wdbj7.com/news/wdbj7-virginia-releases-sol-results-20120814,0,4424367.story
WDBJ7 Web Staff
9:29 PM EDT, August 14, 2012
ROANOKE, Va.
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It's the day teachers and students either wait hopefully for or dread.
Standards of Learning test results for the past school year came in Tuesday. For math, a new test has seen some scores go way down.
Let's just jump right into the numbers and look at what tests have suffered most this past year compared with 2010-2011.
Statewide for 3rd grade math saw a 27 percent drop in the pass rate. In Roanoke city and Roanoke County the dropoff was about the same.
For seventh graders in Virginia, the pass rate dropped 19 points to 58 percent. In Roanoke city, only 44 percent of students passed the math test. Roanoke County nearly doubles that rate at 86 percent.
Lastly is high school algebra 1, the pass rate is down to three quarters across the Commonwealth,
in Roanoke city it's at 59 percent. Even though it's a failing grade, right now the glass is half full.
"I do endorse all the things that the state is doing to increase the rigor in mathematics," says Roanoke City Schools superintendent Rita Bishop. She credits teachers and students getting prepared, otherwise the results could have been worse.
"I make no bones that I was terrified, would be the best word, about what we were facing," she says.
Roanoke County saw results go down, but overall scores were closer to the state average.
"In all but one we exceeded the state average by six points and that other test we were right at the state average so we feel like we did a good job," says county schools superintendent Lorraine Lange.
The changes in the testing included less multiple choice questions and more emphasis on technology and developing critical thinking skills.
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The Virginia Department of Education has released the results of the Standards of Learning tests.
Across the state for the 2011-12 school year, pass rates in Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II were 10 to 14 points higher than the results for students last fall and winter tested last year.
The Board of Education strengthened Virginia's math standards in 2009. Last year's SOL math tests are the first results from the increased standards.
To see test-by-test results for each school division, click here.
Here is the news release from the Virginia Department of Education:
Superintendent of Public Instruction Patricia I. Wright said today that the performance of students on rigorous new state mathematics assessments introduced during the 2011-2012 school year provides a “solid foundation” for future achievement.
“Virginia teachers and students worked hard throughout the school year — and for many, into the summer — to meet the Board of Education’s challenging new mathematics standards,” Wright said. “While we have a long climb before we reach the achievement levels we hope to see on the new mathematics tests, the results released today represent a good start and provide a solid foundation for further progress in 2012-2013.”
Statewide, full-year 2011-2012 pass rates on Standards of Learning (SOL) tests in Algebra I, Geometry and Algebra II were 10 to 14 points higher than the results for students tested last fall and winter at the end of the first semester in high schools and middle schools following four-by-four block schedules.
Test | First Semester 2011-2012 | All Tests 2011-2012 |
Algebra I | 63% | 75% |
Geometry | 60% | 74% |
Algebra II | 59% | 69% |
Grade 8 |
| 60% |
Grade 7 |
| 58% |
Grade 6 |
| 74% |
Grade 5 |
| 67% |
Grade 4 |
| 70% |
Grade 3 |
| 64% |
The Board of Education revised and strengthened Virginia’s mathematics standards in 2009 to ensure that Virginia public school students are prepared for the challenges of the first year of college or meaningful entry-level employment when they graduate from high school. Last year’s SOL mathematics tests were the first to reflect the increased rigor of the new standards.
“Raising standards was the right thing to do and in the long-term interest of Virginia students and our economy,” Governor Robert F. McDonnell said. “I commend all of our teachers and students for their excellent efforts in adapting to and embracing these challenging new standards. This is a necessary step in ensuring that Virginia students are ready to excel in our globally competitive economy. Higher standards mean greater accomplishments and I know Virginia's students, teachers and parents are ready for this challenge. It is a challenge we must meet if we're going to succeed in the economy of the decades ahead.”
“As school divisions align curriculum and instruction with the new standards and focus on strengthening students’ problem-solving skills, I am confident that we will see higher achievement in mathematics and more graduates who are truly college and career ready,” Board of Education President David M. Foster said.
Foster pointed to the success of students on end-of-course tests in dozens of divisions as evidence that, while challenging, the new, more rigorous mathematics standards established by the board are achievable.
The online mathematics SOL tests taken by most students included new technology-enhanced items designed to mirror common classroom experiences. The items also require students to apply mathematical knowledge in solving multistep problems. Technology-enhanced items made up about 15 percent of each online middle and high school test.
Statewide, 87 percent of the students who passed the new Algebra I SOL Test were successful on their first attempt, as were 86 percent who passed the Geometry test, and 88 percent who passed the Algebra II test. Twelve percent of students passing in Algebra I and Geometry succeeded on their second attempt, as did 13 percent of students who passed in Algebra II.
Most students who were unsuccessful on a new mathematics end-of-course test in 2011-2012 took the assessment two or three times. These students will have additional opportunities to prepare for retesting during 2012-2013.
Students had the most difficulty on the grade-3, grade-7 and grade-8 tests. The third-grade test no longer assesses K-2 content. The seventh-grade assessment includes additional content and concepts formerly taught and tested in grade 8. The increased rigor of the eighth-grade standards is designed to prepare students who were not ready for Algebra I in middle school to tackle the course during their freshman year.
VDOE today also released 2011-2012 SOL results in English, science and history/social science. Achievement levels in these subjects were relatively stable with a noteworthy three-point gain in grade-3 reading pass rate, from 83 in 2010-2011, to 86 percent in 2011-2012. Legislation proposed by Governor McDonnell and passed by the 2012 General Assembly requires schools to provide intervention services for third graders who demonstrate reading deficiencies in reading.
Wright said that VDOE will continue to provide training and resources related to the mathematics standards and tests — and the new English and science standards and assessments that will be fully implemented during the 2012-2013 school year. The state superintendent also pledged that the department would follow up on the results of an unprecedented June survey of 11,000 Virginia teachers by creating new channels for the direct communication of SOL-related information and resources in all content areas from VDOE to the classroom.
Accreditation ratings and student subgroup performance will be reported next month, along with data on progress in raising achievement in the commonwealth’s lowest-performing schools, as described in Virginia’s approved No Child Left Behind flexibility waiver. Three-year averaging will mitigate the impact of the 2011-2012 mathematics tests on accreditation ratings and other accountability determinations.
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