SIXTY
PERCENT OF STUDENTS AT DISTRESSED LITTLE ROCK HIGH SCHOOLS LESS THAN PROFICENT
"The most callused aspect of the
(Arkansas) education monopoly is that it willingly and deliberately forces
children--except those whose parents have wealth--to attend bad schools. And it
does so with financial resources taken from parents already struggling
financially and at the expense of their ability to choose a better school for
their sons and daughters." Policy Foundation education report,
1998
(February
2015) Sixty (60) percent of students at three Little Rock high schools in
academic distress1
are less than proficient in the category of literacy, according to results
reported by the state Department of Education.2
The
following charts shows the national percentile rank of
grade 11 students at Hall High School, J.A. Fair H.S. and McClellan H.S. in
literacy in 2014:
Literacy Grade 11 | %Below Basic | Basic | Proficient | Advanced3 | ||||
Hall H.S. | 18 | 43 | 33 | 6 | ||||
J.A. Fair H.S. | 10 | 51 | 35 | 4 | ||||
McClellan H.S. | 13 | 47 | 37 | 3 |
Sixty
(60) percent of grade 11 students at McClellan were classified in less than proficient
categories. A similar number of Hall and
J.A. Fair students-61 percent-were less than proficient, based on March 2014
literacy test results.
The
state Board of Education voted January 28 to take over the Little Rock School
District. The Department of Education
classified J.A. Fair H.S., Hall H.S., McClellan H.S., and three other Little
Rock schools--Baseline Elementary, Cloverdale Middle School, and Henderson M.S.--in
academic distress
last year, based on poor student performance on state tests.
1 Academic Distress: "This term is used to describe a district
that has, for a sustained period of time, demonstrated a lack of student
achievement on the state-mandated, norm-referenced, or criterion-referenced
tests." Arkansas
Department of Education, "Definitions of Common Assessment Terms."
2 Arkansas
Department of Education, "Test Scores By Year"
http://www.arkansased.org/divisions/learning-services/student-assessment/test-scores/year?y=2014
3 The Department of Education uses four categories to describe student achievement: advanced, proficient, basic and below basic. Definitions are as follows: Advanced: "Advanced student demonstrate superior performance well beyond proficient grade-level performance. They can apply established skills to solve complex problems and complete demanding tasks on their own. They can make insightful connections between abstract and concrete ideas and provide well-supported explanations and arguments." Proficient: "Proficient students demonstrate solid academic performance for the grade tested and are well prepared for the next level of schooling. They can use established skills and knowledge to solve problems and complete tasks on their own. Students can tie ideas together and explain the ways their ideas are connected." Basic: "Basic students demonstrate partial knowledge and lack skills necessary for the proficient level." Below Basic: "Below basic students fail to show sufficient skills to attain the basic level."