On New Florida Academic Standards

Laura Isensee:

Thirteen high schools won high praise for their soaring graduation rates during the Miami-Dade School Board’s last meeting for the year Wednesday.
Overall, Miami-Dade County’s public schools hit their highest graduation rate ever, nearly 78 percent — higher than Broward County’s and just shy of the state’s 80 percent rate.
But the celebration came with a warning: Next year could be very different.
There is a new FCAT 2.0 and, in the pipeline, a new scoring scale for that exam, plus more weight on reading and a new grading model for state-issued letter grades. Other changes in 2012: More tests will be administered via computers and new end-of-course exams will be given in geometry and biology.
“As we celebrate this year’s outstanding graduation accomplishments, it’s important to inform the community what’s happening in Tallahassee and across our state,” said Superintendent Alberto Carvalho. “The new standards are going to change the game for all of us.”
Parts of the new standards are still being developed. On Monday, the State Board of Education will consider proposed new scoring levels for the FCAT 2.0 and the algebra end-of-course exam.

Related: Excellence in Education explains Florida’s reading reforms and compares Florida’s NAEP progress with Wisconsin’s at the July 29th Read to Lead task force meeting.