I remain obsessed with trying to understand the gigantic seven point surge in scores that Washington DC posted on the 2013 NAEP national assessment, which I first reported on Nov. 7, 2013. Last week, on Nov. 15th, I broke the test data down by race and noticed that while black scores did improve, the seven point increase was more influenced by the growing population of white and Hispanics. Both groups, on average, have even higher test scores than blacks do. A blog reader asked me if I looked at socioeconomic status. Unfortunately, NAEP doesn’t have a SES variable, but it does look at which students are low income as measure by whether they qualify for free or reduced price lunch.
Average Fourth Grade Mathematics Scores in Washington DC on the 2013 NAEP
Qualifies for free or reduced price lunch |
Doesn’t qualify for free or reduced price lunch |
|
2013 |
220 |
261 |
2011 |
213 |
246 |
change |
up 7 |
up 15 |
So it’s interesting to see that the lowest income students are not driving the gains as much as the middle class and upper income students are. That jives with what NCES Commissioner Jack Buckley noted nationwide, that the bottom students are not making the same incremental progress that the top students are.
I also broke down the DC results by percentile, but didn’t see the same stark trend. Not sure what to make of this…
Average Fourth Grade Mathematics Scores in Washington DC on the 2013 NAEP by Percentile
10th |
25th |
50th |
75th |
90th |
|
2013 |
184 |
205 |
229 |
252 |
273 |
2011 |
176 |
199 |
222 |
245 |
267 |
change |
up 8 |
up 6 |
up 7 |
up 7 |
up 6 |
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Is gentrification in Washington DC driving the surge in test scores?