Many students pass state tests, fail federal ones
The Associated Press
3.03.2006
By Ben Feller Tucson, Arizona | Published: http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/118371
WASHINGTON — The nation's students do glaringly worse on a tough federal
test than they do on state exams in reading and math, raising doubts about
how much kids are learning.
The number of children who were proficient or better on state exams was
often solid, if not lofty, in 2005. States have wide latitude in deciding
what proficiency means.
But on the National Assessment of Educational Progress — the gold-standard
measure of achievement in the United States — most states don't come close
to matching up, a new analysis shows.
The performance gap was often enormous. The number of fourth-graders and
eighth-graders who scored proficient or better on state tests was often 30,
40 or 50 percentage points lower on the federal exam — the one the president
and Congress use to chart the nation's progress.
The size of that discrepancy raises questions about whether states are
setting lower standards. Congress, in fact, has required every state to take
part in the federal testing for that very reason — as a way to expose states
that otherwise report rosy achievement.
The Education Trust, a nonprofit think tank that tracks state compliance
with the No Child Left Behind law, released the comparison of test scores in
a report on Thursday.
"There ought to be questions about whether state standards are preparing
students for the challenges of college, work and the real world," said Daria
Hall, senior policy analyst at the Education Trust.
Under President Bush's No Child Left Behind law, all children must be
proficient in reading and math by 2014.
But the states define what proficient means, and their expectations for
students, their tests and their passing scores vary widely. States have a
huge stake in the scores on their own exams, because they determine whether
schools make enough progress to avoid federal penalties.
The federal test is supposed to be a benchmark. But some state officials say
the federal standard of proficient — competency over challenging subject
matter — is too high.
Still, some of the test-score gaps within states were huge:
● In Mississippi, 89 percent of fourth-graders were proficient or better in
reading on the state test. On the federal test, only 18 percent were.
● In Colorado, 89 percent of fourth-graders were proficient or better in
math on the state test. On the federal test, 39 percent were.
● In North Carolina, 88 percent of eighth-graders were proficient or better
in reading on the state test. On the federal test, 27 percent were.
● In West Virginia, 71 percent of the eighth-graders were proficient or
better in math. On the federal test, 18 percent were.
In a few cases, students performed higher on the federal test than the state
test.
"It makes you question whether the definition of 'proficiency' any place is
anchored in real-world demands," said Michael Cohen, president of Achieve, a
nonprofit organization dedicated to helping states raise academic standards.
Cohen said the new data will give even more urgency to states that are
working together to make their standards more connected with what colleges
and employers want.
One factor is unlikely to change. The state tests have consequences for
schools. The federal test does not. So even big shortfalls on the federal
test may not force much action.
"We specifically pushed for all 50 states to participate in (the national
test) to shed some light on state assessments," said Education Department
spokeswoman Susan Aspey. "We hope states take a good, hard look at this data
and use it to help the millions of kids who aren't yet at grade level."
In charting performance on state and federal tests, the Education Trust
compared students within the same grade, or at least within a one-grade
difference.
Overall, the analysis of state exams found states made progress in
elementary school in raising achievement and reducing test-score gaps
between white and minority students. But the progress was much more mixed in
middle school and high school.
On StarNet: Find out how a school did on the AIMS,
Stanford 9 and other standardized tests at
azstarnet.com/education
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