Giving Every Child a Fair Shot



America’s educators, students and families have produced historic progress in student outcomes across the nation in recent years, including reaching the highest high school graduation rate and lowest dropout rates in our history, and narrowing achievement and graduation gaps. States and districts that have led the way on school reform – including Tennessee, Kentucky, District of Columbia, and Denver – are seeing meaningful gains in student achievement. 

At the same time, some students are still denied an equal opportunity to succeed. Information on the performance of schools in each state is attached.  Nationally[1]:

·         Only four out of ten students attending the lowest-performing under-resourced high schools graduate on time, compared to an 87% graduation rate at all other high schools.

·         Between students in the nation’s lowest-performing 5% of elementary and middle schools and their peers in all other schools, there is a 31 percentage point gap in reaching grade-level proficiency in reading, and a 36 percentage point gap in math – in these lowest-performing schools, approximately two-thirds of students do not meet grade level standards. 

·         Nationwide, black and Hispanic fourth-graders are only half as likely as white students to be on grade level in math.

To accelerate our progress and ensure that it reaches every child, we must replace No Child Left Behind (NCLB) with a strong law that invests in what’s working and improves on what’s not. A new law should empower state and local decision makers – including school leaders, superintendents, and state officials – to develop their own systems for measuring and improving schools. It should push states to reduce testing without sacrificing clear, comprehensive information for parents and educators. And it should guarantee that steps are taken to help struggling students and schools.

Progress in Supporting College and Career-Readiness for All Students

Across the country, the hard work of America’s students and educators is paying off.  Our high school graduation rate is the highest ever reported, at 81%. Reading and math scores for fourth- and eighth-graders, across all student subgroups, have also increased, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).  More students are earning college degrees than ever before, and college enrollment of black and Hispanic students is up by more than 1 million students since 2008.

We are also seeing remarkable progress in states that have embraced bold action to prepare students for college and careers. For example, Kentucky was among the first states to adopt college- and career-ready standards.  It was also among the first to receive flexibility from the onerous, one-size-fits-all approach of NCLB in exchange for state-led reforms that raised expectations for every student and targeted resources to better support locally designed interventions in its lowest-performing schools. Kentucky is seeing results. Its graduation rate has increased in recent years to 87.5% – above the national average. And the percentage of high school graduates demonstrating success on the state’s measures for readiness in college and careers has nearly doubled.

By replacing NCLB with a more flexible law, we can continue and spread this kind of progress, while maintaining guardrails and protections for the most vulnerable students and directing federal resources toward what works in helping all children learn.  All children should have an equal opportunity, and all schools should have the support, funding, and resources they need to improve student outcomes. Federal policy should also recognize and reward high poverty schools and districts showing improvement based on progress and growth.

Much Work Remains to Ensure Equity and Opportunity for All Students

Despite the advances we’ve made, much work remains to ensure that every child in America has the opportunity that he or she needs and deserves.

While many low-performing schools – including those eligible for federal Title I funds to support students in poverty – are improving, and disadvantaged students in all schools are making progress, achievement data underscore how important it is that we continue to focus attention and resources on further helping these schools and students.

Crisis in the Lowest-Performing Schools: Even with the progress we’ve made, comparing the percentage of students nationwide performing at grade level (“proficient”) on state assessments in the lowest-performing 5% of Title I schools to all other public schools reveals vast gaps. For example, in our lowest performing 5% of elementary and middle schools, only 36% of students have reached grade level proficiency in reading compared to 67% in all other schools, a gap of 31 percentage points. The average gap in math proficiency is 36 percentage points. In other words, across the bottom 5% of Title I schools, about two-third of students do not meet grade level standards, but in all other schools, the reverse is true: two-thirds of students reach proficiency. In half of the states, the gap in math proficiency between the lowest-performing 5% of Title I schools and all other schools is more than 35 percentage points. These low-performing schools, approximately 3,000 elementary and middle schools serving more than a million students across the nation, are in crisis. 

Students who attend low performing high schools– Title I-eligible schools that are among the lowest-performing 5% of high schools or have graduation rates of less than 60% – graduate on time at an unacceptably low rate: 40%. Students in all other high schools graduate on time at a rate of 87%, an average rate nearly 50 percentage points higher than what we see in our lowest performing schools. And in over a dozen states, the graduation rate gap is even larger between the most challenged schools and all other high schools.

Disadvantaged Students in Other Schools:  While the crisis in low-performing schools contributes to significant achievement gaps in all states, we also know that disadvantaged students often fall behind in higher-performing schools. This includes low-income, black, and Hispanic students as well as students with disabilities or with limited English proficiency.  Often disadvantaged students in these schools are denied access to rigorous coursework, or are not held to the same high standards as other students.  While 37% of high school students are black or Hispanic, they represent only 27% of students enrolled in at least one Advanced Placement (AP) course, and a mere 18% of students receiving a qualifying score of 3 or above on an AP exam. That is why it is critical that we identify schools that are failing any group of students and expect tailored actions in those schools to improve student outcomes.

The most recent results of the NAEP show extremely large gaps in student achievement across categories of race, income, disability status, and English learner status in every state.  For instance, the percentage of fourth grade students scoring at or above proficient in math is well over 50% for white students. But for black students and Hispanic students, it is 18% and 26%, respectively. Some states have achievement gaps that exceed 40 percentage points. Federal policy must ensure that we provide support to narrow these gaps and improve low subgroup performance wherever it exists, even in our highest-performing schools.

Leading States and Districts Show the Potential for Progress 

While we have much work to do, we know it is possible for even the most challenged schools to change course and dramatically improve student achievement. Educators, local and state leaders, and other stakeholders are joining together to achieve success with results-driven, commonsense reforms to help ensure that every child in this country has the opportunity for a high-quality education. Through these efforts, states and local communities are:

·         Raising standards for teaching and learning to align with real expectations for success in college and careers;
·         Providing resources to adapt curriculum and instruction and to support great teaching;
·         Focusing on improving student outcomes, especially for those students who are furthest behind, by rejecting labels of failure based on a single snapshot and instead identifying schools that are showing improvement and closing achievement gaps, recognizing progress and growth over time, and responding accordingly;
·         Supporting dramatic change to accelerate student achievement, close gaps, and turnaround persistently low-performing schools that aren’t providing students with the education they need to succeed in college and a career.
·         Creating comprehensive systems to support great teaching and school leadership that integrate pre-service preparation, recruitment, induction, multi-measure evaluation systems, personalized development and feedback, and career advancement for all educators; and
·         Identifying innovative approaches to teaching and learning, based on evidence of what works and what can work better for their schools.

In states and school districts across the country, we are seeing remarkable progress. For example:

·         Closing Achievement Gaps in New Mexico: New Mexico has used flexibility from NCLB mandates to move from a pass/fail accountability system to a letter grade system that provides educators and parents with clear information about their schools’ performance, identifies students that are struggling, and targets greater supports toward those students. These reforms continue to emphasize accountability for student performance, including an enhanced focus on subgroup performance, while also encouraging schools to promote student success on indicators of college and career readiness. Last year the state saw an 8% increase in the number of AP exams taken, and a 5% increase in students scoring a 3 or better. Additionally, between 2009 and 2013, the achievement gaps between white and Hispanic students on the NAEP math assessment decreased by 4%.

·         Tennessee Achievement Rising for Students: Tennessee's “First to the Top” legislation created conditions for significant improvement in the state's public schools, setting clear educational priorities that helped it become the fastest improving state in the nation on the NAEP in 2013. These reforms were incentivized and supported by Tennessee’s $500 million Race to the Top grant, awarded in 2010. With the opportunity to invest in meaningful changes for kids, Tennessee raised expectations with higher standards and assessments, enhanced data systems to improve instruction, supported teachers and leaders with strategies to increase teacher effectiveness, and created a leading-edge local turnaround effort in the Achievement School District. For example, Tennessee fourth graders scored seven points higher in both subjects between the 2011 and 2013 NAEP, propelling the state from below average scores to a level of performance on par with national results. Results from the 2013 NAEP also showed progress among nearly all student demographic groups compared to 2009 data.

·         Higher Performance in Washington, DC: Bolstered by $75 million in Race to the Top funds, DC Public Schools, the Office of the State Superintendent for Education for the District, and 29 public charter organizations came together to support the implementation of college- and career-ready standards, build a stronger pipeline for effective teachers and leaders, and create conditions to support and attract those educators to DC’s persistently low-achieving schools. Results from the 2013 NAEP for DC Public Schools showed significant progress since 2011 in reading and math in both 4th and 8th grades – the most significant of all 21 districts that participated in the urban district NAEP. When viewed over a longer period of time, DC’s progress is even more pronounced. Since 2003, fourth grade scores have increased by 24 points on the NAEP math assessment, and eighth grade performance has increased by 17 points.

·         Ten Years of Growth in Denver: Over the last decade, Denver Public Schools has increased its on-time graduation rate for black and Hispanic students by 60%, increased college enrollment by 25%, and transformed from the district with the lowest rate of academic growth among major districts in Colorado to the highest for three years running. Denver accomplished these feats by raising expectations for students, overhauling its system for supporting educators, creating robust public school choice options for all families through a portfolio of traditional, charter, and innovation schools, introducing a student-based budget that leveled the funding playing field between schools, adopting a multi-measure school performance system, and investing in extensive community engagement and school climate initiatives.

President Obama’s Vision to Strengthen Our Schools
The President stands ready to work with Congress to advance a strong, bipartisan reauthorization of NCLB that helps to prepare all students for a globally competitive economy by:

·         Holding all students to high expectations that set them on a path to graduate from high school ready for success in college and a career.
·         Helping states ensure that all students succeed by targeting additional supports and interventions to the lowest-performing 5% of schools, schools that are not preparing groups of students for success, and high schools where too many students do not graduate on-time..
·         Working with states to reduce unnecessary testing to make sure teachers and students have maximum time for learning and to place sensible limits on testing, following the lead of states like New York, which limits the amount of time spent on state-mandated testing to no greater than 2% of total classroom time. This also means helping states and localities rigorously review their tests and eliminate those which are outdated, repetitive, low-quality, or unnecessary.
·         Encouraging states to allow for greater creativity in the classroom and more time for a balanced curriculum that includes arts, history, foreign languages, financial literacy, music, physical education and after school enrichment.
·         Investing in the expansion of high-quality preschool so that all children arrive in kindergarten ready to learn.
·         Making sure that all students have an equitable opportunity to succeed, including access to excellent resources - teachers and principals, rigorous coursework, and a continuum of community services and supports to meet the needs of the whole child.
·         Supporting teachers, principals, and paraprofessionals with better information, preparation, development, support and recognition, including additional resources, and opportunities to advance in their roles.  We should also ensure that the best teachers are serving the students who need them most.
·         Providing significant incentives and support for states, school districts and nonprofit organizations to innovate with new ideas and then identify and expand what’s working.

Conclusion

Our nation’s elementary and secondary schools are improving, with students learning more and with more students graduating. But, there is still much more that must be done to ensure that every child receives a quality education.  That’s why the President wants to replace NCLB with a new law that addresses the overuse of standardized tests, raises expectations for all students and schools, and gives every kid a fair shot at success.  Federal resources must be directed toward what works and toward those communities and students that need them most.  We cannot afford to ignore our lowest-performing 5% of schools, our schools where subgroups of students are not making progress year after year, and our high schools where far too many students do not earn a diploma.


Achievement Gaps in Our Lowest Performing Schools


Average Math Proficiency (%)
Average Reading and Language Arts Proficiency (%)
Average Graduation Rates (%)
State Name
Low Performing
All Other Schools
Gap
Low Performing
All Other Schools
Gap

Low Performing

All Other Schools


Gap
NATION
29
65
36
36
67
31
40
87
47
ALABAMA
47
83
36
65
88
23
52
83
31
ALASKA
51
77
27
53
83
30
37
83
46
ARIZONA
28
64
37
49
79
29
30
85
54
ARKANSAS
45
78
33
52
81
29
87
CALIFORNIA
26
62
36
26
58
32
44
89
45
COLORADO
27
67
39
35
72
38
30
86
56
CONNECTICUT
41
85
44
38
82
43
53
89
36
DELAWARE
28
72
44
39
75
36
45
83
38
D.C.
18
56
38
17
52
35
46
82
35
FLORIDA
24
59
34
26
60
34
19
83
64
GEORGIA
56
86
30
79
95
16
47
79
32
HAWAII
38
64
26
49
75
26
83
IDAHO
61
83
22
71
90
18
ILLINOIS
23
61
38
25
61
35
47
85
39
INDIANA
52
84
32
51
81
30
45
89
44
IOWA
50
78
28
44
73
29
45
92
46
KANSAS
41
81
40
49
87
38
37
89
52
KENTUCKY
17
44
27
22
51
29
75
91
16
LOUISIANA
36
72
36
41
73
32
52
80
28
MAINE
36
63
28
44
72
28
70
87
16
MARYLAND
40
81
41
55
86
31
45
87
42
MASSACHUSETTS
19
60
42
22
67
46
38
89
51
MICHIGAN
8
44
36
29
69
40
35
89
54
MINNESOTA
17
64
47
16
59
43
29
90
61
MISSISSIPPI
35
68
33
31
60
29
54
78
23
MISSOURI
15
56
41
17
54
37
45
90
45
MONTANA
18
69
51
41
86
45
54
85
31
NEBRASKA
28
73
45
43
80
37
73
90
18
NEVADA
26
62
35
35
64
29
59
79
20
NEW HAMPSHIRE
46
73
28
52
80
27
88
NEW JERSEY
34
77
44
24
69
45
46
89
43
NEW MEXICO
15
45
30
22
52
30
40
75
35
NEW YORK
3
34
30
5
34
28
44
85
42
NORTH CAROLINA
13
44
31
15
45
30
50
86
35
NORTH DAKOTA
37
80
43
31
76
45
56
91
35
OHIO
26
78
52
42
85
42
31
91
59
OKLAHOMA
32
71
39
34
70
36
37
87
50
OREGON
32
64
32
43
72
28
34
78
44
PENNSYLVANIA
31
77
46
28
71
44
46
89
44
RHODE ISLAND
26
65
38
37
75
38
48
83
35
SOUTH CAROLINA
40
74
34
49
78
29
32
80
48
SOUTH DAKOTA
18
76
58
29
76
47
37
89
52
TENNESSEE
16
53
37
14
52
38
49
88
40
TEXAS
44
77
32
54
80
26
39
91
52
UTAH
50
80
30
56
83
27
31
87
56
VERMONT
39
67
27
47
74
26
64
87
24
VIRGINIA
38
72
34
42
74
32
51
85
35
WASHINGTON
30
63
33
41
72
31
23
84
62
WEST VIRGINIA
26
47
21
26
49
23
26
49
23
WISCONSIN
12
51
40
6
37
31
6
37
31
WYOMING
48
80
32
48
76
28
48
76
28
           

Math and Reading/Language Arts Proficiency Data
Methodology: This analysis was conducted by (1) identifying the 5 percent of schools with the lowest school-wide math proficiency rates among all elementary/middle schools in the state, (2) identifying the Title I participating (Title I eligible for New York) schools with at least 30 valid scores among the bottom 5% of schools, (3) calculating the average proficiency rate among those schools, and (4) comparing that rate to the average rate among the schools with at least 30 valid scores not in the bottom 5%. The gap is defined as the average proficiency rate for the all students group among the other 95% of elementary/middle schools in the state minus the average proficiency rate for the all students group among Title I schools that are in the bottom 5% of all elementary/middle schools in the state. Gap calculations are based on unrounded numbers. Source: 2012­–13 Common Core of Data (Title I status, student membership) and 2012–13 EDFacts State Assessment Data
Graduation Rate Data
Notes: — Calculation not possible. The following states had no schools with ACGR data in the bottom 5 %, or with graduation rates below 60% that were eligible for Title I and had at least 30 students in the cohort: Arkansas and West Virginia. Idaho is not included because the state did not report ACGR data in 2012–13. Data for Hawaii and New Hampshire are suppressed to protect privacy.
Methodology: This analysis was conducted by (1) identifying the 5% of schools with the lowest school-wide adjusted cohort graduation rates among all schools with graduation rate data in the state or the schools with graduation rates lower than 60%, (2) identifying the Title I schools with at least 30 students in the cohort among those schools, (3) calculating the average graduation rate among those schools, and (4) comparing that rate to the average rate among the schools with at least 30 students in the cohort not in the bottom 5% and with graduation rates above 60%. The gap is defined as the average graduation rate for the all students group among the other high schools in the state minus the average graduation rate for the all students group among Title I high schools that are either  in the bottom 5% of all high schools in the state or  have graduation rates below 60%. Gap calculations are based on unrounded numbers.

Source: 2012­–13 Common Core of Data (Title I status, student membership) and 2012–13 EDFacts Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate data

NAEP – Percentage of 4th Grade Students At or Above Proficient in Math

 
All Students
White
Black
Hispanic
English Learners
Students with Disabilities
NATION
41
54
18
26
14
18
ALABAMA
30
40
9
23
7
10
ALASKA
37
52
22
33
8
14
ARIZONA
40
55
24
28
4
14
ARKANSAS
39
47
17
31
27
18
CALIFORNIA
33
53
18
19
8
11
COLORADO
50
62
22
30
14
17
CONNECTICUT
45
58
14
19
7
20
DELAWARE
42
57
21
27
8
17
FLORIDA
41
54
20
36
11
22
GEORGIA
39
53
20
33
11
16
HAWAII
46
60
34
43
8
7
IDAHO
40
44
20
6
15
ILLINOIS
39
51
16
25
7
16
INDIANA
52
58
21
39
30
21
IOWA
48
52
16
30
20
15
KANSAS
48
53
22
31
28
19
KENTUCKY
41
45
19
30
19
17
LOUISIANA
26
40
13
29
14
10
MAINE
47
49
25
13
20
MARYLAND
47
67
22
33
14
19
MASSACHUSETTS
58
68
26
32
19
29
MICHIGAN
37
45
10
22
13
16
MINNESOTA
59
67
32
34
17
31
MISSISSIPPI
26
42
11
27
14
MISSOURI
39
46
13
29
17
MONTANA
45
50
34
8
15
NEBRASKA
45
54
12
20
9
20
NEVADA
34
46
17
24
14
16
NEW HAMPSHIRE
59
60
34
20
26
NEW JERSEY
49
61
24
30
12
22
NEW MEXICO
31
48
24
26
9
11
NEW YORK
40
50
17
24
10
15
NORTH CAROLINA
45
60
22
35
15
21
NORTH DAKOTA
48
52
35
27
22
OHIO
48
56
16
36
30
22
OKLAHOMA
36
45
14
21
15
15
OREGON
40
46
16
20
10
19
PENNSYLVANIA
44
52
19
24
11
21
RHODE ISLAND
42
53
19
23
7
10
SOUTH CAROLINA
35
49
15
25
27
12
SOUTH DAKOTA
40
48
14
16
10
15
TENNESSEE
40
50
15
22
9
15
TEXAS
41
61
24
30
23
16
UTAH
44
51
16
2
18
VERMONT
52
53
18
VIRGINIA
47
56
22
32
14
23
WASHINGTON
48
56
29
24
9
24
WEST VIRGINIA
35
36
25
18
WISCONSIN
47
57
12
23
19
21
WYOMING
48
52
29
8
22
‡ Reporting standards not met. Sample size insufficient to permit a reliable estimate.
NOTE: The national and state/jurisdiction results include public school students only. Data for DoDEA schools are not in the national results. Black includes African American and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic origin. SD includes students identified as having either an Individualized Education Program or protection under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The results for English language learners and students with disabilities are based on students who were assessed and cannot be generalized to the total population of such students.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 2013 Mathematics Assessment.


NAEP – Percentage of 4th Grade Students At or Above Proficient in Reading

 
All Students
White
Black
Hispanic
Students with Disabilities

English Learners
NATION
34
45
17
19
11

7
ALABAMA
31
40
15
15
9
ALASKA
27
41
18
26
6
1
ARIZONA
28
42
19
17
7
1
ARKANSAS
32
38
15
24
9
17
CALIFORNIA
27
46
13
16
11
5
COLORADO
41
52
19
23
7
8
CONNECTICUT
43
53
15
20
15
4
DELAWARE
38
49
23
25
13
4
FLORIDA
39
49
20
36
20
10
GEORGIA
34
45
20
24
16
8
HAWAII
30
46
37
26
4
3
IDAHO
33
38
13
7
3
ILLINOIS
34
46
14
18
10
3
INDIANA
38
42
17
24
9
13
IOWA
38
41
15
23
5
11
KANSAS
38
44
17
20
13
17
KENTUCKY
36
39
15
29
11
11
LOUISIANA
23
35
11
20
6
10
MAINE
37
38
11
9
9
MARYLAND
45
60
22
35
28
18
MASSACHUSETTS
47
57
21
20
17
12
MICHIGAN
31
37
12
21
7
9
MINNESOTA
41
47
21
23
16
8
MISSISSIPPI
21
33
11
16
8
MISSOURI
35
41
13
30
12
6
MONTANA
35
39
23
9
2
NEBRASKA
37
43
16
22
10
7
NEVADA
27
39
14
16
6
6
NEW HAMPSHIRE
45
46
27
18
12
10
NEW JERSEY
42
52
22
21
14
9
NEW MEXICO
21
38
24
17
4
3
NEW YORK
37
47
21
21
9
4
NORTH CAROLINA
35
47
20
23
9
4
NORTH DAKOTA
34
37
23
29
11
OHIO
37
44
11
25
11
19
OKLAHOMA
30
36
14
17
8
6
OREGON
33
38
11
16
9
6
PENNSYLVANIA
40
47
20
19
13
5
RHODE ISLAND
38
48
18
17
5
4
SOUTH CAROLINA
28
39
13
21
7
18
SOUTH DAKOTA
32
38
17
19
11
5
TENNESSEE
34
40
15
21
9
2
TEXAS
28
46
18
17
9
9
UTAH
37
43
14
12
2
VERMONT
42
43
6
VIRGINIA
43
51
23
25
12
5
WASHINGTON
40
46
25
19
11
3
WEST VIRGINIA
27
28
14
9
WISCONSIN
35
41
11
17
9

9
WYOMING
37
41
24
10
9
‡ Reporting standards not met. Sample size insufficient to permit a reliable estimate.
NOTE: The national and state/jurisdiction results include public school students only. Data for DoDEA schools are not in the national results. Black includes African American and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic origin. SD includes students identified as having either an Individualized Education Program or protection under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The results for English language learners and students with disabilities are based on students who were assessed and cannot be generalized to the total population of such students.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 2013 Reading Assessment.


NAEP – Percentage of 8th Grade Students At or Above Proficient in Math

 
All Students
White
Black
Hispanic
Students with Disabilities
English Learners
NATION
34
44
14
21
8
5
ALABAMA
20
28
6
6
3
ALASKA
33
46
20
24
7
2
ARIZONA
31
45
19
19
4
ARKANSAS
28
34
9
20
6
12
CALIFORNIA
28
42
11
15
5
3
COLORADO
42
53
15
23
8
5
CONNECTICUT
37
48
13
12
13
1
DELAWARE
33
45
14
25
9
FLORIDA
31
40
14
24
10
5
GEORGIA
29
42
12
24
6
4
HAWAII
32
41
28
4
7
IDAHO
36
41
15
8
1
ILLINOIS
36
48
12
22
10
3
INDIANA
38
44
15
24
12
IOWA
36
40
10
13
4
5
KANSAS
40
47
18
24
5
11
KENTUCKY
30
33
11
17
7
1
LOUISIANA
21
31
9
25
3
MAINE
40
40
14
11
MARYLAND
37
51
18
30
10
6
MASSACHUSETTS
55
63
28
28
17
8
MICHIGAN
30
36
7
14
6
2
MINNESOTA
47
54
15
20
13
9
MISSISSIPPI
21
33
8
24
4
MISSOURI
33
38
12
23
8
MONTANA
40
44
28
9
NEBRASKA
36
42
8
17
8
5
NEVADA
28
40
12
17
5
2
NEW HAMPSHIRE
47
48
20
14
NEW JERSEY
49
58
24
34
13
NEW MEXICO
23
40
12
17
4
3
NEW YORK
32
44
12
14
7
4
NORTH CAROLINA
36
48
17
27
7
6
NORTH DAKOTA
41
44
25
8
OHIO
40
45
16
27
10
8
OKLAHOMA
25
29
9
15
5
6
OREGON
34
40
16
10
#
PENNSYLVANIA
42
49
13
16
12
5
RHODE ISLAND
36
45
15
15
6
2
SOUTH CAROLINA
31
43
13
23
5
23
SOUTH DAKOTA
38
45
10
27
5
2
TENNESSEE
28
33
10
21
5
TEXAS
38
53
21
29
10
7
UTAH
36
42
13
6
1
VERMONT
47
48
18
12
VIRGINIA
38
47
15
25
9
7
WASHINGTON
42
48
23
23
10
5
WEST VIRGINIA
24
24
13
2
WISCONSIN
40
47
8
19
9
8
WYOMING
38
40
26
9
‡ Reporting standards not met. Sample size insufficient to permit a reliable estimate.
NOTE: The national and state/jurisdiction results include public school students only. Data for DoDEA schools are not in the national results. Black includes African American and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic origin. SD includes students identified as having either an Individualized Education Program or protection under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The results for English language learners and students with disabilities are based on students who were assessed and cannot be generalized to the total population of such students.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 2013 Mathematics Assessment


NAEP – Percentage of 8th Grade Students At or Above Proficient in Reading

 
All Students
White
Black
Hispanic
Students with Disabilities
English Learners
NATION
34
44
16
21
8
3
ALABAMA
25
34
9
19
2
ALASKA
31
44
16
31
5
1
ARIZONA
28
42
16
17
4
ARKANSAS
30
37
12
21
7
12
CALIFORNIA
29
44
15
18
5
2
COLORADO
40
50
13
23
10
3
CONNECTICUT
45
54
22
24
13
1
DELAWARE
33
42
19
27
12
FLORIDA
33
42
19
27
13
3
GEORGIA
32
42
17
26
6
4
HAWAII
28
45
27
25
3
3
IDAHO
38
42
19
7
2
ILLINOIS
36
47
14
24
7
1
INDIANA
35
39
11
23
9
6
IOWA
37
39
15
21
5
2
KANSAS
36
42
13
20
5
13
KENTUCKY
38
41
15
30
9
5
LOUISIANA
24
35
12
26
5
MAINE
38
39
11
MARYLAND
42
53
25
30
16
MASSACHUSETTS
48
57
24
20
15
4
MICHIGAN
33
37
12
22
7
8
MINNESOTA
41
46
16
20
10
6
MISSISSIPPI
20
31
8
18
6
MISSOURI
36
41
13
32
8
MONTANA
40
45
28
9
NEBRASKA
37
43
16
19
6
NEVADA
30
43
18
19
6
2
NEW HAMPSHIRE
44
45
18
12
NEW JERSEY
46
55
26
31
15
NEW MEXICO
22
40
15
17
5
2
NEW YORK
35
46
18
19
8
1
NORTH CAROLINA
33
43
16
23
6
7
NORTH DAKOTA
34
37
23
5
OHIO
39
43
16
34
6
20
OKLAHOMA
29
35
14
18
6
6
OREGON
37
43
18
9
1
PENNSYLVANIA
42
49
17
17
12
3
RHODE ISLAND
36
44
18
18
10
3
SOUTH CAROLINA
29
39
14
24
5
10
SOUTH DAKOTA
36
40
22
5
TENNESSEE
33
38
16
28
8
TEXAS
31
49
17
20
8
2
UTAH
39
44
22
7
3
VERMONT
45
45
25
10
VIRGINIA
36
45
17
26
9
7
WASHINGTON
42
50
22
21
9
3
WEST VIRGINIA
25
25
23
2
WISCONSIN
36
42
9
23
6
9
WYOMING
38
40
25
7
‡ Reporting standards not met. Sample size insufficient to permit a reliable estimate.

NOTE: The national and state/jurisdiction results include public school students only. Data for DoDEA schools are not in the national results. Black includes African American and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic origin. SD includes students identified as having either an Individualized Education Program or protection under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The results for English language learners and students with disabilities are based on students who were assessed and cannot be generalized to the total population of such students.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 2013 Reading Assessment.

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