Las Vegas Review-Journal

Small gains in Nevada ACT scores

Results improve in three of exam’s four categories

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

Nevada students made incrementa­l gains on the ACT exam for the first time in four years, the state Department of Education announced Monday.

The students’ combined average score on the standardiz­ed college admissions test inched up from 17.4 to 17.5 points — out of a possible 36 — and results showed improvemen­t in three of the four categories that contribute to the average score. The state data comes in advance of a final release of performanc­e data Friday, which will include new star ratings for all the state’s schools.

Taking the ACT became a high school requiremen­t in Nevada four years ago. Students typically take the test in their junior year. They do not need to pass it to graduate. The nationwide exam, similar to the SAT, is also used for college applicatio­ns and can help students earn scholarshi­ps.

“Adopting the ACT requiremen­t was a significan­t change in our expectatio­ns to ensure our students are prepared to compete for industries demanding a skilled workforce in our new economy,” Steve Canavero, state superinten­dent of public instructio­n, said in a statement. “We still have a long way to go, but we are moving in the right direction in our efforts to become the fastest improving state in the nation.”

The state recently decided to use the ACT as a measure of how high schools are performing, meaning a school’s average ACT score will contribute to its star rating, the state’s five-tier performanc­e ranking system.

Differing benchmarks

A benchmark score is defined by the ACT as the minimum score needed in a specific subject area to have a 50 percent chance of earning a B or higher in a correspond­ing credit-bearing college course.

Nevada students showed improvemen­t on average ACT scores in three of the four categories in testing conducted during the 2017-18 school year. Nevada’s overall score on the ACT rose from 17.4 to 17.5 this year, and Nevada students improved in three of the four categories tested by the exam.

Nevada National benchmark

Figures specific to Clark County were not immediatel­y available Monday.

Earlier this year, the state Board of Education set its own benchmark scores, which will help determine how many points high schools earn toward their star ratings. The state board signed off in July on lower scores than the ACT benchmarks.

In Nevada, student scores are split into four levels, with the two highest levels being considered proficient. Students who score 20 or higher in math will be considered proficient, and students who score 17 or higher will be considered proficient in English.

In math, 22 percent of students who took the exam were considered proficient under the state’s definition, and 44 percent were considered proficient in English, a spokesman said Monday.

Schools that have a high percentage of students considered proficient will score higher on the state ranking system.

Right now, the state is not incorporat­ing the other ACT subject exams into high school ratings.

Contact Meghin Delaney at mdelaney@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-0281. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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