Wednesday, January 26, 2011

www.BestEssayHelp.com | NY kids lag in science

The state's fourth-graders scored slightly lower than the national average on the latest science assessments, while eighth-graders here scored on par with the rest of the nation, new data show.

Racial achievement gaps were evident in both grades in the state, and the gap among eighth-graders was significantly higher than the nation as a whole.

The results on the 2009 National Assessment of Educational Progress showed 30 percent of the state's fourth-graders scoring proficiently -- compared to 32 percent nationally -- and 31 percent of eighth-graders passing the proficiency mark.

The test, which is not comparable to past results because it has been revised since it was last administered in 2005, is considered the gold standard.

It sets a high bar for passing.

Among the state's differences with the nation, New York's black eighth-graders scored 41 points lower than white students -- on a 300-point scale -- compared to a gap of 36 points in the country overall.

White eighth-graders here scored 164 points on average on the exam.

The state's Hispanic eighth-graders scored 39 points lower than white students on average, whereas nationally, that difference was a narrower gap of 30 points.

In addition, the scores of high-poverty students in New York were 33 points lower than those of students whose families aren't considered low income -- a margin that was 5 points greater than the national average.

While those same gaps existed for New York's fourth-graders, they were not significantly different from the gaps seen in the nation as a whole.

Source: NY Post

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