Thursday, May 24, 2007

The New York Sun: Reading Scores Mixed A Sharp Rise Recorded for Some City Pupils by Elizabeth Green...

Four years after Mayor Bloomberg's takeover of the city's public schools, roughly half of the city's pupils aren't meeting standards on standardized reading tests.

The scores on state reading tests for the city's students, announced yesterday, did show some improvements versus last year. This year, 42% of eighth-graders met the standard, as opposed to 37% last year. But the fourth-graders who met standards dipped to 56% this year from 59% the year before.

Since state testing began in 1999, younger students have tended to make small but steady gains, while middle schoolers' scores have been stuck. Despite the gains, more than 39,000 third- through eighth-graders who took the test in January read so poorly, at the state's bottom level, that some could go to summer school or be held back.

The unusual reversal in progress between middle and elementary students follows an influx of more than 30,000 beginning English speakers into the city's accountability regime this year. The federal government forced New York to make the expansion in a confrontation this summer. Before, students could avoid testing for up to five years after entering the country; now, the longest they can go without being tested is one year.

"That had an enormous impact," the schools chancellor, Joel Klein, said. Mr. Klein suggested the influx of so-called English-language learners could be behind the fall-off in elementary reading scores. There are roughly 1.1 million students in the city's public schools.

Subtracting out the English-language learners, Mr. Klein uncovered a more promising picture, with gains in almost every grade level. Slice the statistics that way, and 46% of eighth-graders read at or above standard. Those scores had previously been stagnant at around 35%.

Mr. Klein attributed the gains to reforms made beginning with mayoral control in 2002, when those eighth graders were in fourth grade. "Students are coming more prepared to the middle schools," he said. "The system is clearly moving forward."

Asked how proficiency just about 50% across the board could be a good story, Mr. Klein said, "It's a question of whether the glass is half empty or half full." In his opinion, he said, "it's clearly half full and getting fuller by the year."

Looking at the same number, the education historian Diane Ravitch scoffed, questioning how a 50% proficiency rate could be touted after four years of restructuring and $40 billion poured into the city's public schools. "You might say that it's Joel Klein and Michael Bloomberg's report card," she said. "They get 50 percent. Fifty percent is not a passing grade."

"That had an enormous impact," the schools chancellor, Joel Klein, said. Mr. Klein suggested the influx of so-called English-language learners could be behind the fall-off in elementary reading scores. There are roughly 1.1 million students in the city's public schools.

Subtracting out the English-language learners, Mr. Klein uncovered a more promising picture, with gains in almost every grade level. Slice the statistics that way, and 46% of eighth-graders read at or above standard. Those scores had previously been stagnant at around 35%.

Mr. Klein attributed the gains to reforms made beginning with mayoral control in 2002, when those eighth graders were in fourth grade. "Students are coming more prepared to the middle schools," he said. "The system is clearly moving forward."

Asked how proficiency just about 50% across the board could be a good story, Mr. Klein said, "It's a question of whether the glass is half empty or half full." In his opinion, he said, "it's clearly half full and getting fuller by the year."

Looking at the same number, the education historian Diane Ravitch scoffed, questioning how a 50% proficiency rate could be touted after four years of restructuring and $40 billion poured into the city's public schools. "You might say that it's Joel Klein and Michael Bloomberg's report card," she said. "They get 50 percent. Fifty percent is not a passing grade."

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