What's more, a study conducted by the University of Virginia showed that kids who attend a school with a severe climate of bullying often have
lower scores on standardized tests.
I don't believe in fast food, and was intrigued when I read a study that suggested that the more often kids eat the junk,
the lower they score on standardized tests.
«We have to deal with the issue of the effect of Common Core testing on teacher evaluations,» Cuomo said Tuesday at a news conference on the state budget, referring to the tougher curriculum standards adopted by the state that produced sharply
lower scores on standardized tests in New York last year.
In our two previous research collaborations with the Skills for Life team, we already had shown that mental health problems are quite common, are among the strongest predictors of poor attendance, poorer grades, and
lower scores on standardized tests, and that improved mental health scores are powerful predictors of improved academic outcomes.»
The largely poor and rural state of Mississippi suffers from the highest rate of childhood poverty in the country, along with some of
the lowest scores on standardized tests.
It also showed that students who are chronically absent in the second and third grades record
lower scores on standardized tests.
Most efforts to lift struggling schools focus on students with
the lowest scores on standardized tests, as well as students who are «on the bubble» — not college - bound students who presumably are meeting grade - level expectations.
Mississippi has consistently posted some of
the lowest scores on standardized tests in the nation.
Children living in poverty have
lower scores on standardized tests of academic achievement, poorer grades in school, and lower educational attainment.2, 3 These patterns persist into adulthood, ultimately contributing to low wages and income.4, 5 Moreover, increased exposure to poverty in childhood is tied to greater deficits in these domains.6, 7 Despite numerous studies demonstrating the relationship between family resources and children's educational outcomes, little is known about mechanisms underlying the influence of poverty on children's learning and achievement.
Not exact matches
Finally, in Houston in 2010 — 11, he gave cash incentives to fifth - grade students in 25
low - performing public schools, as well as to the parents and teachers of those students, with the intent of increasing the time they spent
on math homework and improving their
scores on standardized math
tests.
Table 1 shows clear and highly significant (P <.0001) tendencies for increasing duration of breastfeeding to be associated with higher
scores on measures of cognitive ability, teacher ratings of performance,
standardized tests of achievement, better grades in School Certificate examinations, and
lower percentages of children leaving school without qualifications.
Cuomo maintains that too many teachers are getting great evaluations despite students
scoring low on standardized tests.
Children from families of
low socioeconomic status generally
score lower than more affluent kids
on standardized tests of intelligence, language, spatial reasoning, and math, says Priti Shah, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin who was not involved in the study.
Haney and others have concluded that this policy change artificially drove up 4th - grade
test scores, because it removed from the cohort of students
tested those who were retained in 3rd grade, the very students most likely to
score the
lowest on standardized tests.
The Fairfax County (Virginia) Public Schools turned to more frequent assessments in part because officials reportedly noted that in some schools minority students were
scoring lower on standardized tests than non-minority students.
Student achievement at schools operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs as measured by
scores on standardized tests is considerably
lower than that of public schools, according to a report by the federal General Accounting Office.
The Singapore texts and methods were so effective in College Gardens that the
scores of students there
on the math computation portion of the
standardized Comprehensive
Tests of Basic Skills (CTBS) rose from the 50th and 60th percentiles to the
low 90s in the first 4 years they were used.
Although the school still ranks as «
low achieving,» students have made progress
on standardized test scores, according to O'Blines.
According to a 2002 study of children in Dane County, Wisconsin, by urban - policy consultant David Rusk,
low - income children at schools with a middle - class majority
scored 20 - 32 percent higher
on standardized tests compared with what their
scores would be at schools with a
lower percentage of middle - class students.
Researchers found that students of
low - performing teachers who'd been randomly selected to join a partnership
scored 12 points higher,
on average,
on standardized tests than students of
low - performing teachers who didn't join a partnership.
In 1995, according to Dayton Public School Superintendent, James Williams, Allen Elementary ranked first in the district
on standardized test scores; student absenteeism was the
lowest in the district; 87 percent of the students regularly submitted homework; and only 8 students were suspended for bad behavior.
In the face of these powerful forces, MI theory has served as a reminder to educators to focus
on the strengths and weaknesses of the individual child and has also offered conceptual support for educators seeking to prevent individual students from being stigmatized by a
low score on one of these
standardized tests.
These patterns are consistent with the findings of a 1997 study by Dominic Brewer and Dan Goldhaber, which found that more in - class problem solving for American 10th - grade students in math is related to
lower test scores on a
standardized test.
A study by Jonah Rockoff and Benjamin Lockwood found that students in New York City attending standalone middle schools
score lower on standardized tests than students of the same age who attend K - 8 schools.
Schools that report
low achievement for English - language learners also report
low test scores for white and African - American students, and share characteristics associated with poor performance
on standardized tests, according to a study released by the Pew Hispanic Center.
State accountability systems focus attention and resources
on low performance and remediation, but in many school districts across the country district leaders are as much concerned, if not more, about sustaining good performance and about establishing agendas for student learning beyond proficiency
scores on standardized tests.
The recent ubiquity of
standardized test scores has provided new data
on just how poorly some schools are performing — particularly schools filled with
lower - income and minority students, whose parents make up an important Democratic voting base.
The studies examined schools that
scored well
on standardized or criterion - referenced
tests while serving students from inner - city areas or neighborhoods with
low socioeconomic status.
Low performance on the Smarter Balanced standardized tests combined with high levels of chronic absenteeism and suspension rates were the most common factors that resulted in the low CORE scor
Low performance
on the Smarter Balanced
standardized tests combined with high levels of chronic absenteeism and suspension rates were the most common factors that resulted in the
low CORE scor
low CORE
scores.
Some states made the
standardized tests so easy or set passing
scores so
low that virtually all students were rated proficient even as they
scored much
lower on federal exams and showed up for college requiring remedial help.
A 2011 study of the effects of teacher turnover
on the performance over five years of more than 600,000 fourth - and fifth - graders in New York City found that students who experienced higher teacher turnover
scored lower in math and English
on standardized tests — and this was «particularly strong in schools with more
low - performing and black students.»
Students typically
score lower on standardized tests at the end of summer than they do
on the same
tests at the beginning of the summer.
A poor rating coupled with
low student
scores on standardized tests is often the foundation for defining a bad teacher.
Aurelio recaps the details of a questionnaire created in response to the school's
low test scores on standardized math exams.
ELL students and students with disabilities tend to
score lower on standardized tests, therefore charter schools look higher performing when they do not have either subgroup.
States and districts mostly have opted to look at student growth, as opposed to raw
test scores, because raw
scores can disadvantage teachers with large numbers of
low - income, limited - English or special needs students, who tend to
score lower on standardized tests.
In 2010, the Environmental Protection Agency found that that students who attend schools in poor condition
score 11 percent
lower on standardized tests than students who attend schools in good condition.
Impairment to language acquisition because of excessive noise during classroom instruction also can lead to deficits in reading skills according to a study by Evans, G. W. and Maxwell, L. First - and second - grade students exposed to chronic noise
scored lower on standardized reading
tests taken in quiet conditions.
Recent studies of voucher programs in Louisiana and Ohio found that students in taxpayer - supported private schools consistently
score lower on standardized tests than demographically similar students in the public schools.
The middle school, which serves students in grades 6 — 8, had
low scores on standardized achievement
tests, an alarming level of bad behavior, and dwindling enrollment.
In a curious choice, the «Odds» list is based
on how well a school's
low - income students
score on standardized tests but does not take into account how many
low - income students it has.
His son, who usually did well in school, had
scored too
low on a
standardized test to qualify for the district's program for gifted students.
And they earn worse grades and
score lower than classmates
on standardized tests.
Black or Hispanic students similarly
score lower on standardized tests,
on average, than white or Asian students.
California
test scores dip slightly but L.A. Unified holds steady California students
scored slightly
lower in math and English
on standardized tests this year, the first dip since 2004, in what education officials Thursday blamed in part
on brutal budget cuts over the last several years.
These students may fall behind in class and
score lower on standardized tests.
«While some charter high schools with a large percentage of
low - income students
score high
on MCAS [Massachusetts
standardized tests], these schools rank much
lower on the SATs.
Children from
low - income families begin kindergarten with less preparation for school than the children of the affluent, they attend schools which face greater challenges with fewer resources, and they
score lower on standardized tests.
A majority (59 %) also say they are very concerned that students in
lower - income areas are less likely than other students to be ready for college when they finish high school, and half (51 %) say they are very concerned that English Learners
score lower on standardized tests than other students.
According to a study by the Council of Great City Schools, students that attend school in deteriorating buildings
score between 5 to 11 percentile points
lower on standardized achievement
tests than students in modern, maintained buildings.