As you may (or more likely may not) have heard, yesterday the state of New York released the results of the latest school test scores for grades three through eight. Apparently they’ve raised the standards, and the results are pretty dismal – especially for the urban districts around the state.


Statewide, only 31.1 percent of students in grades three through eight met the state’s tougher new standards in English language arts, down from 55.1 percent the previous year. In math, 31 percent met the standard, compared to 64.8 percent the previous year.
[…]
In Syracuse, only 8.7 percent of third through eighth-graders met the standard in English language arts, down from 24.2 percent the previous year. In math, it was 6.9 percent meeting the standard this year, down from 26.9.

And the Syracuse City School District wasn’t even the worst. The distinction goes to Rochester.


Only 5 percent of Rochester School District elementary and middle schoolers scored proficient on math and reading tests — last in the state save for a handful of charter schools and tiny districts that serve children with severe emotional problems.
[…]
In Buffalo, 11.5 percent scored proficient in reading and 9.6 percent were proficient in math. Syracuse reported 8.7 percent proficient in reading and 6.9 percent in math.

The suburban district scores were considerably better, of course, but still nothing to brag about (statewide, the average was about 31% passing for both math and English).

I’m not a big fan of using standardized tests to measure how much kids actually know, and I’m not sure what they’re actually measuring and what’s meant by being “proficient,” but when less than 10% of the kids pass the test (Syracuse had four school where not a single kid passed the math test), something aint right. I don’t know if the tests are just somehow ridiculously difficult or what.

I’d like to get hold of the 8th grade level tests and see how I do.

Then again, maybe not.

It’s another dental day for me, and one I’m not looking forward to. Apparently he found a couple of things he go and tinker with, and some of it involves a little work up front, where I can either suffer through without Novocaine, or suffer through what feels like a needle being shoved up into my brain. Neither option sounds appealing to me.

But at least it gets me out of work for an hour or so.