#032 Is Your Child's School Successful? How do you know?
#032 Is Your Child's School Successful? How do you know?

#032 Is Your Child's School Successful? How do you know?

Gareth

46 min
Kids
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<p>What comes to mind when someone says, "Oh, that's a really good school?" Is it students all sitting in their seats, diligently taking notes? Is it passing along students who can read and do math on grade level? Or is it graduating students who can immediately join the workforce, or go to college, or interact with others with empathy and respect? Common sense would say a combination of all of those things signals a successful product of K-12 education. But is that what schools are actually producing?</p> <p>For those of us who gauge success as producing graduating students who are at least proficient in reading and math scores, there's not a lot of success here. The National Assessment for Educational Progress <a href="https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/" target="_blank">(NAEP)</a>, a congressionally mandated test, has been testing 4th, 8th, and 12th-grade students since 1969. The test routinely covers reading and math but has also tested history, science, and geography. It breaks down proficiency levels as advanced, proficient, basic, and below basic. (To see what skills each level encompasses, click <a href="https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/reading/achieve.aspx#2009_grade4">here for reading</a> and <a href="https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/mathematics/achieve.aspx#grade12">here for math</a>. I'm not sure I'd test proficient in math! ๐Ÿ˜ณ) The last year the NAEP tested the 12th grade was 2019, before Covid.</p> <p>The news reports talk about how test scores have fallen after Covid, but what they don't emphasize is the dismal levels they were at before Covid. The 2019 test found only <a href="https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/reading/nation/achievement/?grade=4">37% of 12th-grade students nationwide </a>were either advanced or proficient in reading. For comparison, in 2015, 12th-graders were at this very same percentage. Nothing has changed. And what about the rest of the students? Why are we not talking about the other 63% who are not proficient? Look at it this way, would you buy a car from a company wh

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Jax_92

#032 Is Your Child's School Successful? How do you know? - Listen Free | WowFM