Frustrated in their attempts to pass
the state graduation test and receive high school diplomas, some Florida students are securing the prized credentials by a different route: a private school in Lewiston, Maine.
Not exact matches
Florida high school students who can't pass the two
state tests needed for
graduation could find it harder to earn a diploma starting next year, as the
state moves to change what other exams — and scores — can be used in their place.
The study showed that the
states that spent the most did not have the highest average ACT
test scores, nor did they have the highest average
graduation rates.
«The success of these new schools... is clear,» Bloomberg said, arguing that they have higher
graduation rates,
state test scores and parent satisfaction survey scores than the schools they replaced.
New York spends more money per student than any other
state in the country, and yet its schools yield mediocre education outcomes, such as
test scores and
graduation rates.
Syracuse has one of the highest concentrations of poverty among black and Hispanic people in the United
States and some of the lowest
test scores and
graduation rates in the
state.
among black and Hispanic people in the United
States and some of the lowest
test scores and
graduation rates in the
state.
In Indiana, schools must administer the Indiana Statewide
Testing for Educational Progress assessment and report their
graduation rates to the
states.
The Cincinnati Federation of Teachers is mobilizing its ranks to tutor high school seniors who have not passed the
state proficiency
test required for
graduation.
To pay companies like K12 more or less depending on how their students perform on
state tests or depending on their
graduation rates?
Today in Massachusetts, as in many
states, students who fail to pass the statewide
graduation test are prevented from receiving a diploma.
After all, achievement -
test scores and
graduation rates in the middle - class suburb were already surpassing
state averages.
Yet the school has a 100 %
graduation rate, and their students have 100 % mastery on every high - stakes
state assessment
test in every subject.
What they saw was sobering but not surprising: Despite attempts to close achievement gaps between students of color, immigrant students, and low - income students and their more affluent white peers, wide disparities persisted in student performance on
state tests,
graduation rates, school attendance, and college - going rates.
The measures used in the NEPC report — whether schools make AYP,
state accountability system ratings, the percentage of students that score proficient on
state tests, and high - school
graduation rates — are at best rough proxies for the quality of education provided by any school.
Mean scale scores on
state reading and math
tests, median growth percentage, four - and seven - year
graduation rates, progress in achieving English - language proficiency
As
states across the U.S. move to adopt standardized
tests as a means to determine grade promotion and school
graduation, new research presented in the Harvard Educational Review shows that sole reliance on high - stakes
tests as a
graduation requirement may increase inequities among students by both race and gender.
Annual average improvement target of 2.5 percentage point gains in achievement on
state reading and math
tests between 2018 and 2025 for all students and student subgroups; plan includes goal of reaching a
graduation rate of 90 percent by 2025 for all students and student subgroups
«With XQ, Emerson took on a big, tough challenge, laden with a Gordian knot of tradition,
state graduation requirements, college entrance requirements (and the
tests that go with them), and the traditions of prom, football, and everything else,» observed Mary Ryerse, strategic director at Getting Smart, a Minneapolis — St. Paul nonprofit, who was among the judges for the competition.
More students also pass the
state tests on the first try rather than needing to repeat them to meet the
graduation requirements.
Yet, increasingly,
states are adopting — or considering adopting — civic
tests as a requirement for high school
graduation.
Hanushek examines the report's two main conclusions: a) that
test - based incentive programs «have not increased student achievement enough to bring the United
States close to the level of the highest achieving countries;» and b) that high school exit exam programs «decrease the rate of high school
graduation without increasing achievement.»
The relevance of including students with disabilities in assessment and accountability has been demonstrated by the increase in the number of students with disabilities in many
states who took and passed the standardized
tests and an increase in
graduation rates in recent years.
Once good standards and decent
tests are in place,
states should release
test scores (and other revealing information such as
graduation rates) every which way, and they should rate their schools on an easy to understand scale, ideally from A to F, as Florida started doing under Governor Jeb Bush.
Governor had proposed in January that legislature appropriate $ 5 million for remedial education for 10th graders who hadn't yet passed
state's high school
graduation test and $ 500,000 to enable students to take the Preliminary SAT for free.
In the most regulated environment, larger participants — those schools with 40 or more students funded through vouchers in
testing grades, or with an average of 10 or more students per grade across all grade levels — receive a rating through a formula identical to the school performance score system used by the
state to gauge public school performance, inclusive of
test score performance,
graduation rates, and other outcome metrics.
Instead, Orfield
states that The Civil Rights Project strongly supports the recommendation of the National Academy of Sciences» report entitled High Stakes:
Testing for Tracking, Promotion, and
Graduation (1999) that single tests never be used as the sole determiner of graduation or grade
Graduation (1999) that single
tests never be used as the sole determiner of
graduation or grade
graduation or grade promotion.
* What happens in
states (about half of them) that already have statewide
graduation tests (e.g., Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System and the Ohio Graduation Test) with minimum passi
graduation tests (e.g., Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System and the Ohio
Graduation Test) with minimum passi
Graduation Test) with minimum passing scores?
Under the new system, grades one through three are measured against a goal of reading by the end of third grade; grades four through six on proficient or advanced performance on the English and math portions of a
state test indicating middle school readiness; seven, eight, and nine on high school readiness with passing all ninth - grade; grades 10, 11, and 12 focus on the goal of high school
graduation.
Her litany of complaints about the academic results of Klein's «radical restructuring» is somewhat familiar — «inflating»
test results and «taking shortcuts» to boost
graduation — except for the charge that «the recalibration of the
state scores revealed that the achievement gap among children of different races in New York City was virtually unchanged between 2002 and 2010, and the proportion of city students meeting
state standards dropped dramatically, almost to the same point as in 2002.»
The settlement in the class action on behalf of such students will let them use oral presentations, spell - checkers, voice - recognition software, help from
test proctors, and other
state - approved accommodations on the Alaska High School
Graduation Qualifying Exam.
Though many
states have instigated
graduation tests, these often have low passing levels and, in any case, are not readily compared from one jurisdiction to the next.
Which is apt to put even more ill - considered pressure on
graduation rates or else throw
states back to SAT and ACT results even when those are useless for students who don't take the
tests.
The legislation, which is based on the recommendations of a task force appointed by Ms. Castor, calls for scrapping the
state's
tests of minimum skills in grades 3, 5, 8, and 10, as well as the minimum - competency
test required for high - school
graduation.
Progress in Massachusetts is also no doubt attributable in part to the
state's strong system of student accountability, including a universal
graduation requirement pegged to the 10th grade statewide
test - a provision missing from the NCLB mandate.
For each school,
states must report their standardized
test scores, college entrance exam scores,
graduation rates, and student attendance.
But it was an inner - city high school, initially primarily black, in later years increasingly Hispanic, with all the attributes common to such: poor scores on the various
tests, district,
state and national, that have come over the years to evaluate schools; poor attendance; low
graduation rates; and serious student discipline problems.
And insofar as their
states impose
graduation tests as prerequisites for receiving diplomas, the passing score is generally a cinch for these students.
Because NAEP is based on a sample, it would discourage the kinds of
test prep, credit recovery, grade changing and rate faking that afflict
graduation data — and that often afflict
state assessments.
In a setback for opponents of one - shot, «high stakes»
tests, New York
state Commissioner of Education Richard P. Mills last week rejected a bid by about 40 nontraditional schools to substitute individually tailored projects for the English examination the
state recently began to require for
graduation.
The
state's massive Education Reform Act of 1982 requires that school boards, starting this year, set minimum
graduation requirements that include passage of a minimum - com - petency
test in reading, writing, and mathematics in grade 11.
The Every Student Succeeds Act requires
states to use «another indicator of student success or school quality,» in addition to
test scores and
graduation rates, when determining school grades.
It was the
graduation test, and Florida was one of the first
states to have one.
In about half the
states, graduates have also made it through statewide
graduation tests that are typically pegged to an 8th -, 9th -, or at most 10th - grade standard of actual performance.
Typically, districts judge their schools» success by
state test scores, attendance and
graduation rates, reflecting their
state's chosen accountability metrics.
In 2012, after years of worsening
test scores and abysmal
graduation rates, the Lawrence Public Schools system was taken over by the
state of Massachusetts — and the answer to all three of those questions later turned out to be «yes.»
Specifically, the proposed regulations provide that the additional K — 12 indicator (s) that a
state uses can not «change the identity of schools that would otherwise be identified» unless a school is making «significant progress» on at least one of the academic indicators —
test scores,
graduation rate, additional K — 8 academic indicator, and EL progress.
Within a
state's accountability plan, «substantial weight» would have to be given to quantitative measures, such as
graduation rates and performance on
state tests, with much less weight allotted to subjective measures, such as school climate and educator engagement.
While the
state - run Recovery School District created in 2003 has its share of critics, credible external evaluation suggest that
test scores and
graduation rates have indeed improved under the districtwide takeover by charter schools.
They have joined a national protest in which
states have repealed their
graduation test requirements, postponed the consequences of
testing for the Common Core — national standards in more than 40
states — and rolled back the number of required exams.