Newton's MCAS Results Slid During Pandemic

News

Newton MA

21 September, 2021

5:16 PM

Description

NEWTON, MA — Newly released results from the spring MCAS exams show more Newton students failing to meet expectations compared to their peers in the same grades who took the standardized tests before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education said Tuesday. The percentage of students receiving a score of "meeting expectations" or higher in math and English each dropped from 2019, the most recent previous year the test was given after the exams were skipped in 2020 amid the sudden pivot to remote learning. The largest drop-off in Newton was in 6th-grade math. The percentage of 6th graders who met or exceeded expectations was 59 percent, down from 77 in 2019. In math, the percentage of third through eighth grade students meeting or exceeding expectations fell from 73 percent in 2019 to 60 percent in 2021, while for the English language arts test, it dropped from 73 percent in 2019 to 70 percent in 2021. Read more: MCAS Results Show Slide In Scores During Pandemic There was a slight decline on the science tests, with 65 percent of fifth and eighth grade students meeting or beating expectations, versus 66 percent in 2019. There was also a slight drop for 10th graders in mathematics, with the percentage at least meeting expectations falling from 84 to 83 percent. Several grades showed an improvement in certain areas, including 4th grade and 10th grade English language arts. While teachers unions and some advocates have called for pausing use of the MCAS tests or eliminating their use as a graduation requirement, Gov. Charlie Baker on Monday said he would be "very aggressive about supporting the ongoing process of using diagnostic tools to ensure that kids are getting the basic education that they're entitled to." Families will receive their child's MCAS scores after Sept. 30, the education department said. The 2021 tests for third through eighth grades were shorter than usual, a factor the department said can cause individual student performance to vary. Materials from State House News Service were used in this report.

By:  view source

Discussion

By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.

/
Search this area