Local schools post gains in test scores
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District showed gains in most of its
standardized test scores this year, with English and mathematics
scores rising even as high school science scores took a distinct
drop.
District administrators hailed the scores as a sign of progress,
noting that schools showed growth in English and math at every grade
level and that some schools more than doubled their percentages of
proficient and advanced scores from a year ago.
“The magic of it all, the secret, is hard work -- making sure
standards are taught at every grade level,” said Supt. Robert Barbot.
“As we’ve all learned, it’s just a lot of hard work and
concentration.”
The state Dept. of Education released the 2005 results Monday
morning for both the Standardized Testing and Reporting program and
the California High School Exit Exam. Newport-Mesa outperformed the
state on both, with 76% of students passing both the English and math
sections on the high school exit exam. The state averages were 65%
for English and 63% for math.
In addition, Newport-Mesa surpassed the state standardized testing
results at every grade level in English, history and science, and at
nearly all grade levels in math.
Some of the individual schools’ scores also marked breakthroughs.
Those making the largest bounds in 2004-05 were Paularino Elementary
and Killybrooke Elementary, two schools in less affluent areas of
Costa Mesa.
Paularino’s percentage of second-graders scoring as proficient or
advanced on the English test jumped from 30% in 2004 to 62% this
year. Killybrooke had the district’s highest increase in math for its
fifth-graders, with the number rising from 14% to 46%.
In another positive sign, Newport-Mesa made up some of its losses
from the year before. In 2003-04, the district saw decreases in both
math and English scores for second-graders, and staggering drops
among Corona del Mar High School algebra students. This year, the
second-grade scores rose close to levels from two years ago, while
Corona del Mar posted slightly higher algebra marks.
Barbot said that two possible reasons for Newport-Mesa’s improved
scores this year were the implementation of a Houghton-Mifflin
language arts assessment program in elementary schools, and an effort
by administrators to get more classified staff involved in the tests.
Bus drivers, cafeteria workers and other employees served as proctors
this year, with some even making breakfast for the test takers.
“It’s hard to measure the impact, but it certainly had one,”
Barbot said. “A lot of the kids said, ‘Even the custodian and the
office lady were telling me how important it is to learn this
stuff.’”
The only blemishes on Newport-Mesa’s record this year were its
high school science scores, nearly all of which stayed the same or
dropped from the previous year. The number of ninth-graders scoring
proficient or above on chemistry fell sharply from 84% to 65%;
eleventh-grade biology had a similar drop, from 72% to 53%.
Peggy Anatol, Newport-Mesa’s director of assessment, attributed
the decreases to a much larger number of students taking high school
science classes this year. Ninth-grade chemistry, offered only at
Costa Mesa High School, had only 13 students last year; this year,
the class doubled to 26. Similarly, enrollment in 11th-grade biology
across the district leapt from 186 students in 2003-04 to 274 this
year.
Still, Anatol admitted, the declining percentages were a concern
to the district.
“More kids took it, so you have more students moving into biology,
but we still need to take a look at why a great majority didn’t
become proficient or advanced,” she said.
In addition to the results just released, Newport-Mesa has two
milestones remaining this year with regard to standardized test
scores. On Aug. 31, the No Child Left Behind report card will
announce which schools in the district made “adequate yearly
progress.” And on Sept. 13, the government will identify Title I
schools, a label designated for sites that do not make adequate
progress in the same subject for two years in a row.
California’s standardized tests, held in April and May, rate
students in grades two through 11 on English, math, science and
history. The standardized testing program compiles data from the
California Standards Tests, California Achievement Tests and other
tests, ranking students in five categories: advanced, proficient,
basic, below basic and far below basic. The federal No Child Left
Behind Act mandates that all children test proficient or above by
2014.
According to figures released Monday by State Supt. of Public
Instruction Jack O’Connell, 40% of California’s second- through
11th-graders scored proficient or above in English this year, 38% in
math. Both numbers were slight increases from the year before.
Newport-Mesa, a relatively affluent district, has routinely scored
higher than the state average on the standardized tests. However,
while every site in Newport-Mesa made a gain on at least one test
this year, the numbers still showed a disparity between schools in
Newport Beach and east Costa Mesa and their less affluent neighbors
on the west side. The lowest-scoring site in the district, Rea
Elementary, managed no higher than 24% on any test, while many of the
elementary schools across town peaked in the 80s and 90s.
“Every school is across-the-board improved, but ‘improve’ is a
journey,” Barbot said. “We’ve gotten from A to B, but now we have to
get to C. Until every child everywhere has equal opportunity and is
able to achieve at the level they’re capable, we’re not going to be
satisfied.”
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