This is an important issue regarding the rate of illiteracy and dyslexia among people who are in prison. Thanks for bringing it up. |
+1 |
The link you added doesn’t include citations so I can’t see what they are using. But the Maryland Reads report uses NAEP scores and the Nation’s Report Card. Here is another article: https://marylandmatters.org/2023/12/19/former-mississippi-schools-chief-aims-to-repeat-learning-miracle-in-maryland/. Mississippi has improved dramatically in the last decade. |
| It’s about time. |
DP You mean test scores from about 2,000 students, mostly poor kids from Baltimore and surroundings? Come again! |
So we should just keep moving that 30% along hoping they can both catchup AND keep up as the material gets increasing more difficult ??? Explicitly teach foundational skills of reading and math and show how they are used in science, social studies, art and music starting in K. Start with high expectations and never let up. If families can’t be bothered to attend school(for whatever reason) then they can’t be surprised when their kid doesn’t make progress, is held back and eventually sent to a separate class/school/program. Everyone deserves a free quality public education. That doesn’t mean it will be catered to their every whim and desire. The standard is that by end of third students should be moving on from this foundational level. If not, that doesn’t mean you’ll never get it, but it does mean you need more time and attention before moving on to the next thing. I’m sick of this BS that it’s too hard. There are folks addressing education in war zones under threat of bombs and gunfire in classrooms writing on walls with no desk and chairs. |
Using the MCAP, about half of MCPS students aren’t proficient in literacy. |
Fine but we will all pay for it in higher taxes when thousands of students will be held back. I highly doubt they’ll do this because it leads to higher drop out rates and they don’t want that. |
Retention in lower grades has not been proven to lead to higher dropout rates. |
What's the relevancy of your post to the subject or the quoted posts? |
The poster thought it was the poor Baltimore City students dragging down the MCAP scores but half of MCPS aren't proficient on MCAP so stop blaming others. |
Reading comprehension is not your forte, either. The subject is not about MCAP and the quoted posts were not about MCAP. They were about the NAEP scores, which are mainly from Baltimore and surroundings. And MCPS scores on MCAP are among the highest, while Baltimore's are in the bottom in MD. |
Of course they are. Standardized test scores have always followed parental income levels. |
Ok, then what was the revelancy of the post? |