Vermont school test scores show improvement

Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont Agency of Education announced results from the Smarter Balanced Assessment Program on Wednesday. These relatively new scores are replacing the "No Child Left Behind" assessments. The new results, while generally indicating progress, do not offer much perspective. There is not a nationalcomparison in the results (see tables below), nor were local school scores yet released. This is also the first year under the new system that 9th graders were assessed.

What the results do show, however, is that in English, especially, scores have improved. They were also relatively better than the Math results, where only 3rd graders reachedat least 50 percent proficiency. In English, every grade reached that level.

The assessments are administered annually in the spring to students in grades 3 through 9. They are designed to measure students’ mastery of the Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts and Mathematics.

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“It’s good to see that Vermont students continue to perform well on the Smarter Balancedtests,” said Vermont Secretary of Education Dan French in a press release. “We are coming to the end of the No Child Left Behind Act era of standards-based accountability school reform. I am hopeful that our efforts to personalize learning for students and to create more flexible and relevant pathways throughout our education system will translate into greater levels of achievement across the entire system, and better serve the personal learning aspirations of students and their families."

The English Language Arts section of the assessment program includes sections on Reading, Writing, Listening and Speaking, and Research/Inquiry. The results from each section are combined to form a broad English Language Arts score.

The 2018 results are generally positive, with student performance improving in percent proficient and by scale score in almost all grades compared to 2017 scores. In particular, students in grades 4 and 8 showed notable gains of more than five scale points. This was the first year that 9th grade students took the assessments, so no comparisons can be made to last year.

2018 Smarter Balanced English Language Arts Results

Scale Scores

Total Proficient and Above

Proficient Score

State Average

Change from 2017

State Average

Change from 2017

Grade 3

2432

2428

+3

50%

+1

Grade 4

2473

2473

+7

53%

+4

Grade 5

2502

2507

-1

55%

=

Grade 6

2531

2532

+1

53%

+1

Grade 7

2552

2559

+4

57%

+2

Grade 8

2567

2576

+6

57%

+2

Grade 9

2571

2578

***

55%

***

The Mathematics assessment includes tasks and questions that address Communicating Reasoning, Problem Solving and Modeling/Data Analysis, and Concepts and Procedures. In this assessment, results were not as uniform as those reported for English Language Arts. In grades four, six and eight, the percent of students performing in the proficient range increased; students in grades four and six also increased their average scale scores. The percent proficient in grades 3, 5 and 7 did not change, and scale score performance in both grades 3 and 5 decreased by one point as compared to 2017 results.

Except for grade 3, the percentage of students scoring proficient or above in mathematics was lower than in English Language Arts by as many as 15 percentage points. In grade 9, only 35% of students scored in the proficient range. That score is 20 percentage points less than the percentage of grade 9 students with proficient scores in English Language Arts. This was the first year that students in grade 9 took the assessments, so no comparisons can be made to last year.

2018 Smarter Balanced Math Results

Scale Scores

Total Proficient and Above

Proficient Score

State Average

Change from 2017

State Average

Change from 2017

Grade 3

2436

2436

-1

52%

=

Grade 4

2485

2478

+2

49%

+2

Grade 5

2528

2504

-1

42%

=

Grade 6

2552

2522

+3

41%

+2

Grade 7

2567

2541

=

44%

=

Grade 8

2586

2558

+3

42%

+1

Grade 9

2601

2543

***

35%

***

“The Smarter Balanced Assessment Program is only one of the many tools we use to evaluate the quality of the education our students are receiving,” said State Assessment Director Michael Hock, “but it is really the only one that assesses student’s academic proficiency against a common set of standards adopted by our State Board of Education.”

Unfortunately, school and SU/SD level results are not yet publicly available. School systems have access to their results for planning and instructional purposes. However, superintendents have been directed to maintain the privacy of this data as it contains student information that has not yet been validated for public release. These results will be available when the Annual Snapshot, an interactive data visualization platform, launches in December.

As part of its response to the federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), the agency’s accountability system now includes scores from a new grouping of students. Known as “Historically Marginalized Students,” this reporting group combines all student groups historically underserved by educational institutions. The group includes racial/ethnic groups, students with disabilities, English learners and students in poverty – groups that are generally too small to report separately.

2018 Smarter Balanced Results- Historically Marginalized Status

Grade

ELA Scale Scores

Math Scale Scores

Historically Marginalized

Not Historically Marginalized

Difference

Historically Marginalized

Not Historically Marginalized

Difference

Grade 3

2397

2462

65

2408

2468

60

Grade 4

2439

2514

75

2449

2511

62

Grade 5

2469

2545

76

2470

2538

69

Grade 6

2493

2571

77

2483

2560

77

Grade 7

2519

2597

78

2501

2579

78

Grade 8

2533

2615

82

2509

2602

93

Grade 9

2525

2620

96

2487

2587

100

Deputy Secretary Heather Bouchey noted, “The state can be quite proud of student achievement overall, yet we cannot overlook the performance discrepancies between students who have historically been marginalized and those who enjoy greater privilege. The agency looks forward to assisting schools in best leveraging their resources in order to address persistent equity gaps.”

Aspreadsheet of all 2018 Smarter Balanced resultsis available on the agency’s website.

Source: Vermont Agency of Education. 10.10.2018