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May 23, 2006State Test Scores Adjusted to Match Last YearA new statewide assessment used to test the knowledge of Wisconsin students forced a lowering of the curve, a Madison school official said.Kevin Carey recently wrote how states inflate their progress under NCLB: But Wisconsin's remarkable district success rate is mostly a function of the way it has used its flexibility under NCLB to manipulate the statistical underpinnings of the AYP formula.I'm glad Sandy is taking a look at this. UW Emeritus Math Professor Dick Askey mentioned changes in state testing during a recent Math Curriculum Forum: We went from a district which was above the State average to one with scores at best at the State average. The State Test was changed from a nationally normed test to one written just for Wisconsin, and the different levels were set without a national norm. That is what caused the dramatic rise from February 2002 to November 2002. It was not that all of the Middle Schools were now using Connected Mathematics Project, which was the reason given at the meeting for these increases.Alan Borsuk has more: This year's results also underscore a vexing question: Why does the percentage of students who are proficient or advanced drop from eighth to 10th grades? The decline was true almost across the board, including across ethnic groups, except in language arts. In reading statewide, the percentage of students who were advanced and proficient held close to steady from third through eighth grade and then dropped 10 points, from 84% to 74% for 10th grade. The decline was even steeper for black and Hispanic students - in each case, 17-point drops from eighth to 10th grade.Planner was most recently principal at Madison's Thoreau Elementary School. Madison Metrpolitan School District's press release. Posted by Jim Zellmer at May 23, 2006 6:05 AMSubscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas |