Sunday, March 28, 2010

NAEP SCORES: “THE NATION’S REPORT CARD” - California @ “Rock Bottom” in reading; National results are “disappointing”

NAEP: State shares rock bottom in U.S. reading scores

Jill Tucker, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer

Thursday, March 25, 2010 - California remained at the bottom of the barrel in national test scores for reading, sharing last place with Louisiana, Arizona, New Mexico and Washington, D.C., according to the Nation's Report Card released Wednesday.

The state's reading scores have remained flat since the last assessment in 2007.

Few states showed improvement over the last two years on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, standardized tests given to a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students nationwide. A couple of states fell back.

In California, 54 percent of fourth-grade students and 64 percent of eighth-grade students tested in early 2009 scored at or above the basic reading level, a measure indicating a partial mastery of grade-level content. Nationally, 66 percent of fourth-graders and 74 percent of eighth-graders scored at basic or above levels.

Given California's size and diverse student population along with the relatively low amount of money spent per child on education, the state's scores aren't as bad as they appear, said David Gordon, Sacramento County schools superintendent and member of the National Assessment Governing Board.

"It's not really helpful to compare California to most of these other states," he said. "The level of investment we're making in our school system is really shameful."

California spends about $8,000 per student. New Jersey and New York spend about twice as much and score among the top states.

"I think given its circumstances, I would say California is holding its own," Gordon said. "It's hard to expect a lot more."

On average, California students perform at a basic level, but score lower than their national peers across virtually every socioeconomic demographic.

In the good-news category, the state's African American students moved from below basic to a basic level of reading competence this year.

But on the flip side, English learners lagged well behind their peers.

"In California, English learners make up a quarter of our student population, yet as a group, this population scores far behind nearly every other subgroup," said state Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell in a statement.

The tests are given to a sampling of students nationwide every two years, alternating each year between math and reading results.

Overall, the scores showed private school students score better than public school students and girls outscore boys.

Nationally and in California, the achievement gap between white and Asian students and their black and Hispanic peers remained as stubborn as ever.

California has seen some progress in state standardized tests, but that wasn't reflected in the national scores announced Wednesday.

A student questionnaire connected to the test results found that students who had access to books at home or who read for fun scored higher than their peers.

"Reading is fundamental to learning," O'Connell said. "Parents play a crucial role in helping their children build a solid foundation for learning by encouraging them to read every day."

How California fared on 2009 reading scores

The National Assessment of Educational Progress 2009 in Reading scores, on a 500-point scale, represent the results of a standardized reading test given to a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students.

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NAEP: Reading Results Deemed Disappointing

By Catherine Gewertz | Ed Week | Vol. 29, Issue 27

March 25, 2010 -- Reading scores stayed flat for 4th graders and rose only slightly for 8th graders on the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress, results that some find disappointing after many years of intensive attention to improving the reading skills of American students.

The report released today on NAEP, commonly known as “the nation’s report card,” shows that 8th graders scored 264, on average, on a 500-point scale on the 2009 exam. That is 1 point higher than the last time the reading test was given, in 2007. At the 4th grade level, 2009 reading scores averaged 221, the same as in 2007.

Eighth graders’ reading scores have hovered between 262 and 264 since 2002, and have risen 4 points overall since 1992, the year that marks the beginning of this series of reading exams. Fourth graders’ scores, also, have risen 4 points since 1992, and since 2002 have stayed within 2 points of the average 2009 scores.

“What NAEP shows us over the past two decades is that in reading there have been only slight gains and no sustained trend of improvement,” Steven Paine, West Virginia’s commissioner of education and a member of the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for NAEP, said at a news conference to announce the results. He called the findings “disappointing” given the “considerable amount of effort” devoted to improving reading. Even the 1-point 8th grade gain, while statistically significant, “is not sufficient,” he said.

Building reading skills has been one of the main focus areas for states for more than a decade as they have set up accountability systems aimed at raising student achievement.

At the federal level, the Reading Excellence Act, signed by President Bill Clinton in 1998, brought attention to the need for better reading instruction. The National Reading Panel’s 2000 report, which called for better approaches to teaching reading, was a key source in crafting the $6 billion Reading First program launched by President George W. Bush as part of the No Child Left Behind Act, signed in 2002. Reading First required key changes, including professional development, and the use of formative assessments, more structured curricula, and a sequence of interventions for struggling students.

In spite of those efforts, however, Mr. Paine noted that the proportion of 8th graders scoring at or above “proficient” on NAEP has risen only 3 percentage points, to 32 percent, since 1992. NAEP sets student-achievement levels in three categories: “basic,” “proficient” or “advanced.” The latest results show that one-quarter of 8th graders and one-third of 4th graders don’t reach the basic level.

The lack of improvement in 4th grade reading between 2007 and 2009 is “especially disappointing,” Mr. Paine said, because it parallels the December report on NAEP mathematics at that grade level. The math results, however, showed far more growth over time in students’ progress than the new report shows in their reading progress, a difference Mr. Paine deems “striking.”

One reason for the difference, he said, could be that learning math is largely confined to math classrooms, and the subject is taught with cohesive, sequential curricula reflecting standards adopted by national math groups and echoed in textbooks. Reading comprehension, by contrast, is acquired across all courses, with “no similar cohesion or emphasis” on a clear reading curriculum, he said. Also, students’ reading-comprehension skills can be deeply influenced by what they do outside school.

Bottom Up

Some officials saw the NAEP results as a call to arms. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan urged support for putting the administration’s key education reforms, such as higher, common standards and better assessments, into practice.

“We shouldn’t be satisfied with these results,” he said in a statement. “By this and many other measures, our students aren’t on a path to graduate high school ready to succeed in college and the workplace.”

Carol Jago, the president of the National Council of Teachers of English, based in Urbana, Ill., said the results should remind teachers that adopting better reading-instruction strategies must go hand in hand with ensuring that students read more books.

“In the last five or 10 years, many of us have embraced many strategies, all the things we’ve figured out that help struggling readers do what accomplished readers do invisibly,” she said. “But we have to remember that it’s all in the service of reading a great deal more than students are reading today. And we need to be careful that they’re not just reading snippets of information. English teachers need to make sure what we’re doing in class is demanding from our students sustained, rigorous reading, thinking, and speaking.”

Officials found some encouragement in the proportion of students reaching the basic level or higher in 4th grade reading over the past decade. That number has gone from 59 percent in 2000 to 67 percent in 2009. Mr Paine attributed that to a focus on early reading instruction, the only area of reading “where there has recently been an emphasis and some agreement.”

Another area of optimism cited by officials of the assessment governing board was the progress made in reading by students at the lower achievement levels. The scores of 8th graders performing in the 10th percentile, for instance, rose 2 points since 2007 and 6 points since 1992. In 4th grade, average scores of those in the 10th percentile have risen 5 points since 1992. The scores of students in the 90th percentile, however, have not shown as much growth.

The greater gains by the lowest-performing students could reflect the effects of state accountability systems since the late 1990s, even before the passage of the federal No Child Left Behind Act, said Tom Loveless, the author of a recent report examining NAEP score trends and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

“It’s consistent with a story that says accountability systems are doing what they’re designed to do, boosting the lowest achievers,” he said. But he noted, as well, that the highest-achieving students did not appear to benefit from those same systems.

While the NAEP scores were relatively flat over the past two years, the long-term progress is “encouraging” because it suggests that the last decade’s focus on reading is paying off in 4th grade and “washing up” into 8th grade as well, said Michael L. Kamil, a Stanford University professor of education. But the lack of greater progress also illustrates some widespread problems with reading instruction, he said.

Teachers spend too much time on literary texts in the early grades, neglecting to arm students with skills they need to tackle informational texts beginning in 4th grade, and in grades 4-8, they “don’t do anything systematic” in reading instruction, he said.

“We are just now finally realizing that kids actually graduate from 3rd grade,” Mr. Kamil said.

Boys on the Move

Even as the scores of most student groups—girls and boys and those of various races and ethnicities—have risen over time, gaps since 2007 showed no improvement, and gaps since 1992 narrowed in only two areas: between black and white students in 4th grade and between boys and girls in 8th grade.

In fact, despite widespread concern about boys’ reading skills, the latest NAEP scores show boys making greater improvements than girls since 1992, Mr. Loveless pointed out.

The 2009 NAEP was the first based on a new reading frameworkRequires Adobe 
Acrobat Reader, or testing blueprint. The framework places more emphasis on literary and informational texts, uses a new way of assessing students’ vocabulary knowledge, and includes poetry. A NAGB analysis concluded that results from tests based on the new framework can be accurately compared with results of tests based on the previous framework, which had been used since 1992.

Among states, Kentucky alone saw increases in reading scores at both grade levels since 2007. Rhode Island and the District of Columbia saw scores rise only at the 4th grade level, and seven states—Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Utah—saw increases only in 8th grade.

Terry K. Holliday, Kentucky’s commissioner of education, attributed the gains to Reading First and to multiple state reading initiatives focusing on elementary and middle school. Reading coaches were dispatched to many schools to work with teachers, he said, and professional development in reading instruction was provided not just to English/language arts teachers, but to those in other subjects as well.

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