Schools, students still recovering from pandemic learning loss, state
report card shows
Send a link to a friend
[October 28, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Student test scores continued
to fall last year but new data shows Illinois’ students are on the path
to recovering from the learning loss that occurred during the pandemic.
Numbers from standardized tests administered last spring show steep
declines in the percentage of students who met or exceeded state
standards in English language arts and math compared to 2019, the last
year tests were administered before the pandemic.
Those numbers were reported in the latest state report card, which the
Illinois State Board of Education released Thursday. In addition to test
results, the report card includes information on a wide range of
education metrics such as graduation rates, class sizes and teacher
qualifications. It offers statewide data as well as data on each
district and school building.
But while proficiency rates were down across the board, State
Superintendent Carmen Ayala said the amount of growth students are
showing from one year to the next is improving, suggesting that
strategies being used help students catch up in their academics are
working.
ISBE devised a new metric this year to track growth rates. It involves
measuring a student’s year-over-year change in scores in a particular
subject and comparing that growth to a student in a prior year – in this
case, 2019 – who started off with the same score. This year’s report
card suggests students in 2022 showed greater growth than their academic
peers in 2019.
“Now, proficiency rates are still not back to pre-pandemic levels, but
this accelerated rate of growth tells us we are on the right track,”
Ayala said during a media briefing on the report card.
Overall, only 27.4 percent of third graders in Illinois met or exceeded
state standards in reading, down from 36.4 percent in 2019.
That’s considered an important metric because third grade reading skills
are a strong indicator of future success in school. A 2010 study by the
Annie E. Casey Foundation found that students who are not proficient in
reading by third grade are four times more likely to drop out of high
school than those who are proficient.
Typical questions on a third grade reading test would ask students to
define a word such as “impatient” or “overwhelmed” as it’s used in a
short story or article.
Likewise, eighth grade math proficiency is considered crucial to future
success in what are called the STEM fields – science, technology,
engineering and math.
Typical questions on an eighth grade math test would ask students to
calculate how many gallons of paint are needed to cover a patio of
certain dimensions or use the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the
length of a trip between three cities.
Last year, only 23.1 percent of Illinois eighth graders scored
proficient in math, down from 32.6 percent in 2019.
One positive sign in math performance was an increase in the percentage
of eighth graders who completed Algebra I – 29.9 percent, compared to
28.8 percent the prior year – although it was still lower than the 30.6
percent reported in 2019.
“This metric is critically important because taking Algebra I by eighth
grade is the gateway to STEM in college,” Ayala said. “If a student does
not take Algebra I by eighth grade, then following the normal math
course sequence ... that student will not make it to calculus by the end
of high school. And calculus is frequently a prerequisite for STEM
majors in college.”
Although the overall percentage of students scoring at or above grade
level may seem low, Ayala said that Illinois has some of the most
rigorous standards for proficiency in the nation. The report card also
noted that the four-year graduation rate in 2022 was 87.3 percent, the
highest rate in 12 years, and that 64 percent of Illinois’ 2020
graduates enrolled in a post-secondary program within 12 months of
graduating.
[to top of second column]
|
Illinois State Board of Education
Superintendent Carmen Ayala is pictured at an event in Springfield
with Gov. JB Pritzker. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)
The college enrollment rate was down significantly from the 75 percent
recorded for the class of 2016. State officials said that has been a
nationwide trend that was exacerbated by the pandemic.
The standardized tests are required by state and federal law. Like most
states, however, Illinois received a federal waiver from the requirement
in 2020, when school buildings were closed due to the pandemic, and the
participation rate in 2021 was far below normal. State officials
cautioned against using either of those two years as a point of
comparison on most metrics.
Achievement gaps
The report card showed academic declines across all racial and ethnic
groups in both English language arts and math, but there were still
large gaps between those groups.
For example, across all grades, preliminary data showed 39.4 percent of
white students scored proficient in English language arts compared to
12.1 percent of Black students and 18.4 percent of Hispanic students.
Asian students had the highest proficiency rate by far, at 58.6 percent.
In math, 35.6 percent of white students scored proficient compared to
6.8 percent of Black students, 13.5 percent of Hispanic students and
60.2 percent of Asian students.
One area where achievement gaps appeared to be closing, however, was
high school graduation rates. The four-year graduation rate among Black
students rose more than 1.5 percentage points, to 79.5 percent, while
the graduation rate for Hispanic students rose 1.4 points, to 85
percent.
That was a major factor in the state’s overall growth in graduation
rates because the rate for white students dropped half a point, to 90.4
percent.
There were also increases across the board in the percentage of ninth
graders who were on track to graduate, and for Black and Hispanic
students, those rates were above pre-pandemic levels.
“We know that the number one strategy to increase graduation rates is to
intervene early with students who are not on track to graduate,” Ayala
said. “The rate of ninth graders on track to graduate has bounced back
to pre-pandemic levels after dipping in 2021.”
National trends
The Illinois report card came out the same week the U.S. Department of
Education released results from the National Assessment of Educational
Progress, or NAEP exams, often referred to as “the nation’s report
card,” and many of the trends seen in Illinois were consistent with
national trends.
NAEP is administered to a representative sample of fourth and eighth
grade students across the nation. In 2022, the majority of states saw
average scores decline in both reading and math compared to 2019. There
was also an increase in the percentage of students scoring below the
NAEP “basic” level.
Illinois fared better than many states on the NAEP exam in that there
was no significant difference between average scores in 2019 and 2022
for both subjects and grade levels, with scores above the national
average.
“This is the nation's gold standard report card, and this demonstrates
that our investments in learning recovery serve as a national model
because they are working,” Ayala said. “Now, we have much work to do,
but this is an important indication that our students are on track.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |