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May 27, 2013Do Americans Know How Well Their State's Schools Perform?Among the most common rationales offered for the Common Core State Standards project is to eliminate differences in the definition of student proficiency in core academic subjects across states. As is well known, the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2002 (NCLB) required states to test students annually in grades 3-8 (and once in high school), to report the share of students in each school performing at a proficient level in math and reading, and to intervene in schools not on track to achieve universal student proficiency by 2014. Yet it permitted states to define proficiency as they saw fit, producing wide variation in the expectations for student performance from one state to the next. While a few states, including several that had set performance standards prior to NCLB's enactment, have maintained relatively demanding definitions of proficiency, most have been more lenient.Wisconsin's oft-criticized WKCE is similar to Alabama's proficiency approach, rather than Massachusetts. Yet, Alabama has seen fit to compare their students to the world, something Wisconsin has resisted. Related: www.wisconsin2.org. Posted by Jim Zellmer at May 27, 2013 4:48 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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