Education: Math Scores Fell by Record Levels in Almost Every State in National Test

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NAEP ‘Nation’s Report Card’ Shows Steep Fall in Math Scores
By Daniel Mollenkamp     Oct 24, 2022
Photo By Prostock-studio/Shutterstock



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It was no secret that the pandemic hurt student performance. But its precise effects are still being quantified.
New national test scores, released Monday, reveal that the disruption may have been even more severe than already anticipated.
Over the last two-and-a-half years, students’ math and reading scores saw a historic decline, according to the results of a Congressionally-mandated test—known as the “nation’s report card.”
The assessment, NAEP, represents a clear, quantifiable window into the impact of the pandemic’s disruption on student performance, its administrators say.
Sharp Declines in Reading and Math
There were some intriguing outliers, including the fact that reading scores in cities with a population of over 250,000 were stable. But so far, the picture being painted is pretty discouraging.
The results show plummeting scores for math and reading. In fact, average fourth and eighth grade math and reading scores fell for most states between 2019 and 2022. In math, fourth graders fell five points nationally since 2019. Eighth graders fell eight points. Reading scores declined by three points for both grades.
There were also more students considered below basic level in reading and math. For example: Eighth graders saw a large drop, in math scores especially. In 2019, 31 percent were considered below basic level. In 2022, post-pandemic, that number has climbed to 38 percent. In reading, there were 30 percent below basic (up from 27 percent pre-pandemic).
Fourth graders didn’t really fare much better. Thirty-seven percent of fourth graders were below the basic reading level in 2022, according to the results. That’s up from the 2019 results, which showed 34 percent below basic. There were 25 percent of fourth graders below the basic math level in this year’s results—a big increase from 2019’s results, when 19 percent were below that level.
‘Appalling and unacceptable’
School closures took students and teachers out of the classroom, and the switch to remote learning exposed various inequalities in education— including issues like broadband access.
This was already well known.
But while observers may have expected a drop in scores, the severity is causing a little vertigo.
The decline in the national average scores was the “largest ever in mathematics,” according to NCES Commissioner Peggy Carr, one of the people in charge of the assessment, who noted in a prepared statement that the scores reveal the importance of instruction and schools in students’ performance.
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, in a briefing with reporters, called the results “appalling and unacceptable.”
The results have provoked a series of other responses.
Some issued warnings about the possible career impacts. For example: Daniel McGrath, acting NCES associate commissioner for the assessment, noted that eighth grade is a gateway to higher math and that the learning loss could “alter the trajectories” of students who might find themselves shut out of careers in math, science and tech if the trend doesn’t change.
For some, the results seem to be proof of the failure to adapt to the pandemic.
“This year’s NAEP results confirm the absence of political will in the last two years to do anything revolutionary to change the trajectory for our children’s futures,” a statement from Memphis Lift and Nashville Propel, two Tennessee-based parent advocacy groups said.
The groups argue that politicians and school officials have misplaced energy on issues like book bans.
“The results, which parents have been predicting since the start of the pandemic, send a clear message that the powers that be, from the president to local school boards, value the system and will continue to adhere to the status quo over the future of Black and brown children,” the groups said.
Not everyone appreciates the gloomy statements. For others, the lessons are more revealing about the unprecedented challenges faced by teachers.
It’s not surprising to see such large score declines, given that the education system hasn’t seen such a large-scale crisis before, says Karyn Lewis, the director for the Center for School and Progress at the academic assessment nonprofit NWEA.
“Nothing here is surprising. We need to be focused on how we respond and how we react moving forward,” Lewis says.
The results should cause the “utmost empathy” for teachers, she adds.
Teachers have faced high levels of burnout and demoralization. Meanwhile, the range of learning needs that teachers have to accommodate has grown during the pandemic.
They’re being asked to be everything to everyone in a way that teacher-prep programs did not prepare them for, Lewis says.
“Teachers’ jobs are harder, and we need to be intentional about getting them professional development to help them change their practice to cope with that increased need for differentiation,” she says.
Lewis’ NWEA colleague, Miah Daughtery, who’s also a former teacher, adds that it shouldn’t be seen as an indictment of teachers or parents.
“2019 and 2020 were unconventional years that literally threw the world into disarray,” she says.
To Daughtery, the results signal a clear need for more investment in improving early literacy and K-12 literacy instruction, as well as an increased investment in writing instruction, which she says will improve literacy scores generally.
 
Technology has reshaped how we do mathematics. Because kids have access to devices that has apps or websites that can do the work for them, then most go that route.

I don’t even fight it anymore. Paper tests can weed out the ones that uses technology, but you already know what the results will be. Mostly poor scores and failing students.

Math teachers are faced with this issue big time. But this is on a collegiate level.

Middle and high school is even more difficult because teachers are faced with student performance and discipline.

The mathematics paradigm needs some help in this country. So many find it useless, but it teaches critical thinking, which so many folks lack.

I tell my students that if I gave them a paper test, most of them would fail because few are actually learning to do the work.
 
Have anyone looked at this so called new math they are teaching now, shit is wild simple math has been made more complex and only targeted for SOL scores. I me and my kids have showed all the grandkids the simple way that came up with the same results basically a one point formula vice the six point formula they teach now, it's one of the many reasons we got them a in STEM schools. One of my nephew's almost got suspended from school caused he can do all the math in his head and his cac teacher accused him of cheating. They want these kids dumbed down for a reason.
 
We’re there gains in any other subject areas or just the ones they test them on. Because I believe that there were significant drops in every subject area. Simply if any student’s basic needs ( food, shelter, security, safety, and well being) aren’t being meet they could care less about education on top of that some damn Math and Reading test, when they see teachers, family members getting Covid, some dying from it, parents fighting to get unemployment benefits. It’s survival mode.
 
I think we are seeing the gap between the haves and the have nots widening, my suspect is that many poor people are being sold on the idea of alternative avenues of success, often bypassing academia in favor of short cuts that promises quick rich success as opposed to going to school, busting your ass, getting in debt via student loans all for a 9 to 5 you hate.
The problem with this approach is that usually winds up being a pipe dream that destroys thousands of lives for every success story, but being that we only see the successful ones on TV, the picture in the minds of the youth is greatly skewed.
So basically logic and critical thinking is being replaced with feeling and hoping, and in my opinion we are moving away from a masculine or left side of the mind thinking (where the brain uses to process critical thinking and mathematics) to a more feminine mind or right side of the brain thinking, (a more feeling based and creative side of the brain) and to me this also explains why so many young males today look and act like bitch made faglings.
This is a glaring red flag that the people are being placed in a weakened position that makes them vulnerable in the future.
 
Shout to my son

He got dam near perfect on his math star
Congrats! The divide between the haves and the have nots will be even larger, especially when A.I., robotics and other forms of automation will obliviate the work market in the near future. Plus another thing we are starting to see, is gas prices will continue soar as the availability of easy to reach oil starts to shrivel up this will make the have not life even worse, and as life gets worse and worse for the have nots, their short cut thinking (or lack of reasoning skills) where many of them will turn to violence and crime which will lead to higher crime rates and increase prison systems which will lead to slave states, where people who are arrested, not employable or heavily in debt will be forced to work, just to stay alive.
In 20 years there will be no welfare, section 8 or programs for the poor, they will be replaced by government sponsored work camps. Meanwhile those who are able to critically think, especially those with high mathematical skills, would live better than any humans in the history of mankind, it will be a real life tale of two cities.
 
The problem is that most of us in the US don’t value excelling in education. We think studying, and hard work is for suckers, and are looking for the quick way to make it. The only ones who take education seriously are immigrants.

We love to talk about Black immigrants and Foundational Black people, but Latino immigrants outperform Latino-Americans, and Asian and Indian immigrants FAR outperform Asian/Indian Americans.

Most of those immigrants aren’t “well off” either. It’s not a haves vs have nots issue, it’s an American issue. We think watching YouTube videos and trading crypto a better way to get rich than going to Harvard, and spending 10 years on Wall Street learning the correct way to trade.

My guess is that about 60-75% of the students at Ivy League are first or second generation immigrants.

What’s crazy is that once those immigrants get rich, they’ll have American kids who grow up wanting to become YouTubers and trade crypto.
 
The technology my generation invented, smart phones, computers, and tablets are being use for the exact opposite of the reason they were invented.
 
Technology has reshaped how we do mathematics. Because kids have access to devices that has apps or websites that can do the work for them, then most go that route.

I don’t even fight it anymore. Paper tests can weed out the ones that uses technology, but you already know what the results will be. Mostly poor scores and failing students.

Math teachers are faced with this issue big time. But this is on a collegiate level.

Middle and high school is even more difficult because teachers are faced with student performance and discipline.

The mathematics paradigm needs some help in this country. So many find it useless, but it teaches critical thinking, which so many folks lack.

I tell my students that if I gave them a paper test, most of them would fail because few are actually learning to do the work.
Excellent points.

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