Ups and downs line test results
Marisa O’Neil
District high school students performed better than the state and
county average on this year’s exit exam, but there were some
startling results on other standardized test reports released Monday.
Districtwide, 85% of students passed the 2004 California High
School Exit Examination’s math and English language arts sections.
And though scores in some sections of the Standardized Testing and
Reporting program showed significant improvement, they also made some
large drops -- particularly for the district’s second-grade students
and Corona del Mar High School algebra students.
“The district got better overall,†Newport-Mesa Unified School
District Supt. Robert Barbot said. “But we need to take a look at our
strengths and weakness.â€
Corona del Mar High School had 98% of its students pass the exit
exam -- the most of any district school. In the other standardized
testing results, however, they showed large drops in some categories.
The state scores the standardized tests on a five-level system.
Advanced is the highest level, followed by proficient, basic, below
basic and far below basic. Students must achieve proficient or
advanced levels to meet the state’s goals.
The federal No Child Left Behind Act will require all students to
score proficient or above by 2014.
In Algebra I at Corona del Mar High School, 39% of freshmen scored
at proficient levels or higher in 2003, but only 11% did in 2004.
In 2003, 68% of sophomores tested as proficient in that class.
This year, none did.
“That to me is a real anomaly,†said Jaime Castellanos, assistant
superintendent of secondary education for the district. “We’ll have
to take a look at those significant [demographic] subgroups. It’s
hard to believe that from Corona del Mar [High School].â€
The district plans in the next two to three years to make
eighth-grade students take Algebra I, Castellanos said. Students
currently taking it in 10th grade might be those who struggle with
math anyway, he said.
“We’ll have to take a look at the standards,†he said. “We may
have to go back to the drawing board and see if there are any holes
and see where we’re missing the mark.â€
The Standardized Testing and Reporting results factor into the
state’s Academic Performance Index, which comes out later this month.
Because of the large drops at Corona del Mar High School, the school
may post lower API scores this year, he said.
Other high schools also showed mixed results -- but no drops as
significant as Corona del Mar’s.
The Standardized Testing and Reporting program encompasses data
from a variety of standardized tests, including the California
Achievement Tests and Sixth Edition Survey, or CAT/6, tests. This
year, only 38% of Newport-Mesa second-graders scored as proficient in
English, down from 42% in 2002-03. In math, 54% passed, down from 60%
last year.
“We need more information about why second grade hasn’t done as
well,†Barbot said. “We need to find out what needs to be corrected
and correct it.â€
The makeup of last year’s second-grade class could have something
to do with the drop off in performance, district spokeswoman Jane
Garland said. More English language learners in the district took the
test this year than last year, she said -- 4% more in second grade
and 7% more in fourth grade.
Second-graders who have lived in the district for a year, but not
yet learned the language completely, could have factored into the
lower scores, she said.
Fifth-grade students in the district showed the biggest overall
improvement, with 5% more meeting the goal in English. Third-grade
students showed improvement in math, but 4% fewer met performance
goals in English.
In English language arts, 49% of ninth-grade students, 46% of
sophomores and 39% of juniors met their goals.
Starting in 2006, all students must pass the California High
School Exit Exam to graduate from high school. They first take it in
their sophomore year and have four more opportunities to take it if
they don’t pass.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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