Posted on 11/25/2003 8:55:39 PM PST by chance33_98
City School Tests Reveal Sharp Ethnic Disparities
By Matthew Artz (11-25-03)
The achievement gap separating white Berkeley public school students from other racial groups remains profound, according to an analysis of test scores unveiled at last weeks meeting of the Berkeley Unified School District board.
Results from the California Standards Tests measuring reading, math, science and social studies skills for students throughout the district revealed a steady decline in math scores from elementary schools to the high school and poor results in algebra and writing.
Neil Smith, the districts director of curriculum and instruction, said district officials would use the data analysis to improve instruction, but cautioned that until they get detailed analysis from other standardized tests, they wouldnt read too much into the results.
In each subject, whites outscored other groupsoften reaching proficiency rates close to four times higher than African American students.
The breakdown for proficiency rates is as follows:
MathWhites 63 percent, African Americans 19 percent, Asians 58 percent and Latinos 27 percent.
ReadingWhites 78 percent, African Americans 21 percent, Asians 54 percent and Latinos 27 percent.
ScienceWhites 73 percent, African Americans 27 percent, Asians 58 percent, and Latinos 23 percent.
Social ScienceWhites 71 percent, African Americans 13 percent, Asians 41 percent and Latinos 17 percent.
More troubling is that for reading and math the achievement gap expanded from lower to higher grades.
Something wasnt being passed on, said Bradley Johnson, the boards student representative.
Students in lower grades scored better in math than higher grades, with algebra posing the biggest problems for district students. While 59 percent of second graders scored as proficient on math tests, only 17 percent of eighth grade algebra students ranked as high.
Algebra was recently shifted from ninth to eighth grade to comply with state standards, which could explain the poor scores, Johnson said.
Reading proficiency followed the opposite trend, rising from 42 percent of second graders to 62 percent of 11th-graders, though scores dipped in some grades.
Writing tests given to elementary and middle school students also showed huge discrepancies between schools, prodding board members to question if the district had a consistent district-wide program.
Students at Jefferson and John Muir Elementary Schools scored the highest, with 37 and 36 percent of students respectively ranking as proficient. At the other end of the spectrum, only nine percent of Leconte students, and six percent of Malcolm X students scored at the proficient level.
Superintendent Michele Lawrence told the school board that math and writing skills required grade-by-grade structured lessons and that its imperative that the school system have a specific sequence to guide students.
She added that it was hard to read too much into test results because the state has repeatedly tweaked the test, making trends over time difficult to discern.
Board member John Selawsky reiterated that the test results were only part of the overall picture of student achievement, but added that it was an important part and that the district needed to use the scores to develop strategies to improve instruction.
The system is working exactly as intended. Our leftist PC Mecca has had every chance to prove otherwise.
I would bet that the disparities are less in the rural South.
Obviously the first name change wasn't vigorous enought. Call the place the "Mumia abu Jamal Academy" and the kids are sure to pass at a rate of 90 percent.
The differences are not intractable. Give me any child of any gender or race, before he/she is 7 and they will be reading well by the time they are 7. It takes a dedicated teacher that knows how to motivate, and phonics. That is ALL it takes.
It certainly doesn't take $6,000/student/year at some NEA rat-trap of a school.
/john
I worked harder because I knew that I knew less, and the internal competition kicked in. Kind of like people I know who get certifications by studying for the tests and forget most of it later on, they don't spend time on the basics because they don't think they need to (I always see myself as less knowledgable than others so I keep myself studying all the time).
You're supposed to "tweak" the student, not the test.
More useless fodder for those on The Quest for Cosmic Justice.
Students at Jefferson and John Muir Elementary Schools scored the highest, with 37 and 36 percent of students respectively ranking as proficient. At the other end of the spectrum, only nine percent of Leconte students, and six percent of Malcolm X students scored at the proficient level.
Are these education professionals really that stupid?
However, the Hispanic scores are not high. This can be attributed in part to the lack of language skills, although Asians have that same mark against them and yet their test scores are far higher. But why are the black scores so low? Those kids are English mother tongue, have access to everything in English, and yet are not as fluent as foreigners in their second languages. What is going on there? I hope it is not that fear of "sounding white" that keeps black families from guiding their children into decent language usage. That is just too sad.
My pic is on my profile page :) Just a regular old hill billy. And I am getting ready to move into a house out in the country and get some chickens and a goat. Checked out the little town I will be close to (about 2 miles) - We have a gas station there, and two cafes, and a place that does logging. I hate moving though :( I have two servers that weigh about 110lbs each and I have to get them safely down the steps. I don't think I will move again for a long long time!
As far as education, got a ged.
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