The Mercury News

California’s poor students rank near last on national test

Low-income black boys are struggling the most, national test data show

- By Jessica Calefati CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining policies and politics.

California’s poor students performed worse on a national exam than needy kids from all but one other state, according to results released last week by the National Center for Education Statistics.

Congratula­tions, folks. We beat Alaska.

These students’ lackluster scores on the most recent National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress come despite the state’s $31.2 billion investment in their learning under a new school funding method championed by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2013.

And although the average California fourthgrad­er from a low-income family scored a few points higher on this most recent test than a decade ago, poor students’ scores on the test have declined since the state’s investment.

CALmatters reported last year that Brown’s school funding policy, known as the Local Control Funding Formula, has largely failed to bridge the academic achievemen­t gap between the state’s poor students and their wealthier peers.

Poor black boys’ performanc­e on the exam is driving down the disadvanta­ged students’ average score.

African-American fourthgrad­ers from low-income families scored 210 on a 500-point scale in math, 10 points worse than poor Hispanic boys and almost 15 points worse than poor white boys.

CALmatters recently examined these disparitie­s in San Francisco, a hub for technologi­cal innovation that also happens to be the state’s worst county for black student achievemen­t.

California’s black boys are struggling the most of all, the national test data show.

Poor fourth-grade African-American boys scored almost 10 points below their female counterpar­ts, a phenomenon CALmatters examined last year as well.

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