Los Angeles Times

A bright spot in test scores

At all achievemen­t levels, California eighth-graders show some progress in reading assessment.

- JOY RESMOVITS joy.resmovits@latimes.com Twitter: @Joy_Resmovits

Eighth-graders at all achievemen­t levels in the state show some reading progress.

Every two years, the nation’s fourth- and eighthgrad­ers are tested in math and reading — and newly released results from last year’s tests give California at least a little reason to be pleased.

The 2017 results — out Monday night — were mostly flat nationwide, though the average score in eighth-grade reading went up.

Although that improvemen­t largely came from the increased scores of the highest-performing students, California eighthgrad­ers showed some reading progress from the lowest levels to the highest.

Educators have been fretting about the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress — known as NAEP — since 2015, when scores stagnated after a long period of slow but steady gains.

Even the slight progress in eighth-grade reading nationwide this time was not across the board.

“The performanc­e of lower-performing students stayed about the same,” said Peggy G. Carr, associate commission­er of assessment at the National Center for Education Statistics, the U.S. Department of Education’s research office.

California, though, had “a success story across the distributi­on” of students in eighth-grade reading, said Jack Buckley, a senior vice president at the American Institutes for Research, who previously led the National Center for Education Statistics, which oversees the test.

Interpreti­ng the scores

California was one of just 10 states to post statistica­lly significan­t increases in eighth-grade reading.

In 2015, the average reading score for California eighth-graders was 259 on the 500-point test.

In 2017, the average was 263.

Ryan Smith, executive director of the Education Trust-West, an Oakland nonprofit that fights for educationa­l equity, partially credited the effects of the state’s Local Control Funding Formula, which aims to give schools extra resources for the neediest students.

“It’s showing California’s efforts to provide more resources have given [students] some gains,” he said.

Otherwise, the state’s scores on the test were flat, which the state Education Department downplayed.

Robert Oakes, a department spokesman, said of the test: “We do not believe it is the best measure of success because it is not aligned to California standards.”

Big achievemen­t gaps remain

Gaps between different racial groups remained wide both nationally and in California.

In L.A. Unified, only 13% of black students met or exceeded proficienc­y goals in fourth-grade reading, compared with 51% of white students and 23% of students overall. In California, only 10% of black students and 15% of Latino students met those benchmarks in eighth-grade math, compared with 44% of white students and 29% of students overall.

“This is a wake-up call that we need to do more to put equity at the center of the discussion,” Smith said. “We have to start putting our actions where our words are. I’m concerned that California claims to be a beacon on the hill and yet still leaves black and Latino students languishin­g on the sidelines.”

Tested on tablets

The national exam generally is considered the gold standard of educationa­l measuremen­t, in part because it has no consequenc­es for individual students, schools and teachers, so there’s less incentive to try to game it by spending hours on test-prep drills. In states such as California, where many districts are posting higher graduation rates, it can also be a reality check.

Last year was the first time the test was administer­ed digitally, with 298,000 fourth-graders and 268,800 eighth-graders in public and private schools nationwide logging their answers on tablets.

Southern California’s scores

In L.A. Unified, average scores increased by a few points between 2015 and 2017 in all areas except fourthgrad­e math, but the federal government judged those small increases to be statistica­lly insignific­ant.

“In comparing ourselves to other districts, we did fairly well,” said Oscar Lafarga, executive director of LAUSD’s office of data and accountabi­lity.

Students with disabiliti­es and English learners, he said, saw some higher scores.

In eighth-grade math, though, the performanc­e gap between white and Latino students widened between 2015 and 2017.

“All gaps … are concerning,” Lafarga said.

But where the lowestperf­orming students in California and the nation overall largely posted lower scores in 2017 than their peers in 2015, L.A.’s bottom scorers held steady and even posted higher scores.

There was good news for San Diego too, where fourth-graders’ average scores went up in both subjects.

 ?? Gary Reyes MCT ?? TEACHER Christina Pak, left, helps Chase Kerley use his iPad in 2010. Students can take the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress test on tablets.
Gary Reyes MCT TEACHER Christina Pak, left, helps Chase Kerley use his iPad in 2010. Students can take the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress test on tablets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States