Los Angeles Times

California’s science scores lag those in most states

But the state’s Latino students show significan­t gains in NAEP test results.

- By Joy Resmovits

California has produced some of America’s most celebrated innovators, but its students test below the national average in science, according to a new federal report.

The state’s results on a science test that is periodical­ly administer­ed nationwide also compared poorly with those of most other states — though averages for most states’ public school students were somewhere in the vicinity of half the top score of 300 points.

The report, released late Tuesday, looks at results of the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress in science, taken by students in the fourth, eighth and 12th grades last year, and compares them with scores from the last times the tests were administer­ed.

Nationally, results for fourth- and eighth-graders showed statistica­lly significan­t gains, while 12th-grade scores stagnated.

In California, some measured gains were deemed statistica­lly insignific­ant because of the size of the samples. But the state’s Latino fourth-graders showed particular improvemen­t.

“We see these results as a promising indicator of progress, but we realize there’s a lot of work to do,” U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King Jr. said of the national results. “We worry that we still are not at a place as a country where we are preparing the future STEM [science, technology, engineerin­g and math] workforce that we need.”

Television scientist Bill Nye joined King on a conference call with reporters.

Nationwide, the average score for fourth-graders rose from 150 to 154 out of 300. For eighth-graders, scores rose from 152 to 154.

In 2015, California’s fourth-graders scored 140, on average, and eighthgrad­ers scored 143.

“I would be concerned. Obviously the state can do better, because almost all the other states are doing better,” said Tom Loveless, a Sacramento-based senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n. “It’s doubtful that it’s due to demographi­c challenges.”

The National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress, or NAEP, administer­ed by the U.S. Department of Education’s research arm, is meant to be rigorous and, officials say, “aspiration­al.” It is the only such test that allows state-by-state comparison. Students answer questions on physical science, Earth and space sciences, or life science.

Of all the ethnic groups tested in California, only Latino students made significan­t progress — with fourth-grade scores rising from 121 to 128.

California has a large number of students who are English learners or in poverty, and rankings of test scores often reflect such demographi­cs. But a previous study of testing in other subjects found that California’s scores remain low even when those factors are accounted for.

California is in the process of implementi­ng a new set of expectatio­ns for science education, known as the Next Generation Science Standards.

Next week, the state Board of Education is set to adopt a curriculum framework aligned to the standards, which emphasize scientific investigat­ion and creating continuity between different subjects.

New statewide tests aligned to the standards will be administer­ed in a pilot program this spring. Until these exams are fully operationa­l and results become available, though, it’s hard to know how the national assessment results fit into a broader picture of California science education.

Jessica Sawko, executive director of the California Science Teachers Assn., said she doesn’t put much stock in NAEP scores because school districts haven’t fully implemente­d the new California standards.

After all, she said, the tests might be measuring material that the state’s schools plan to teach but aren’t yet.

joy.resmovits@latimes.com Twitter: @Joy_Resmovits

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