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Overall, the results fit a recent pattern of noticeable, if unspectacular, improvements by American students on various standardized tests. In April, results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress
-- the only nationwide series of tests for K-12 students -- showed students improved their reading and math scores, though high school math scores have stagnated. On international tests last year, U.S. fourth- and eighth-graders gained on some of their toughest competitors in math and continued to hold their own in science. However, the ACT figures also highlight a still-massive gap between the preparation U.S. students receive in high school and what's expected of them in college. That's especially true in science, where just 28 percent of 2009 graduates earned ACT scores showing they're ready for college-level biology. By comparison, 42 percent nationally are prepared for college-level algebra and 67 percent for English composition. Still, on the English test, 40 percent struggled or failed with some basic skills: using the correct adverb or adjective forms, using correct prepositions, and subject-verb agreement. ___ On the Net:
[Associated
Press;
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