The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Literacy is essential, but math declines need to be addressed

- Maureen Downey Only in the AJC

At the recent Excelined national summit in Atlanta, K-8 math policy expert Christy Hovanetz tried to talk with policymake­rs about addressing declines in U.S. math performanc­e. She didn’t get much traction.

Hovanetz, a former assistant education commission­er in Florida and Minnesota, was met with a common refrain: “We need to figure this reading thing out first.”

States are intent on improving literacy. That includes Georgia, where multiple initiative­s are underway to improve reading and millions of dollars are going to retrain teachers in phonics-based instructio­n. But math is emerging from the shadows after score plunges on the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress (NAEP) and the Program for Internatio­nal Student Assessment (PISA).

Released in June, NAEP scores showed middle school math in free fall. The disappoint­ing news continued this month when PISA results revealed a mere 7% of American teens capable of math at advanced levels. PISA is given to students in 81 nations.

In explaining why the U.S. trails peer nations, Andreas Schleicher, director for education and skills for the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, which

administer­s PISA, cited a range of reasons.

“Usually, the expectatio­ns for students are significan­tly higher. The mathematic­s curriculum is much more rigorous. It is typically more focused. They teach fewer things at greater depth,” Schleicher said. “It is not just about rememberin­g formulas and equations, but how students might think and reason like mathematic­ians.”

The slide in math competency augurs poorly for the U.S. economy, Stanford economist Eric Hanushek said. “Economic growth, which is what determines the future well-being of countries, is directly related to the quality of the labor force in every country. The measures of PISA turn out to be pretty good measures of what the quality of the labor force will be in our modern, informatio­n-based economy,” he said during a recent Excelined webinar.

The decline comes at a time when math skills are increasing­ly tied to career prospects. Eight in 10 jobs over the next decade will require skills in the STEM discipline­s — science, technology,

engineerin­g and math.

The performanc­e drops in NAEP and PISA signal that the U.S. could see the loss of “future doctors, engineers, computer scientists — people we need to keep the country moving,” said Denise Forte, president and CEO of the Education Trust.

Earlier this month, the Education Trust and Just Equations released a report, “Opportunit­ies Denied: High-achieving Black and Latino Students Lack Access to Advanced Math.” The report found that high-performing Black, Latino and low-income students aren’t afforded equal access to advanced math classes despite displaying the aptitude for them.

And it matters to their futures. The report found that students who had the opportunit­y to access higher-level math classes experience­d positive academic outcomes, including higher grades and high school graduation rates and increased rates of enrolling in college.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics highlights the earnings payoff to STEM credential­s. Engineers

earned the highest median salaries, with an average pay of $97,000, followed by computer scientists at $90,000.

North Carolina is drawing interest for its strong post-pandemic gains in math. The state invested $103 million in competency-based math and reading assessment­s so teachers had the data to figure out where students were. It also spent $36 million on summer bridge programs that offered evidence-based, in-person enrichment programs for math for at-risk students.

“Our biggest jump coming out of the pandemic has been in middle-grades math,” said Catherine Truitt, North Carolina superinten­dent of public instructio­n. When the state legislatur­e meets this spring, Truitt plans to ask for an early math screener for all K-8 schools so teachers have valid and reliable data on which fundamenta­l skills have been mastered, enabling tailored instructio­n.

Georgia doesn’t have a required statewide math screening assessment, but the state Department of Education is expanding its formative assessment tool, BEACON, now used in math and language arts in grades 3 to 5, to K-2. Schools can use BEACON to determine where students are in their learning and measure progress throughout the year.

Hovanetz said K-8 schools have two primary subjects they’re supposed to teach, reading and math, and states have to get serious about raising performanc­e in both of them.

“Please don’t wait,” Hovanetz said. “You can do both at the same time.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? Denise Forte, CEO of the Education Trust, says the drop in math competency could result in the loss of “future doctors, engineers, computer scientists.”
DREAMSTIME/TNS Denise Forte, CEO of the Education Trust, says the drop in math competency could result in the loss of “future doctors, engineers, computer scientists.”
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