thoughts here. Just goes to show the system is messed up in so many different ways. Teacher hiring/evaluating, parents, school structure, everything!
07:03 PM on 09/17/2011
The only advice I have for other countries is, in order to guarantee a great school system in your specific country, make sure that when and if the time arises, say NO to slavery.
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savvy7
Taxes are the price you pay for civilization.
11:39 PM on 09/17/2011
"The only advice I have for other countries is, in order to guarantee a great school system in your specific country, make sure that when and if the time arises, say NO to slavery"

THAT'S the only reason for advising against slavery? Looks like attempts to educate you was money wasted.
08:10 AM on 09/18/2011
you missed the point.... Let me try again. Take for instance University of Wisconsin. Whites and Asians need not apply even tho the highest black scores are lower than the lowest white and asian scores. This is how affirmative action works. Because of slavery in this country, this is what we have become. Now read my statement again.
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geo999
"Well, who's gonna monitor the monitors?"
03:20 PM on 09/17/2011
We are now into the generation that is being taught by the first generation for whom reading was a purely secondary form of entertainment.
11:52 AM on 09/17/2011
kids cant readdddddddddddddddd?????????????????

they have teachers that dont teACH,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,U GET WHAT U GET...........
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02:42 PM on 09/17/2011
Actually it's the parents fault. Reading is fundamentally a parental obligation. If parents fail to encourage reading in their children, no matter what the education system does, the child will not excel at it.

My parents took us to the public library, read to us and made us read aloud to them. You cannot imagine how painful it was to be in 11th grade and have to suffer through other students who had to sound out simple words when reading a single paragraph. Reading is a skill that must be practiced. And parents must encourage their children to read, and listen to them read to ensure correct pronunciation and comprehension.

What the modern parent fails to understand is that they are the teachers partner in education. Without their equal participation in the off hours, a child will not be encouraged or retain what they are learning.
10:56 AM on 09/17/2011
Liberal solution? Throw more money (debt) at the problem.

Conservative solution? Raise standards and if you don't pass you don't graduate. This is one issue where I side with the right.
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paxatman
Do no harm, Help others.
12:53 PM on 09/18/2011
Raising the standards while rewriting school text books to right wing ideology seems a bit strange though.

Don't you THINK ?
05:03 PM on 09/16/2011
I find this article slightly unsettling and a little encouraging. I recently got back my scores on the SAT (Im a senior this year) and got a 680. Which scared me considering it was out of 800. Seeing that so many have down much worse makes me feel a little better about myself, but at the same time makes me feel bad for my peers.