Rhode Island Performed 40% Worse than Massachusetts on PARCC

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

 

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The numbers are in, and two-thirds of Rhode Island students in grades 3 through 10 who took the PARCC assessment last year did not meet expectations in English Language Arts/Literacy (ELA) and math.    

Meanwhile in Massachusetts, over 50% of students met expectations in both categories on the recent PARCC test  -- 60% of students in grades 3 though 8 met or exceeded expectations for English, and 52% did so for math.  

Rhode Island reported Tuesday that 36% of students who took the PARCC assessment met or exceeded expectations in ELA, and 25% for math, for grades 3-10.  For grades 3-8, the percentage was similar for math at 25%, and just slightly higher for ELA (37%).

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See RI's Results by School and District HERE

The “cut scores” vary state by state, but states are ultimately responsible for determining who is meeting expectations — and who is not.  

Christine Lopes Metcalf with the education policy and advocacy group RI-CAN pointed out that “twenty years ago, Massachusetts set their standards much higher than Rhode Island and most other states.”

“They committed to funding their plan to meet those higher expectations, tweaked things along the way and were steadfast in their promise to keeping high standards.  Now that we have an assessment that is much more closely aligned to higher expectations, it’s not surprising that Massachusetts has an advantage,” said Metcalf-Lopes. 

“But, they also have improvements to make. Rhode Island has taken the first steps in its path by adopting higher standards and creating a funding formula that is centered-around the student,” continued Metcalf-Lopes. “Now more than ever, we need to be steadfast in our commitment to making sure every student in our state is supported and reaches the highest of expectations.”

Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo issued the following statement on Tuesday following the "disappointing" state scores.

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"The PARCC results released today are disappointing, but not surprising. The results confirm what we already know from Rhode Island's NAEP scores, our high school and college graduation rates, and our remediation rate: too many of our children do not have the skills they need to succeed in today's economy. Our kids deserve better.  Improving our schools is essential to turning our economy around. The only way young people will be able to succeed in today's economy is if they have the skills necessary for high-quality, family-supporting jobs,” said Raimondo.

State — and Urban Core — in Perspective

RIDE pointed out in its release how the state’s urban core —  Providence, Pawtucket, Central Falls, and Woonsockett— struggled in comparison to the rest of the state

In Rhode Island’s core urban communities, 18 percent of students met expectations in English and 11 percent met expectations in mathematics; in all other communities, 43 percent of students met expectations in English and 31 percent met expectations in mathematics – leading to gaps of 25 percentage points and 20 percentage points, respectively.

Meanwhile in Worcester, Massachusetts, 41 percent met the state expectation in English and 29 percent for math — still higher than Rhode Island’s scores as a whole.

“My initial reaction is that it's a baseline year, and as we transition, every district struggles with new assessment,” said Providence School Board President Keith Oliveira.  “There was an expectation that scores wouldn’t be overwhelming.”

Oliveira said he anticipates that Providene -- and statewide - scores would improve as the state continues to implement the common core curriculum. 

“We’ll use the assessment for what it’s intended to do -- look at the data as an important tool for teaching and learning strategies,” said Oliveira.  “We need to make sure our curriculum is aligned to the common core, and our teachers our trained.  It’s still being rolled out, I think we've done well so far, but more training needs to be done so they understand the grade level expectations, and make sure they're comfortable with the delivery of the content. It's a baseline, I expect we'll see improvement."

Contesting the Test

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80% of the participating students took the PARCC online; the rest by paper.

"Just as suspected...the results were dismal.  One of the goals of these tests was to close the "achievement gap"  do you see any of that happening here? I do not," said parent and anti-PARCC activist Jean Lehane. "Thus, are we further setting back the very students this test was meant to serve?

"The buzzwords we keep hearing are "lets get back to the job of "teaching and learning"  Well, that would be fine if we had excellent, developmentally appropriate standards - which we do not; and if teachers weren't being asked to basically teach to this PARCC test - which they are...it is beyond frustrating," continued Lehand. "Then think about an art or music teacher who must get evaluated on an ela or math test score - how does that even make any sense?"

RIDE said Tuesday it was committed leading efforts to “invest in our teachers through high-quality preparation programs and continuous professional development; empower our principals to lead strong school communities; ensure that every student has access to rigorous coursework that builds upon their strengths and interests and prepares them for their futures; and partner with parents and families.

The Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, however, said following the release of the results that "one-size-fits-all Government schools [are] not adequately preparing many students for college and life."

"The disappointing results among RI students in the recently released PARCC test scores re-enforce the need to empower families with additional educational choice options," according to a statement Tuesday from the Center. 

"Education is the civil rights issue of our time. Every parent wants an effective education for their children that prepares them for college, career, and life. When government schools fail to inspire students, it is our moral obligation to provide each and every child with an immediate and better option," commented Mike Stenhouse, CEO for the Center. "Our proposed ESA legislation empowers parents to choose a public or private educational path for their children that will motivate and challenge them."

 

Related Slideshow: The RI High Schools with the Most Absentee Students

Below are the rates of chronic absenteeism for public high schools across the state. Figures are taken from the InfoWorks database maintained by the Rhode Island Department of Education. As the state defines it, a student has become chronically absent when he or she has missed 10 percent of the school year. With a 180-day mandated school year, that comes out to at least 18 or more days of missed school. Data is for the most recent academic year, 2013 to 2014.

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#59 Ponaganset High School

Location: Foster and Glocester

Total # Students: 684

% Chronically Absent: 4%

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#58 Beacon Charter High School for the Arts

Location: Woonsocket

Total # of Students: 227

% Chronically Absent: 6%

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#57 Barrington High School

Location: Barrington

Total # of Students: 1,027

% Chronically Absent: 7%

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#56 North Smithfield High School

Location: North Smithfield

Total # of Students: 519

% Chronically Absent: 7 %

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#55 Portsmouth High School

Location: Portsmouth

Total # of Students: 960

% Chronically Absent: 8%

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#54 East Greenwich High School

Location: East Greenwich

Total # of Students: 729

% Chronically Absent: 9%

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#53 Exeter-West Greenwich High School

Location: Exeter and West Greenwich

Total # of Students: 540

% Chronically Absent: 9%

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#52 Chariho Regional High School

Location: Charlestown

Total # of Students: 1,201

% Chronically Absent:

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#51 Middletown High School

Location: Middletown

Total # of Students: 685

% Chronically Absent: 10%

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#50 North Kingstown Senior High School

Location: North Kingstown

Total # of Students: 1,387

% Chronically Absent:11%

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#49 Smithfield Senior High School

Location: Smithfield

Total # of Students: 755

% Chronically Absent: 11 %

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#48 Westerly High School 

Location: Smithfield

Total # of Students: 917

% Chronically Absent: 11%

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#47 Block Island School

Location: New Shoreham

Total # of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 12%

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#46 South Kingstown High School

Location: South Kingstown

Total # of Students: 1,073

% Chronically Absent: 12 %

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#45 Tiverton High School

Location: Tiverton

Total # of Students: 1,607

% Chronically Absent: 14%

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#44 Coventry High School

Location: Coventry

Total # of Students: 1,607

% Chronically Absent: 14 %

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#43 Cumberland High School

Location: Cumberland

Total # of Students: 1,337

% Chronically Absent: 14%

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#42 Narragansett High School

Location: Narragansett

Total # of Students: 429

% Chronically Absent: 14%

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#41 The Greene School

Location: Exeter

Total # of Students: 162

% Chronically Absent: 15%

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#40 Highlander Charter Academy

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 16%

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#39 Burrillville High School

Location: Burrillville

Total # of Students: 682

% Chronically Absent: 18%

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#38 Lincoln Senior High School

Location: Lincoln

Total # of Students: 1,005

% Chronically Absent: 18%

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#37 Mt. Hope High School

Location: Bristol

Total # of Students: 990

% Chronically Absent:19%

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#36 East Providence High School

Location: East Providence

Total # of Students: 1,502

% Chronically Absent: 19%

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#35 Paul Cuffee Charter School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 19%

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#34 Times2 Academy

Location: Providence

Total Number of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 19%

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#33 Academy for Career Exploration

Location: Providence

Total Number of Students: 168

% Chronically Absent: 19%

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#32 Scituate High School

Location: Scituate

Total Number of Students: 469

% Chronically Absent: 19%

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#31 J.M. Walsh School

Location: Pawtucket

Total number of students: 192

% Chronically Absent: 20%

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#30 Classical High School

Location: Providence

Total Number of Students: 1,119

% Chronically Absent: 21%

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#29 Toll Gate High School

Location: Wawick

Total # of Students: 958

% Chronically Absent: 21%

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#28 West Warwick Senior High School

Location: West Warwick

Total # of Students: 935

% Chronically Absent: 21%

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#27 Davies Career and Techinical Center

Location: Lincoln

Total # of Students: 849

% Chronically Absent: 22%

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#26 Pilgrim High School

Location: Warwick

Total # of Students: 991

% Chronically Absent: 22%

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#25 Johnston Senior High School

Location: Johnston

Total # of Students: 893

% Chronically Absent: 24%

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#24 North Providence High School

Location: North Providence

Total # of Students: 969

% Chronically Absent: 26%

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#23 Cranston High School East

Location: Cranston

Total # of Students: 1,583

% Chronically Absent: 27%

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#22 Warwick Veterans Memorial High School

Location: Warwick

Total # of Students: 910

% Chronically Absent: 27%

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#21 RI Nurses Institute

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 266

% Chronically Absent: 29%

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#20 Rogers High School

Location: Newport

Total # of Students: 538

% Chronically Absent: 32%

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#19 RI School for the Deaf

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 32%

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#18 Tolman Senior High School

Location: Pawtucket

Total # of Students: 1,034

% Chronically Absent: 33%

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#17 Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical Center

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 838

% Chronically Absent: 33%

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#16 Cranston High School West

Location: Cranston

Total # of Students:1,526

% Chronically Absent: 33%

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#15 Village Green Virtual Charter School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: NA

% Chronically Absent: 39%

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#14 E-Cubed Academy

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 349

% Chronically Absent: 39%

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#13 Mount Pleasant High School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 898

% Chronically Absent: 39%

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#12 Central Falls High School

Location: Central Falls

Total # of Students: 727

% Chronically Absent: 40%

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#11 Shea Senior High School

Location: Pawtucket

Total # of Students: 858

% Chronically Absent: 42%

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#10 Blackstone Charter Academy

Location: Pawtucket

Total # of Students: 168

% Chronically Absent: 43%

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#9 Providence Career and Technical Academy

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 577

% Chronically Absent: 44%

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#8 Woonsocket High School

Location: Woonsocket

Total # of Students: 1,579

% Chronically Absent: 47%

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#7 Cranston Construction Career Academy

Location: Cranston

Total # of Students:158

% Chronically Absent: 49%

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#6 William B. Cooley Senior High School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 617

% Chronically Absent: 50%

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#5 Dr. Jorge Alvarez High School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 486

% Chronicallly Absent: 53%

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#4 Central High School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 1,112

% Chronically Absent: 55%

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#3 Hope High School

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 894

% Chronically Absent: 55%

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#2 Sheila Skip Nowell Leadership Academy (II)

Location: Providence

Total # of Students: 81

% Chronically Absent: 87%

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#1 Sheila Skip Nowell Leadership Academy (I)

Location: Central Falls

Total # of Students: 73

% of Chronically Absent: 89%

 
 

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