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November 2, 2009

Student achievement standards higher in South Carolina than other states

Liz Carey:

According to a new national report, South Carolina student achievement standards are among the highest in the nation.

The report said many states declare students to have achieved grade-level mastery of reading and math when the children have not, according to the National Center for Education Statistics, a division of the U.S. Department of Education. [Complete Report 3MB PDF.]

The agency compared state achievement standards to the standards behind the federally funded National Assessment of Educational Progress.

The report, which was released Thursday, said many states deemed children to be proficient or on grade level based on state standards when those students would rate "below basic," meaning lacking even partial mastery, in reading and math under the NAEP standards.

State standards vary significantly from state to state, according to the report. But South Carolina standards measured among the highest.

In 15 states the standards a student had to meet to score proficient on state reading tests for eighth-graders were not as high as the standards to score basic on NAEP, according to the report. But South Carolina standards for eighth-grade reading were the highest in the nation.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at November 2, 2009 3:41 AM
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