NY State Presentation of 2013 ELA and Math Test Scores
NY State Presentation of 2013 ELA and Math Test Scores
August 2013
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A New Baseline
This years grades 3-8 ELA and math proficiency percentages should not be compared directly with prior-year results. Unlike prior years, proficiency is now based on the Common Core a more demanding set of knowledge and skills necessary for 21st century college and careers. These results present a new and transparent baseline from which we can measure student progress and preparedness for college and careers. School and district leaders are urged to be thoughtful to ensure these proficiency results have no negative impact on students, schools, districts, or teachers. No new districts will be identified as Focus Districts and no new schools will be identified as Priority Schools based on 2012-13 assessment results.
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Therefore, the state-provided growth scores resulted in similar percentages of educators earning each rating category* in 2012-13 compared to 2011-12.
*Highly Effective, Effective, Developing, Ineffective
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6.7%
7.0%
77.2% 10.1%
76.3% 10.8%
6.0%
5.9%
Whether the measure is national or New York-specific, there is converging evidence about student preparedness for college and careers.
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% Graduating All Students American Indian Asian/Pacific Islander Black 74.0 58.5 81.6 58.1 All Students American Indian Asian/Pacific Islander Black
Hispanic
White English Language Learners Students with Disabilities
57.8
85.7 34.3 44.7
Hispanic
White English Language Learners Students with Disabilities
15.7
48.5 7.3 4.9
*Students graduating with at least a score of 75 on Regents English and 80 on a Math Regents, which correlates with success in first-year college courses.
Source: NYSED Office of Information and Reporting Services
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32%
33%
41%
26%
9%
24%
31%
Grade 8 Level 4
8
4%
44%
31%
30%
40%
20%
23%
5%
Grade 8 Level 4
9
7%
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Source: Levine, Arthur. The Suburban Education Gap. The Wall Street Journal. 2012. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444223104578041181255713360.html
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Implementing Common Core standards and developing curriculum and assessments aligned to these standards to prepare students for success in college and the workplace Building instructional data systems that measure student success and inform teachers and principals how they can improve their practice in real time Recruiting, developing, retaining, and rewarding effective teachers and principals Turning around the lowestachieving schools
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SETTING PERFORMANCE STANDARDS FOR COMMON CORE ASSESSMENTS Common Core Standards / CCR NY Educator Judgment Cut Scores
Standard Setting Determination
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Research-based Methodology
Item Development, Item Review, Final Form Review These panels are informing: College and Career Ready Determinations Test specifications, policies, and items Policy-level and grade-level performance level descriptions
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K-12 ELA and Math Teachers BOCES ELL and SwD specialists Higher Education K-12 Administration
Days 1 to 4
95 panelists followed a research-based protocol: Worked in four groups (ELA 3-5, ELA 6-8, Math 3-5, or Math 6-8). Defined expectations based on what students should know and be able to do at each grade according to the demands of the Standards. Reviewed the New York tests and external benchmark data (NAEP, SAT, PSAT/NMSQT). Viewed test questions in easiest-to-hardest order and made individual panelist judgments on where to place the cut scores for proficiency levels. Discussed rationales for their judgments and viewed impact data for each of four rounds of review.
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Day 5
34 of the 95 panelists remained and worked in two groups (ELA 3-8 or Math 3-8) Panelists reviewed the results across all six grade levels to ensure that the results made sense from a broader perspective. Panelists were allowed to make small adjustments only (within +/- 4 raw score points). Adjustments were required to be grounded in the expectations of the Common Core standards. Commissioner was presented with both sets of recommendations those from Day 4 and from Day 5. The results of Day 4 and Day 5 differed minimally.
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In ELA, 31.1 percent of students in grades 3-8 across the State met or exceeded the proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4), reflecting a new baseline relative to the Common Core Standards
The vertical lines indicate years where changes were implemented. In 2010, cut scores changed, but the standards and scale remained the same. In 2013, the standards, scale, and cut scores changed to measure the Common Core.
31.1%
Grades 3-8
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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In each grade level statewide, the majority of students performed at NYS Levels 1 or 2 in ELA
41.6%
21.7%
16.0% 13.6%
34.1% 35.7%
28.8%
9.3%
Grade 3
3.7%
Grade 4 Level 1
Grade 5 Level 2
8.5%
Grade 6 Level 3
Grade 7 Level 4
Grade 8
10.3%
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3.2 percent of English language learners met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in grades 3-8
Beginning in 2013-14, data will be available for students who received ELL services at any time prior to test administration.
80.1%
55.9%
36.4%
55.7%
58.2%
14.3%
12.6%
11.7%
3.2%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
33.0%
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5 percent of students with disabilities met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in grades 3-8
84.2%
60.2%
39.3%
59.9%
62.4%
15.2%
14.5%
15.5%
5.0%
General Education
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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35.9%
The ELA proficiency results (NYS Levels 3 or 4) for race/ethnicity groups across grades 3-8 reveal the persistence of the achievement gap
64.3%
64.8%
68.9%
Asian
Black
Hispanic
White
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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31.1%
Across all race/ethnicity groups in grades 3-8, girls performed better than boys on the ELA proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4)
55.6%
45.3%
45.1%
19.8%
20.5%
24.9%
Asian
Black
12.6%
Hispanic
14.9%
17.8%
White
Females
34.9%
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Across grades 3-8, lower-need communities continued to outperform other areas of the State in ELA proficiency (NYS Levels 3 or 4)
91.8%
84.2%
68.8%
70.9%
56.9%
76.3%
35.0%
26.4%
Large City
10.4%
Urban-Suburban
17.7%
Rural
22.7%
Average
Low
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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31.1%
A smaller percentage of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in the Big 5 cities than statewide.
77.4% 39.2% 37.8% 40.7% 53.2% 52.8% 55.1% 16.4%
Total Public
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68.8%
54.4%
56.0%
52.7%
65.2%
26.4%
11.5%
Buffalo 2009
5.4%
Syracuse 2012
8.7%
Yonkers 2013
31.1%
English Language Arts 2009-2013 Charter Schools Comparisons Grades 3-8 Combined Percentage of Students Scoring at Levels 3 and 4
76.1%
77.4%
53.2%
43.0%
43.9%
49.2%
52.8%
55.1%
Charter Schools
23.1%
Total Public
31.1%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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In math, 31 percent of grades 3-8 students across the State met or exceeded the proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in math, reflecting a new baseline relative to the Common Core Standards
The vertical lines indicate years where changes where implemented. In 2010, cut scores changed, but the standards and scale remained the same. In 2013, the standards, scale, and cut scores changed to measure the Common Core.
86.4%
61.0%
63.3%
64.8%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
31.0%
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In each grade level statewide, the majority of students performed at NYS Levels 1 or 2 in math
39.8%
40.5%
35.4%
34.7%
38.0%
34.3%
30.4%
28.9%
30.3%
21.9%
23.4%
21.0%
28.9%
20.3%
31.2% 7.4%
41.3% 20.2%
12.9%
18.1%
12.3%
8.9%
12.5%
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5
Grade 6
Grade 7
Grade 8
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Level 4
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7.2%
9.8 percent of English language learners met or exceeded the math proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in grades 3-8
Beginning in 2013-14, data will be available for students who received ELL services at any time prior to test administration.
67.1%
87.9%
34.4%
63.5%
65.9%
67.2%
30.7%
32.3%
9.8%
32.7%
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2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
7 percent of students with disabilities met or exceeded the math proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in grades 3-8
91.5%
58.4%
67.7%
70.0%
71.5%
24.6%
26.9%
28.5%
7.0%
General Education
35.5%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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The math proficiency results (NYS Levels 3 or 4) for race/ethnicity groups across grades 3-8 reveal the persistence of the achievement gap
75.0%
79.5%
81.6%
86.4% 38.1%
Asian
Black
15.3%
Hispanic
18.4%
20.9%
White
Total Public
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
Results on the math proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in grades 3-8 were relatively comparable for girls and boys across race/ethnicity groups
60.8%
59.8%
16.4%
Asian
Black
14.2%
18.2%
Hispanic
18.7%
20.2%
21.5%
Females
37.5%
White
38.6%
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Across grades 3-8, lower-need communities continued to outperform other areas of the State in math proficiency (NYS Levels 3 or 4)
91.1%
81.8%
81.0%
85.8%
64.7%
32.3%
29.6%
Large City
9.0%
UrbanSuburban
15.1%
Rural
19.2%
Average
Low
Total Public
31.0%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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A smaller percentage of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the math proficiency standard (NYS Levels 3 or 4) in the Big 5 cities than statewide.
81.8%
73.8%
58.2%
63.3%
63.4%
29.6%
9.6%
Buffalo
Rochester
5.0%
Syracuse
Yonkers
14.5%
Total Public
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
31.0%
Mathematics 2009-2013 Charter School Comparisons Grades 3-8 Combined Percentage of Students Scoring at Levels 3 and 4
89.4%
68.7%
86.4%
64.6%
59.9%
31.3%
61.0%
63.3%
64.8%
Charter Schools
Total Public
31.0%
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
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6 Shifts in Mathematics
Focus Coherence Fluency Deep Understanding Applications Dual Intensity
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Resources for Professional Development
Parent and Family Resources
Most relevant and current information, and newest materials highlighted for easy access.
One-stop ___location for resources and materials to support implementation of the Regents Reform Agenda
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Curriculum Modules
Exemplary, comprehensive, optional, free High-quality, rigorous, deeply aligned to the Common Core Address needs of students performing above and below grade level, students with disabilities, and English language learners Include performance tasks and other assessments that measure student growth daily, weekly, at the end of each unit/module Ensure diversity of voices and perspectives in text selection Contain notes for teachers, templates, handouts, homework, problem sets, overviews Innovative creative commons license approach
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A New Baseline: Measuring Student Progress on the Common Core Learning Standards
August 2013
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