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2011 National Math, Reading Test Scores Show Sluggish Growth, Sustained Achievement Gaps


Posted: 11/01/11 12:25 PM ET

Students performed marginally better over the last two years on the nation's most reliable math and reading exam, according to results released Tuesday. But scores are still low, and achievement gaps between students of differing race and incomes remain wide.

On the 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress, administered every two years, average scores in fourth and eighth-grade math increased slightly, gaining one point each on a 500-point scale since 2009 and continuing a trend of minimal increases since 2003. Fourth-grade reading scores remained stagnant, staying the same since 2007, and eighth-grade reading scores increased by one point since 2009 on the 500-point scale.

"It is not an enormous increase substantively in terms of what students can do," said Jack Buckley, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, the U.S. Department of Education arm that administers the exams. "They're a little bit more likely to get certain questions right."

This year's math scores are the highest to date since 1990, when the test was first administered. But the scores remain dismal: Only 40 percent of fourth graders and 35 percent of eighth-grade students are performing at or above a level defined as "proficient." In reading, despite average scores reaching a similar peak, only 34 percent of students in both grades were rated "proficient."

"The modest increases in NAEP scores are reason for concern as much as optimism," U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a statement. "While student achievement is up since 2009 in both grades in mathematics and in 8th grade reading, it's clear that achievement is not accelerating fast enough to compete in the knowledge economy of the 21st century."

Duncan's sentiment reflects a similar concern among education stakeholders: Though the long-term trends point upward, getting to the stage where all students have a grade-level grasp of reading and math would take years at this rate.

"These results continue a trend of progress both in raising achievements and closing gaps," said Daria Hall, K-12 policy director for the think tank Education Trust. "The progress is far, far too slow."

"We ought to as a country acknowledge what these results mean in terms of the hard work of educators, but not for a second think we can take our foot off the gas."

The exam found consistently large gaps in the performance of white, black and Hispanic students, despite their gradual narrowing over time. For example, in fourth-grade math, 9 percent of white students performed at or above the highest level, compared to only 2 percent of Hispanic students and 1 percent of black students. A greater number of students than in 2009 were found to be eligible for free- or reduced-price lunch, a common measure of poverty in education.

"It's more of the same: It's good that the long-term improvement trend is being shared among different economic groups and racial-ethnic groups, but we're not seeing closing in gaps," said Kevin Carey, policy director of the D.C.-based think tank Education Sector. "There have been other time periods where we saw rapid gap closing, in the 1970s in particular. We haven't been in that for a long time."

One bright spot may be that the scores come on the horizon of major changes to federal education policy.

The No Child Left Behind Act, passed a decade ago under George W. Bush, mandated the regular testing of students in order to hold states accountable for student performance. It also sanctioned schools if they did not meet performance benchmarks known as "Adequate Yearly Progress." But these benchmarks may be on their way out, whether Congress reauthorizes No Child Left Behind, or the Obama administration grants waivers to states that would exempt them from meeting the yearly benchmarks.

Depending on which reform strategy wins, new changes may also be introduced that mandate the grading of teachers based on students' test scores instead of experience. Further, 44 states are in the process of implementing a common set of standards for K-12 reading and math, known as the Common Core, that are aimed at making students college ready.

"We're seeing slow but steady progress, but nothing to write home about," said Michael Petrilli, executive vice president of the right-leaning Thomas B. Fordham Foundation. "If we're going to try to bump it up to the next level, we're going to need new interventions. Maybe those could be in teacher quality, digital learning, or the Common Core."

Carey agreed. "Nobody could say continuing to do the same thing will produce any kind of significant new improvement," he said.

The NAEP data is widely considered the most reliable in education. "NAEP is all we have," Carey said. "There are no other numbers that are credible for making judgments about the long-term progress of the nation's students."

In math, NAEP tested 209,000 fourth graders and 175,000 eighth graders, covering both private and public school students chosen to be nationally representative. In reading, 213,000 public and private school fourth graders and 169,200 eighth graders took the exam.

Results are broken down into three levels of achievement: "basic," which, according to NCES, "denotes partial mastery of the skills and knowledge" needed for proficiency; "proficient," which "represents solid academic performance" and "advanced," which "represents superior work."

The reading exam aimed to assess students on comprehension in both literary and informational texts. Fourth grade reading proficiency denotes the ability "to integrate and interpret texts and apply their understanding to draw conclusions and make evaluations." In eighth grade, proficiency is intended to signal the ability to summarize ideas, "make and support inferences," and "connect parts of a text and analyze features." The math exam tests students across five categories, including algebra and geometry.

Average fourth-grade scores were higher this year than in 2009 in Alabama, Hawaii, Maryland and Massachusetts, but were lower in Missouri and South Dakota. Average eighth-grade scores did not decrease in any states, and were higher on average in Hawaii and Maryland. In math, fourth-grade scores decreased in New York and eighth-grade scores lost ground in Missouri. In reading, fourth-grade scores slipped in Missouri and South Dakota.

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Students performed marginally better over the last two years on the nation's most reliable math and reading exam, according to results released Tuesday. But scores are still low, and achievement gaps ...
Students performed marginally better over the last two years on the nation's most reliable math and reading exam, according to results released Tuesday. But scores are still low, and achievement gaps ...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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jsarets 08:29 PM on 11/01/2011
For extra income, I've been doing some private tutoring, mostly in high school math. I get $80/hr serving affluent bedroom communities. These young people seem to have every advantage one could hope to have in life except good parenting. They have no discipline or motivation, and they are very quick to give up. These are the top 1-2% of American households, and the best they have to offer their children in  Read More...
03:27 PM on 12/07/2011
I'd really like to see the NAEP scores broken down by per-pupil spending. We have to make careful investments in our children. There are plenty of answers to the question of closing the achievement gap--but I'm willing to bet that the amount of money we spend has something to do with it.
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cdecisneros
my micro bio is empty because I went to the micro
02:30 PM on 11/04/2011
Maybe teaching to the tests does not work?
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jp90
07:54 PM on 11/03/2011
Here is what I believe is a large part of the problem. With the constantly changing curriculum requirements, you have gaps in mathematical knowledge. You can't keep changing things wholesale, all at once, K-12. You have to introduce math changes grade by grade, or you will have holes. Improvement in a subject like math, which requires you master pre-requisites before moving to harder things, cannot be done quickly. With reading, we are sucking all enjoyment out of it by basically teaching reading so kids can read boring passages and then answer multiple choice test questions based on that reading. I know what our high school kids have to do now in their English classes, and I can tell you that if I were in school today, I'd hate every second of English class. And I love to read.
The love for standardized testing, and the incessant need to "compete" with other countries has led us to put blinders on when it comes to how things need to be changed in order for them to actually have a chance at working. Instead, we try to slap a band-aid on things in the name of "reform" and end up making things worse.
01:16 PM on 12/07/2011
I totally agree with you very well said!
12:50 PM on 11/03/2011
Reading is the truly easy one to solve for parents.

Read to the kids when they are young.

Severely restrict TV / Video / screen amusements

Allow extended bed times for reading

At some point they find something they are interested in reading about.

My son-in-law got interested in reading about sports. He is now a high school English teacher and basketball coach.
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red skull
I am legion
08:01 PM on 11/02/2011
When Tony Montana is your ideal - "In this country, you gotta make the money first. Then when you get the money, you get the power. Then when you get the power, then you get the women" - education isn't very important.
06:34 PM on 11/02/2011
One of the best ways to combat the lack of progress in national reading scores is to make family engagement a critical part of literacy skill development; beginning with helping parents develop a regular routine of book-sharing at home.

Countless studies demonstrate that developing the routine of sharing books with children can significantly develop the prerequisite cognitive and language skills needed for later reading skill acquisition. And, particularly when children have the opportunity to associate books with a warm positive interaction with a caring adult, children are more likely to develop the internal motivation that translates into academic success and becoming lifelong readers.

Gabrielle Miller, National Executive Director
Raising A Reader
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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
01:56 PM on 11/02/2011
Perhaps these students and their parents need to take some personal responsibility and study more.
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Moravecglobal
01:51 PM on 11/02/2011
University hijack’s our kids’ futures: student loan debt
I love University of California (UC) having been student & lecturer. But today I am concerned that at times I do not recognize the UC I love. Like so many I am deeply disappointed by the pervasive failures of Regent Chairwoman Lansing, President Yudof, Chancellor Birgeneau from holding the line on rising costs & tuition increases. Paying more is not a better education.
Californians are reeling from 19% unemployment (includes: those forced to work part time; those no longer searching), mortgage defaults, loss of unemployment benefits.Current pay increases for generously paid University of California Faculty is arrogance. Instate tuition consumes 14% of Ca. Median Family Income!

UC President Yudof, Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau($450,000 salary) dismissed many much needed cost-cutting options. They did not consider freezing vacant faculty positions, increasing class size, requiring faculty to teach more classes, doubling the time between sabbaticals, cutting & freezing pay & benefits for chancellors & reforming pensions & the health benefits.
They said such faculty reforms “would not be healthy for UCâ€. Exodus of faculty, administrators? Who can afford them and where would they go?
We agree it is far from the ideal situation, but it is in the best interests of the university system & the state to stop cost increases. UC cannot expect to do business as usual: raising tuition; granting pay raises & huge bonuses during a weak economy that has sapped state revenues & individual Californians’ income.

Opinions? Email the UC Board of
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Wall Str33t
Science > GOP
01:30 PM on 11/02/2011
Facepalm, get yer facepalm here...
12:45 PM on 11/02/2011
"Hispanics falling behind in math and reading."

-- Unsubstantiated racial accusations in five....four...three....
mira chancleta
No ball-balancing, clapping, belching seals!
11:44 AM on 11/02/2011
and we needed a report to tell us the obvious?
somebody just ordered their new BMW
11:23 AM on 11/02/2011
I suggest the illegal immigrants spend there own money on personal tudoring and quit expecting our education system to cater to criminals. Keep up or get left behind.
11:10 AM on 11/02/2011
How come someone in college forget about how to do long division, as I read it in comments below? It's a very basic arithmetic. And if they can't do that, how they comprehend higher concept like pre-calculus things?
10:24 AM on 11/02/2011
The feds don't want your kids educated...except for twisted sex education, collective thinking and "it takes a village" mentality. Parents have zero control as to what their kids are taught. Hence, they are dumbed down. No independent, critical thinking will be needed on the global plantation. Keep them playing video games that killl "terrorists" is all they will need when they can't get a job and are forced into the killing fields to advance empire and enrich the bankers and the military indusrial complex. Is anyone old enough to remember guns vs butter economics?(obviously not taught anymore) No more butter...just guns.
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lrobb
Southern Rational
08:33 AM on 11/02/2011
If throwing money at the problem was all that was required to improve test scores, they would have been rising dramatically for the last thirty years. Unfortunately, to get real results you have to actually work with children on comprehension.

As we fall farther and farther down the list of each country's level of education, we need to ask ourselves a few hard questions.

* If the surest indicator of poverty, single motherhood and incarceration is lack of education, why are we allowing kids to drop out of school before they are job ready?

* Children in the US go to school fewer days than in almost any other developed nation. Why do we not have a 12 month school year?

* Why are there not tutoring centers in every school both after school and on weekends where children who are getting a C or less average are required to attend until their comprehension improves?

* Why are we allowing any student to graduate from their course of study be it high school, technical school or university without being certified as job ready? It is fine to minor in Underwater Basketweaving, but a major in something guaranteed to keep the student off the public dole should be an absolute requirement.