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Nevada improves in math
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LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Updated: Apr. 10, 2012 | 9:35 a.m.
Nevada is one of four states that improved math scores in fourth grade and eighth grade in 2009, according to test results released Wednesday.
"It was probably the best news we've had in a while," said Nevada Superintendent of Public Instruction Keith Rheault.
Nevada still has room to improve, Rheault acknowledged. Student scores in the state remain below the national average.
Rheault was pleased that Nevada has been showing steady progress on the National Assessment of Educational Progress since testing began in 1996. NAEP is a series of federally funded achievement tests often referred to as the nation's report card. Students are tested in nine subjects, but they are tested most often in math and reading. Generally, students have been making more progress in math than in reading.
On a 500-point scale, the average fourth-grade score was 235, and the average eighth-grade score was 274 for Nevada. Nationally, the average score was 239 for fourth grade and 282 for eighth grade.
The state has made gains though its percentage of fourth-grade English language learners is twice the national average. Twenty percent of Nevada fourth-graders are identified as English language learners compared with 10 percent across the nation.
Rheault also said minority groups are showing test score gains. In 2009, 70 percent of Hispanics in fourth grade showed basic competence in math. In 1996, 37 percent of Hispanic fourth-graders tested at the same level.
Rheault gave some of the credit for the gains to the state's emphasis on remediation and its requirement that every public school have an improvement plan to raise test scores.
Anna Habash, a policy analyst for Education Trust, a national nonprofit organization, said Nevada still has much work to do to if it wants to become a state that performs in the top tier.
"You have to start somewhere," Habash said. "At least Nevada is moving in the right direction."
Three thousand students in Nevada took the NAEP math test. Rheault estimated that 70 percent were from Clark County. This year's NAEP math tests were given to 168,800 fourth-graders and 161,700 eighth-graders in public and private schools in every state.
Nationally, the math scores show fourth-graders have made no gains since 2007, the first time in two decades they have failed to improve. Eighth-graders advanced for yet another year.
Education officials called the results troubling though it is impossible to know from one test whether progress over the long term has stalled.
"We're clearly not requiring enough of our math teachers," said David Driscoll, chairman of the board that oversees the tests and a former education commissioner in Massachusetts.
Teachers are crucial to learning, said Driscoll, who noted that eighth-graders whose teachers majored in math scored 9 points higher than other students on this year's test.
But teachers lack training even in his state, which posted the highest scores in math. When Massachusetts beefed up the math portion of the elementary teacher test in 2007, 55 percent of teachers failed, he said.
The scores put 39 percent of fourth-graders and 32 percent of eighth-graders at the proficient level, meaning they show the knowledge and skills they should have at that grade.
That means millions of students fall short of meeting the goal of the federal No Child Left Behind law championed by President George W. Bush, which is that every student can read and do math at their grade level by 2014.
Congress hopes to rewrite the law next year.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the results mean "the status quo isn't good enough."
"These NAEP results are a call to action for reforms that will prepare our students to compete in the global economy," Duncan said.
Tom Loveless, an education expert at the Brookings Institution think tank, said the results really weren't much different from 2007. It will take another four to six years to see whether fourth-grade progress has truly stalled, he said.
"Each of these is kind of like a public opinion poll; it's an estimate," Loveless said. "I think people rush to take each release of test scores far too seriously and try to explain every little wiggle in the data."
Loveless said it is impossible to explain exactly why national fourth-grade scores did not budge. "Scientifically, you cannot explain in education why a phenomenon did not happen," he said.
According to the results:
• Four states and the District of Columbia managed to show improvement in both fourth and eighth grades. With Nevada, the states are New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont.
• Three states saw improvement in fourth grade only: Colorado, Kentucky and Maryland. Ten states saw improvement in eighth grade only; they are Connecticut, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, South Dakota, Utah and Washington.
• In four states, scores dropped among fourth-graders: Delaware, Indiana, West Virginia and Wyoming.
In addition, there was no nationwide progress from 2007 to 2009 in closing the gap between minority and white students in either grade, though the gap has narrowed somewhat since the 1990s. Black and Hispanic students did make gains at eighth grade, but the gap persisted because white students improved, too.
Experts say that divide, considered one of the toughest challenges in education, is driven by deeply rooted factors. More minority children live in poverty, which is linked to several problems that interfere with learning.
Another reason the gap has persisted is demographics. White children made up about 75 percent of students tested in the 1990s but today make up less than 60 percent.
Private-school students continue to outperform those in public schools, according to the scores. Private school math scores were 7 points better in fourth grade and 14 points better in eighth grade.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. Contact reporter James Haug at jhaug@reviewjournal.com or 702-374-7917.
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testing began in 1996? i've seen naep scores from the 1970's. ?
A lot of parents think this is not the place to raise your children... and they are right... it's obvious the State doesn't want to educate them, so anyone with a family and children of school age should move...
We can turn all those enclosed campuses into prisions and jails....
We'd save money on educating and make money on jailing.
That's what the State wants to do.
Uh, these numbers indicate that the students are dumber than the stones at Redrock.
Anything under 400 is shameful and you are PROUD of these results?
PARENTS!!!! you had em you raise them!
I was involved with a program back in the the 1970s which took young men from zero to GED 10th grade level in math and science within one year. The course materials were specifically designed for these students who were about as disadvantaged as it gets. They had limited English ability so each instructional unit integrated specific ESL. Other factors were their native alphabet was completely different. They read from back-to-front and right-to-left, just the opposite from western standards. It didn't help that they were in an alien culture thousands of miles from home. Now there is a real educators challenge. To our astonishment they busted their final testing by achieving the GED 12th grade level. Those 1600 boys went back home and became the leaders of the Saudi Arabian Air Force in their specialties.
I think the success was in using air force retirees as the instructors. They had real world experience uncorrupted by academic mumbo-jumbo. Carefully designed courseware without political correctness certainly worked. There were no discipline problems. Everyone was highly dedicated to the mission. Those and other factors taught those young men more math and science in one year than our system can do in 12 years with American students.
OK, this concept can never happen in our public education system. It could be adapted private sector education systems. Take out PC, educratic BS, union protectionism, sports mania and feel-good courses. Bring back discipline. That could get us back to real education.
Anybody out there listening? Probably not.
If you take the test enough times and continully go over the same problems, you should show improvement. Do I believe it? NO, I do not believe any of the test scores published How many people did they hire to teach math teachers how to teach? Last years test scores in math were down so they had to go up this year,it's sick.