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New transition index shows school improvement
occurring too slowly
Kentucky schools are
improving too slowly, according to an analysis of state test
scores released today by three statewide
groups.
The analysis, presented
in a "Transition Index Report," was developed by the Council for
Better Education, the Kentucky Association of School Councils,
and the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence to monitor
school performance during the three years that Kentucky is
moving from the Commonwealth Accountability Testing System to a
system based on new state standards and testing. The new system
was mandated in legislation (Senate Bill 1) enacted by the 2009
General Assembly.
The Transition Index is
based on a formula similar to the one used in past years by the
Kentucky Department of Education to gauge school progress. The
partner groups applied the formula to state test scores for
2009, which were released today, along with those for 2007 and
2008. From the analysis, the groups conclude
that:
·
Elementary and middle school
mathematics results and high school writing have shown
important
improvement.
·
Reading
scores have been flat or declining
statewide.
·
Scores in
other subjects have been flat, declining or improving only
slowly.
Looking at combined
results for all subjects, the analysis
found:
·
56
percent of elementary schools have reached proficiency or are
improving at a rate that would take them to that mark by
2014.
·
44
percent of middle schools have reached proficiency or would
reach it by 2014 at the current pace of
growth.
·
Only 15
percent of high schools would reach proficiency by 2014 if
recent trends continue.
"An index provides the
big picture on whether schools' strategies are working with
kids," said Ronda Harmon, executive director of the Kentucky
Association of School Councils. "We see this transition project
as a way to help schools measure their progress until the new
2012 assessment begins." Harmon added that her organization
views the Transition Index project as a voluntary way for
educators, parents and others to "see the big picture" in
results from the Kentucky Core Content
Tests.
"Remember that our state is getting
ready to set even higher standards," said Daviess County
Superintendent Tom Shelton, president of the Council for Better
Education. "If
current improvement is too slow to reach existing standards,
there is great concern about how we will do when the new
college-ready standards come into play."
Cindy Heine, associate executive
director of the Prichard Committee, said the point of the report
is to let "everyone see the issues and work on moving
achievement to higher levels." Heine echoed Shelton’s thought on
Senate Bill 1, adding, "For all students to be ready for college
and workplace success, school improvement cannot wait for
2012. We all need
to be working on quicker progress in 2009 as well as in future
years."
The full report is
available at www.kasc.net, along with results
for each school and district in Kentucky. An additional report on
achievement gap trends will be released by the same groups on
October 7, 2007.
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