69´«Ă˝

Assessment

Despite NCLB Law’s Emphasis on 69´«Ă˝ and Math, National Test Scores Show Little Change

By Lynn Olson & Kathleen Kennedy Manzo — October 20, 2005 8 min read
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If the No Child Left Behind Act is raising student achievement, it’s not conclusive based on the latest results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress: 69´«Ă˝ achievement has remained essentially flat over the past two years, while gains in math have slowed.

In reading, the average national scores have risen just a point for 4th graders since 2003—to 219 on a 500-point scale—and dropped a point for 8th graders, to 262, according to the 2005 NAEP results, released here Oct. 19. In fact, reading scores for both grades have stayed about the same since 1992, the first year data were available.

Math scores, which have climbed dramatically since 1990, when students first took the current version of the NAEP test in that subject, rose again in 2005, but more modestly this time. Fourth graders have posted a 3-point gain since 2003, reaching a national average of 238, while the average score for 8th graders has risen a point, to 279. Some 36 percent of 4th graders and 30 percent of 8th graders were rated “profi-cient” on the 2005 math test. Larger proportions than in the past also demonstrated at least basic skills: 80 percent of 4th graders and 69 percent of 8th graders.

In July, U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret S. Spellings pointed to gains on what is called the long-term-trend NAEP as “proof that No Child Left Behind is working.” That exam, based on a much smaller sample of youngsters nationwide, showed a 9-point gain in math scores and a 7-point gain in reading scores for 9-year-olds, as well as a 5-point gain in math scores for 13-year-olds, from 1999 to 2004. Ms. Spellings said the Oct. 19 results “confirm that we are on the right track with No Child Left Behind.”

The newly released results, for a much larger sample of students—660,000 nation-wide—also show an upward trend since 2000 in both mathematics and reading in grade 4 and in math in grade 8. But they also show that progress has slowed or stagnated in the past two or three years, when the No Child Left Behind law might have been expected to have an impact.

The federal measure, which President Bush signed into law in January 2002, is designed to drive broad gains in student achievement, with particular emphasis on reading and math. The NAEP tests provide what experts consider the most reliable national picture of student achievement in core subjects. The national assessment also provides state-level results.

Minority Gains

In a telephone briefing for reporters, Secretary Spellings highlighted as particularly encouraging a 2-point gain in reading among African-American 4th graders between 2003 and 2005, from 198 to 200, and a 3-point gain among Hispanic 4th graders, from 200 to 203. “I’m very pleased that we’re making steady progress, which is driven by increased progress by Hispanic and African-American students, which is the whole point of No Child Left Behind,” she said.

Just how much to celebrate a few points’ gain, however, is open to debate. While the differences in test results between generally lower-scoring black and Hispanic students and their generally higher-scoring white peers narrowed by a point or 2 from 2003 to this year, depending on the grade and subject, the minority students are still more than 20 points behind. Though the new NAEP math results are “an affirmation that much of what we are doing is working,” said Cathy L. Seeley, the president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, “the results for minority students and children in poverty remain unacceptably low.”

At a Washington press conference held to release the results, Grover J. Whitehurst, the acting commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, the arm of the U.S. Department of Education that oversees NAEP, said: “If we could eke out a 2-point change each year [for minority youngsters] over a 15-year period, the gap that existed at the beginning of that period would essentially be erased.”

Middle School Dip

Yet based on the current rate of improvement on NAEP, the No Child Left Behind Act’s goal that all children will be proficient on state tests in math and reading by 2013-14 appears unlikely. Even assuming that what counts for “proficient” in many states is closer to the “basic” achievement level on NAEP, the proportion of students at or above basic budged by only a few percentage points between 2003 and 2005 at most. Currently, 36 percent of 4th graders and 27 percent of 8th graders still score below basic in reading.

“I think it does show us that we’re going to need to accelerate our progress at all grade levels and with all kids if we’re to meet those goals,” said Ms. Spellings in the Oct. 19 telephone briefing with the news media after the release. “We actually won’t do it, if we don’t think we can do it.”

She also argued that the federal law has yet to be implemented fully; for example, states must test students annually in reading and math in grades 3-8 and at least once in high school starting this school year. And the law’s 69´«Ă˝ First investments in grades K-2 will take time to affect results in the upper grades, the secretary said.

Timothy Shanahan, a professor of education at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the president-elect of the International 69´«Ă˝ Association, agreed that 69´«Ă˝ First hits a relatively small proportion of schools, primarily those that are low-income and low-achieving. The $1 billion-a-year program is supposed to support enhanced research-based reading instruction. “Until we actually get some data out of those schools, I think you’d have to say that the jury is still out on 69´«Ă˝ First,” Mr. Shanahan said.

“The broader question of NCLB is a little different because that is clearly something that’s supposed to be hitting everybody,” he added. “Clearly, we should start to see some impact of that; the issue is how quickly should you see it?

“If you just look at the overall scores, particularly at the 4th grade level,” Mr. Shanahan continued, “there’s absolutely no doubt that the scores are up a bit, but it’s a small bit.”

But Darvin M. Winick, the chairman of the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for the congressionally mandated NAEP, said, “The expectation for rapid change in a large, complex organization such as public education probably should be moderate.”

“Anticipating in two-year intervals a lot of change is probably unrealistic,” he said at the press conference.

While the nation might be on a path of elementary school improvement, the reading performance of 8th graders was clearly troubling, however. “As a former English teacher, I am distressed by what I see in reading,” said John H. Stevens, the chairman of the governing board’s reporting and dissemination committee. “I think the situation is we stop working explicitly on reading skills and start focusing on content” after elementary school, he said in an interview. 69´«Ă˝ need to work more explicitly on reading skills all the way through high school and across the disciplines, Mr. Stevens argued.

Mr. Shanahan also said efforts can’t stop with the early grades. “If you only focus your reform attention in reading on the lower grade levels, that will not necessarily translate into higher achievement across the board.”

“I wish I could just blame the policymakers,” he continued. “There are a lot of people in the field who pushed very hard for improvements in the primary grades with the assumption that would just fix it.”

State Differences

On the 2005 assessment, the state-level results were mixed, but several states showed some returns on their investment in improved instruction and increased accountability measures, according to Mr. Winick of the NAEP governing board.

“If you look at the state-by-state data, the states that are pressing for results tend to get them,” he said. “Every time you look, they have more dramatic gains in math and reading.”

That was the case particularly at the 4th grade level, where Texas saw a 4-point gain in reading and a 5-point increase in math. Idaho and Pennsylvania also achieved higher scores in that grade for both subjects. In all, seven states attained statistically significant increases in reading scores among 4th graders, while seven saw their scores drop among 8th graders. On the math test, more than 30 states, including Texas, showed some improvement on the 4th grade test, while seven did so for 8th graders.

This year, for the first time, the NAEP reports also include information on the changing student racial and ethnic composition of states between 1992 and 2005. “As our country becomes increasingly diverse, so, too, do students populations, which vary both between states and over time,” NAGB’s Mr. Stevens said. “As a result, achievement data and trends should be interpreted as a reflection of changing demographics as well as school effectiveness.”

As an example, he noted in the past 15 years, the size of the Hispanic student population has more than doubled nationally. “Comparisons without that kind of analysis are mostly unfair and really do not reveal what’s going on,” Mr. Stevens said.

“It’s notable that as our student population has become increasingly diverse, the scores have continued to rise,” Secretary Spellings argued.

The national assessment, which was first administered in 1969, also has become more inclusive over time, offering some accommodations to students with disabilities or limited English fluency who need them. That has led to questions about how to interpret the results, particularly when the percent of such students excluded from the exams varies across states.

Delaware, Louisiana, and Virginia, for instance, excluded 10 percent or more of their 4th graders with disabilities from the 2005 reading exam, while New Mexico and Texas excluded 7 percent and 6 percent, respectively, of their students still learning English.

While previous analyses have found only a “slight statistical relationship between different exclusion rates across states and scores at the aggregate level” in any given year, said Mr. Whitehurst of the Department of Education, “states who raise their exclusion rates tend to have scores that go up on the next assessment, and states who lower their exclusion rates tend to have scores that go down.”

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