Do special ed students take the test? |
Yes |
and FYI if you go to each school equity report you can see what percentages of the special education students have which level of needs (Levels are 1-4 with 4 being the most severe). |
Well, guess this is as good as it gets for public schools in DC. We are outta here! |
Nope that's not the case. KIPP and DC Prep have the highest % of AA kids that scored advanced, followed by Stoddert and Eaton (but you're talking about about 2-6 students at those school). Stoddert ES All Math 10.7% 28 students KIPP DC LEAD Academy All Math 16.1% 87 students KIPP DC Promise PCS All Math 11.5% 191 students DC Prep PCS Edgewood Elementary All ELA 14.3% 63 students Stoddert ES All ELA 10.7% 28 students Eaton ES All ELA 10.4% 67 students For some of the "popular schools" % of AA advanced student performance is concerning as well Lafayette 5.1% AA advanced in math, 2.6% in English. 39 AA students tested (22.4 and 14.9 for white – 196 kids) Stoddert 10.7% AA advanced math, 10.7% in English. 28 AA kids tested (21.5 and 16.7 for white – 79 kids) Janney not enough AA kids (25) Mann not enough AA kids (25) Murch 4.9% AA advanced in math, 2.4% in English. 41 students tested (16.9 and 9.5 for white students - 160 kids) Key 4.0% AA advanced in math, 4.0% in English. 25 students tested (18.4 and 12.8 for white students – 87 kids) Eaton 0% AA advanced in math, 10.4% in English. 67 students tested (19.8 and 18.8 for white students – 96 kids) Oyster 0% AA advanced in math, 3.8% in English. 26 students tested (20.5 and 27.3 for white students – 88 kids) Brent 0% AA advanced in math, 5.7% in English. 35 students tested (20.0 and 23.6 for white students – 55 kids) Hearst 1.3% AA advanced in math, 1.3% in English. 75 students tested (18.8 and 18.8 for white students – 32 kids) Shepherd 4.5% AA advanced in math, 1.8% in English. 111 students tested (NA for white) |
If this is what is making you leave, you were already gone. |
The fact that there aren't 25 white kids among 39 students pretty much answers PPs inane comment about the demographics, especially for grade 3. That translates to < 2/3 whatever the school's overall demographics. For 3rd grade, SWS is 8th overall among DCPS for math 4+, 9th for 3+ and 9th for 5. SWS is 10th overall among DCPS for ELA 4+, 5th for 3+ and 16th for 5. Of course, you're talking about ~ 60 total kids in DCPS 3rd grade who reached 5 so there's not much shame in only having 1 student hit that mark. There were 185 3rd graders who reached 5 on math, including 5 from SWS |
Ha! Where are you going? Moco where they had scores in the 30s? Just calm down, this is a brand new test that was bombed by every state that took it. |
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This would be a good time to remind ourselves that this was the first year of a more difficult test, given in a totally new format (computer). Other states are seeing similar results.
Hang up your call to your real estate agent (unless you want to sell to me for a discount! )
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You might want to check with is going on in the suburbs with test scores. The numbers here are only as good as the test is at measuring learning. Does it measure learning. I have my doubts. |
Yea, I heard part of the problem is it is given on a computer with a mouse, which students don't know how to use. |
Stop being an alarmist. With your resources to provide tutoring and extras, your child will be fine. You have the same resources to provide for your child that the affluent white parents provide for their children, kumon, Huntington, khan academy, sylvan, etc. It's just that your AA child's high numbers will be knocked out by three AA children who are poor and unable to receive tutoring, etc. I don't think you can make a fair comparison. I am sure that my child's individual scores are 4s and 5s, but when the numbers come out, his numbers will mean very little when lumped in with all the poor AA children in this city. |
The bigger issue is that you high achieving boy will be surrounded by peers are not high-achieving, which 1) could drag down your boy's motivation to succeed, and 2) could mean that teachers/others set the same low expectations for your boy that they give the other boys in his class. |
Now I have thought about that, and so far that has not been the case. Of course I am watching and will definitely reassess if I find what you mentioned occurring. He just started fifth grade at Latin and I love the school's curriculum. I'm hoping it can take him all the way through with continued high expectations. I could use any money that I would have spent on private school for college.
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NP. Have not been following PARCC threads until now. Can anyone recap how MoCo or other surrounding areas did vs. DC? I'm not one of those fleeing to the suburbs anytime soon--and my kid is several years away from any testing grades--but just curious.
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