New NAEP data brings fresh round of questions on how to improve education
Alan Borsuk:
What are we doing wrong? Why aren't things getting better?
No, I don't have some powerful secret answer. But I know the urgency behind the questions became all the clearer last week, whether you're talking about Milwaukee or Wisconsin as a whole. Whatever it is that would work, we haven't done it yet or, at best, we haven't done it well enough.
There are so many people trying to change education outcomes for the better. I respect so many of them and think some are having praiseworthy impact in specific arenas. But the overall pursuit? Look at the record.
There are two reasons for my fresh agitation:
First are new results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). NAEP is the best, most nailed-down gauge of how students are doing nationwide. About every two years, NAEP releases results from reading and math tests of samples of fourth and eighth graders in every state. New results came out Thursday.
Nationwide, there were some bright spots, but overall, not much was new or better.
For Wisconsin, the results were disheartening. The average score of a fourth grader in reading was lower than in 1992. We pride ourselves on being a high performing state, but the Wisconsin score and the national score were the same. Sounds pretty middle-of-the-pack to me.
There has been long-term improvement in math scores in Wisconsin. But almost all of it occurred years ago -- scores have been flat for the last half-dozen years.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at November 10, 2013 12:08 AM
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