Wisconsin maintained its third-place ranking on the ACT college admissions test, with this year's graduating high school seniors posting an average composite score of 22.3 for the third year in a row, according to data scheduled to be released Wednesday.
That average placed Wisconsin behind only Minnesota and Iowa among states where the ACT was taken by a majority of the Class of 2009.
But within the state's scores were causes for concern. The average composite score - the combined performance on the ACT's English, math, reading and science tests - for African-American students fell from 17 to 16.8. With the average composite score for Wisconsin's white students at 22.9, the state had one of the largest gaps between the two racial groups in the nation.
According to a report from ACT Inc., such scores indicate only 3% of the state's African-American test-takers are ready for college in all four tested areas, compared with 33% of white students. In Milwaukee Public Schools, spokeswoman Roseann St. Aubin said 6% of district test-takers were deemed college-ready in all four areas.
"Overall, Wisconsin students did well on this national test," state schools Superintendent Tony Evers said in a news release. "However, the results show areas for improvement."
Average composite scores on the ACT, the most popular of the two main college admissions tests in Wisconsin, varied from district to district in the Milwaukee area.
Because the ACT is a voluntary test, schools' average scores can vary based on the number of students who take it from one year to the next. An increase in test-taking usually leads to a score drop.