For years now the retention skills of American children have been dropping and the latest stats look even more disturbing..
National test scores for 13-year-olds released Wednesday showed setbacks in mastering basic skills, providing evidence that schools and students have not overcome the lost learning caused by the pandemic. The National Assessment of Educational Progress, which conducted the tests last fall, reported major drops of nine points in math scores and four points in reading from three years earlier, before the start of the pandemic, the Washington Post reports. The results sparked serious concern across the education field. “This is more than alarming,” said an educator who’s on the board that sets test policy, adding, “We really need to be concerned about what is happening here.”
The declines in what’s been called the nation’s report card put the average reading score back to where it was in 2004 and the average math score back to the 1990 level. In both subjects, scores dropped the most for students already at the bottom of the scale. Students of all races and ethnicities fell in math. But reading scores varied, with Black, multiracial, and white students posting declines while Hispanic, Asian, American Indian, and Alaska Native students pretty much held steady, per the Post. Scores fell 11 points for female students overall and 7 for male students, per CNN. Roughly 8,700 students in 460 schools took the test.
The drop in scores has been pronounced since the pandemic first disrupted schools, but student performance already was in decline, per the New York Times; the questions are designed to spot long-term trends. Action is needed, said a junior high school math teacher from Colorado and member of the governing board. Researchers and policy analysts should help identify the most effective methods for teachers and schools, said Mark Miller, who considers the situation urgent. “It’s like the alarm has gone off,” he said.
History and civics scores are at a record low.
Ignorant students make ignorant voters.
I blame local school boards….they spend more time worrying about bathrooms and what books are acceptable and less time on the quality of the student’s education.
I blame the voters for not caring about their children’s education enough to learn the issues other than some divisive crap.
School boards should not be a political position.
I Read, I Write, You Know
“lego ergo scribo”
Today’s crop of brats are indeed lazier, dumber and more disrespectful than any generation before and it is all because their parents are overly permissive and have given them the belief that they are privileged and that life owes them something they do not have to learn.
I will blame the parents as well for letting ignorance override knowledge. chuq
In the case of the conservatives, familial ignorance is already a given.
And that is tragically so very sad. chuq
It might be sad for somebody but it certainly is not sad for the rest of society — unless, of course, the conservawads are in power…in that case it is not only sad; it is tragic.
Then most of the states are tragic…..Red states that is. chuq
We have a similar situation here. The brightest kids are doing better than ever, the average kids are dropping well below average. During the pandemic lockdowns, far too many parents failed to properly supervise school work done at home, and a huge percentage of school kids essentially lost out on two years of learning. I doubt they will ever get those back.
Best wishes, Pete.
This survey was of 8th graders (middle school)….rich kids do not have to be tested. chuq