Los Angeles Times

Low student test scores show a work in progress

- By Howard Blume

Echoing a nationwide downward trend, most California students are falling short of state learning targets and are not on track to succeed in college, according to the results of new, more rigorous standardiz­ed tests released Wednesday.

And the picture is even worse for L.A. Unified, the nation’s second-largest school system, than it is for the state. Across California, 44% of students achieved targets for their grade in English, while 34% did so in math. In L.A. Unified, the figures were 33% and 25%.

“The results show our starting point,” state Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tom Torlakson said, “a window into where California students are in meeting tougher academic standards that emphasize critical thinking, problem solving and analytical writing.

“I am encouraged that many students are at or near achievemen­t standards. However, just as we expected, many students need to make more progress.”

Indeed, officials said they were prepared for the low scores.

Questions based on the new “Common Core” standards, which have been adopted in 42 states, are more difficult than those on California’s previous test. And students for the first time took the exam on computers.

The testing is designed to provide a more detailed and accurate snapshot of achievemen­t.

Students are given questions that require deeper thinking about a theme in literature, for example, or about the concepts of algebra or geometry. They get more or less difficult based on which ones a student answers correctly, and in

theory no two students will be presented with exactly the same test.

The new test also requires some written answers, in addition to the more familiar multiplech­oice format.

The results are not as discouragi­ng as they seem, former state schools Supt. Bill Honig said, because the bar is set so high: what students need to succeed at a fouryear college.

An 11th-grader who scores below expectatio­ns, for example, would be considered unprepared for college. Younger students scoring below grade-level goals would be classified as not on track for college.

“Not everybody is going to attend a four-year college,” Honig said.

Even though student achievemen­t needs to improve, he said, the scores would be higher if calibrated to the skills needed to attend a community college, get a two-year nursing certificat­e or pursue a career in manufactur­ing.

Still, the just-released results could prove dishearten­ing to parents and school district officials who had thought, based on previous tests, that their students were doing better.

Under the Common Core-linked test, 40% of California third-graders scored at grade level or better in math. That compares to 66% who did so on the former test. And in English, 38% of third-graders met expectatio­ns or better on the new test, compared to 45% previously.

“What’s critical,” said state Deputy Supt. Keric Ashley, “is the communicat­ion that happens between teachers and parents” so that the results are not looked at in a vacuum.

In recent years, L.A. Unified had narrowed the gap between its test results and those in other districts, but that trend reversed this year.

“As we all expected, the overall results of these more rigorous assessment­s show that we still have more work to do,” Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said in a statement.

For some parents, such explanatio­ns are not enough.

“I don’t understand how the new data compare to old data, when you take into account the shift to Common Core teaching standards,” Los Angeles parent Risa Morris said. “Is it possible that students actually really were doing better before and the new curriculum is causing students to fall behind?”

According to experts, the Common Core learning goals have changed both what is taught and how. The idea is to get students to think more deeply, solve problems and better express themselves in writing and speaking. Those objectives are reflected in the new test.

Going forward, the testprepar­ation package for schools includes a digital library of resources for teachers and periodic exams for students to sharpen their skills.

One area that will require attention is the substantia­l achievemen­t gaps that separate the performanc­e of Asian and white students from their black and Latino peers.

In English, 72% of Asian students and 51% of white students tested at grade level or better; 28% of black students and 32% of Latinos met those standards.

In addition, 21% of students from low-income families scored proficient or better in math; 53% of those from more affluent families did so.

Although scores generally were lower at all schools, the highest scoring campuses declined less. And those typically serve students from more affluent families or those with fewer educationa­l challenges.

Canyon Elementary in L.A. Unified, for example, saw its English proficienc­y rate decline by only two percentage points, from 95% to 93% of students. The school has only five students classified as English learners.

“Addressing achievemen­t gaps needs to be at the forefront of any conversati­on regarding preparing students for college and career,” said Ryan J. Smith. of Oakland-based Education Trust-West, a research and advocacy group.

By adopting a tougher test, the end result should be graduates who are better prepared for college and the work force, said David Rattray, a vice president with the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce.

“As far as we can tell, these are the highest standards we’ve ever establishe­d,” he said.

California has set four levels of achievemen­t under the new system: standard exceeded, standard met, standard nearly met or standard not met. The objective was for students to land in the top two categories.

Although the scores were low, they were not a surprise. Students in California performed close to expectatio­ns based on a field test given in 21 states two years ago.

Political opposition to standardiz­ed testing and Common Core has emerged nationwide among parents and teachers.

In New York, the parents of 20% of students kept their children from taking their state’s test, which also is based on Common Core standards. In California, parents of fewer than 1% of students refused to have their children tested.

Nearly 3.2 million California­ns in grades 3 through 8 and grade 11 took the test.

 ?? Anne Cusack
Los Angeles Times ?? MOST CALIFORNIA students are not on track to succeed in college. Above, an L.A. magnet school.
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times MOST CALIFORNIA students are not on track to succeed in college. Above, an L.A. magnet school.
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