Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you look at data by subgroup, Center City Congress Heights does a lot better than other schools citywide. I pulled up data via EmpowerK12.org which I find easier to navigate/look through. You can also sort by economically disadvantaged (with similar trend)
For black students scoring 3+
Congress Heights: 60%, 59%, 63%, 80%, 93%, 85% (grades 3-8 in order) and 73% overall
City Average: 43%, 43%, 38%,36%, 44%, 31% and 37% overall
For black students scoring 4+
Congress Heights: 15%, 36%, 26%, 40%, 41%, 70% and 38% overall
City Average: 19%, 18%, 15%, 15%, 15%, 14%, and 15% overall
EmpowerK12 is super helpful and easy to use, if you haven't been over there yet!
Why is 8th grade 4+ such an outlier? Is it just a fluke result in a small cohort? Or are they getting dramatically better results via differentiation (even if to do it, they have to call advanced 8th grade math “algebra”?).
Anonymous wrote:If you look at data by subgroup, Center City Congress Heights does a lot better than other schools citywide. I pulled up data via EmpowerK12.org which I find easier to navigate/look through. You can also sort by economically disadvantaged (with similar trend)
For black students scoring 3+
Congress Heights: 60%, 59%, 63%, 80%, 93%, 85% (grades 3-8 in order) and 73% overall
City Average: 43%, 43%, 38%,36%, 44%, 31% and 37% overall
For black students scoring 4+
Congress Heights: 15%, 36%, 26%, 40%, 41%, 70% and 38% overall
City Average: 19%, 18%, 15%, 15%, 15%, 14%, and 15% overall
EmpowerK12 is super helpful and easy to use, if you haven't been over there yet!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To clarify, the article says offering Algebra I in 8th, but I don't see that on the middle school advanced math spreadsheet from OSSE, so either it's new this year or they're having kids take the 8th grade math CAPE.
If they’re having their “algebra” students take the 8th grade exam, power to them. BASIS has been playing that game for years.
Well, it means we don't have a good sense of how much Algebra they actually learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To clarify, the article says offering Algebra I in 8th, but I don't see that on the middle school advanced math spreadsheet from OSSE, so either it's new this year or they're having kids take the 8th grade math CAPE.
If they’re having their “algebra” students take the 8th grade exam, power to them. BASIS has been playing that game for years.
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, the article says offering Algebra I in 8th, but I don't see that on the middle school advanced math spreadsheet from OSSE, so either it's new this year or they're having kids take the 8th grade math CAPE.
Anonymous wrote:According to this article, the gulf in test scores between at risk students and not at risk students and between Black and white students is as high as it's ever been. But the Congress Heights campus of Center City PCS manages to have higher test scores than Ward 3 students. What are they doing right?
https://www.k12dive.com/news/solving-for-success-dcs-citywide-effort-to-boost-math-achievement/811797/