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| This article originally appeared in the LA Times on July 14, 1998 © Los Angeles Times
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L.A. Unified Report Card
How did your school do on the statewide tests?
UNDERSTANDING THE NUMBERS/READING THE TABLES. In California, 4.1 million public school students in grades 2 through 11 took the Stanford 9 standardized tests this year. All of them were
tested in reading, writing and math. Students through grade 8 also took a spelling test and students in higher grades took exams in social studies and science.
Even among experts, there is no one view on what a percentile rank tells about school performance. But a 50 means that, taken together, the school's students were right at the national average when measured against a sample of their peers across the country--even though some students at the school may be doing quite well and others poorly. A percentile rank of 25 or less suggests that many of the students are doing poorly when measured against the national sample. A rank of 75 or above shows that a high percentage of students are doing well. Some schools' scores appear abnormally high, which may be because an unusually small number of children took the test. Comparing the individual scores sent to your home with those of the school will help you gauge where your child ranks against classmates. You also might want to compare your school's average with that of the entire Los Angeles Unified School District. These were the average percentile scores: * Grade 4 Reading: 23rd percentile Math: 27th percentile * Grade 8 Reading: 28 Math: 30 * Grade 10 Reading: 22 Math: 33 The release of scores statewide has been held up by a court challenge seeking to exclude the scores of limited-English students from any calculations. A court hearing on the case is scheduled for this week. Although the state has been ordered not to release such data, individual school districts remain free to release detailed school-by-school scores on their own--as the Los Angeles Unified School District has done. |
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