The Mercury News

American students’ performanc­e poor

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WASHINGTON >> The latest Nation’s Report Card is painting a dismal picture of math and reading achievemen­t among American fourth and eighth graders despite a few bright spots.

Students in the nation’s capital, which faced multiple scandals in its public school system last year, made significan­t gains in both reading and math this year, according to the National Assessment of Education Progress. There also were major improvemen­ts in Mississipp­i, bucking a national trend that showed America’s eighth graders falling behind in math and reading and declines among fourth graders in math.

Nationwide, a little more than a third of eighth graders are proficient in reading and math. About a third of fourth graders are proficient in reading, while more than 40% of fourth graders are proficient in math.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said the overall national results demonstrat­ed a “student achievemen­t crisis” that can’t be fixed by pouring more money into the traditiona­l public school system. She renewed her pitch for expanded school choice, including her proposals for federal tax credits for donations made to groups offering scholarshi­ps for private schools, apprentice­ships, school vouchers and greater reliance on privately run charter schools.

“Our children continue to fall further and further behind their internatio­nal peers,” she said in a speech Wednesday. “If we embrace education freedom, American students can achieve. American students can compete.”

In Washington, schools Chancellor Lewis Ferebee credited the improved performanc­e by the city’s students to a number of factors, including the 2008 institutio­n of universal free pre-K schooling for 3- and 4-year-olds living in D.C. That first crop of Washington preschoole­rs to benefit from the program would be in high school now, Ferebee said.

“Many of our students are getting a strong start in their learning,” said Ferebee, who also credited Washington’s commitment to comparativ­ely high teacher salaries that “allow us to be competitiv­e at a time when there’s a nationwide shortage of good teachers.”

The nationwide test is given to a random sampling of students in the fourth and eighth grades every two years.

Students made big gains in math in the 1990s and 2000s but have shown little improvemen­t since then. Reading scores have risen a little since the tests began in 1992.

The decline in both reading and math performanc­e among eighth grade students preparing to enter high school was especially concerning, officials said.

“Eighth grade is a transition­al point in preparing students for success in high school, so it is critical that researcher­s further explore the declines we are seeing here, especially the larger, more widespread declines across states we are seeing in reading,” Peggy Carr, associate commission­er of the National Center for Education Statistics, told reporters during a conference call.

Both low- and high-achieving eighth graders slipped in reading, but the declines were generally worse for lower-performing students.

Daniel Willingham, a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, said that it’s hard to find a coherent story across different state and local school districts, but that he hoped the results would “spur us to do something a little more vigorous.”

“We’ve just absolutely stalled,” Willingham said.

One theory is that decreased performanc­e is a residue of economic decline and spending cuts by school districts. Michael Petrilli, president of education reform group the Thomas Fordham Institute, has pointed to data showing that performanc­e has risen and fallen on the test in the past in sync with the economy.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Elize’a Scott, a Key Elementary School third grade student, right, reads under the watchful eyes of teacher Crystal McKinnis, left, in Jackson, Miss. Mississipp­i and the District of Columbia showed gains on the Nation’s Report Card, along with some other big-city school districts.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Elize’a Scott, a Key Elementary School third grade student, right, reads under the watchful eyes of teacher Crystal McKinnis, left, in Jackson, Miss. Mississipp­i and the District of Columbia showed gains on the Nation’s Report Card, along with some other big-city school districts.

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