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This article was originally published in the March 5, 1999 edition of the Los Angeles Times

© 1999 Los Angeles Times

Read the full report from the National Center for Education Statistics Web site

California Ranks Second to Last in U.S. Reading Test

By Duke Helfand, Times Education Writer

California ranked second to last among 39 states in a new federal assessment of fourth-grade reading skills, which revealed Thursday that only 20% of the students are considered proficient readers.
     Only Hawaii had a lower average score than California on the National Assessment of Educational Progress last year.
     California tied with Louisiana for last in reading in 1994, the last time the test was given--an embarrassing performance that set off billions of dollars in education reforms.
     State officials, disappointed by the latest results, said the fourth-graders who took the test last year did not benefit from reforms that have only recently begun to take hold in classrooms, such as reduced class sizes in primary grades and more phonics in textbooks.
     "The scores are unacceptably low," said Delaine Eastin, the state superintendent of public instruction. "We simply must do a better job of teaching our children this most essential skill."
     Thursday's report also showed that in California:
     * Eighty percent of fourth-graders are not "proficient" readers, meaning they do not have a solid command of challenging reading materials. That figure has remained consistent since 1992, when the U.S. Department of Education began tracking state-by-state results. Nationally, 29% of fourth-graders are proficient readers.
     * Fifty-two percent of fourth-graders in the nation's most populous state scored below the "basic" level, meaning they had failed to even partially master fundamental skills.
     * There were striking differences among racial and ethnic groups. Nearly one-third of white and Asian fourth-graders met the proficient level last year, while just 7% of blacks and 8% of Latinos met that goal. The gaps remained consistent over time.
     * Fourth-graders in suburbia outperformed their counterparts in inner cities and rural areas--a trend mirrored nationally. And as in the rest of the country, girls did better than boys.
     * Overall, the new fourth-grade scores showed a 5-point improvement over 1994 scores, which had dipped from 1992. The new scores pulled the state back to 1992 levels.
     The test was administered last year to fourth-, eighth- and 12th-graders nationally. Year-to-year comparisons among the states were provided only for fourth grade. No results were released for 12th-graders.
     Average eighth-grade scores for last year showed that California ranked 33rd out of 36 states, above only Hawaii, Louisiana and Mississippi. This is the first year that eighth-grade scores have been released for individual states.
     Only 22% of California eighth-graders were deemed proficient readers.
     Gov. Gray Davis said the results underscored the critical need to press ahead with his education reforms.
     Davis is seeking to improve performance by creating reading academies for struggling students, instituting peer review for teachers, ranking schools and requiring high school exit exams.
     "We must not fail an entire generation of children," Davis said in a statement.
     The highest performer in the nation, based on average fourth-grade scores, was Connecticut, followed by Montana and New Hampshire. Some states improved their scores significantly, including Colorado, which improved by 9 points on the 500-point scale from its 1994 score, and Louisiana, which picked up 7 points.
     Experts say California's scores were influenced by several factors, including large class sizes, high rates of poverty, vast numbers of English learners and classrooms staffed by teachers with little or no experience.
     A quarter of California's 5.8 million students have limited English skills, and 10% of the state's 270,000 instructors--or about 27,000 teachers--are working under emergency credentials, many in classrooms created by class-size reduction, the state reports.
     Even so, California performed worse than comparable states such as Texas, which has a large immigrant population but whose average fourth-grade scores ranked 16th out of 39 states.
     In Texas, 29% of those students read proficiently, which matches the national average and is 9 points higher than California.
     Analysts say the difference lies in consistency. In recent years, Texas has instituted an accountability system for schools and a single statewide test to gauge student performance.
     By contrast, California has flip-flopped from one assessment to another, leaving no consistent measure of progress. The state began using the Stanford 9 exam last year, the third testing program in a decade.
     The state only adopted language arts standards in November 1997, and a system of school accountability is part of Davis' reform package now being weighed in the Legislature.
     Perhaps most troubling has been California's tendency to embrace fads.
     Teachers, education professors and others have spent most of the last decade fighting over how to teach children to read--whether through the literature-intensive "whole language" approach or by using the letter-sound techniques of phonics.
     The state has sought to settle that dispute by stressing the need for both strategies in effective early reading programs. But that message is just now filtering into school districts as they begin to apply the new state standards.
     "Around the country, California is known for not sticking with any single reform, for its fits and starts," said Bob Linn, an education professor at the University of Colorado and co-director of the Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards and Student Testing.
     "Texas is exemplary in terms of staying the course. At least they have stuck with it. They deserve credit for boosting achievement."
     Linn and other experts said that California finally appears to be on the right track.
     But the experts and education officials alike agreed that reform takes time, particularly in a state with 1,000 school districts, 8,000 schools and more students than the entire populations of some states.
     "We're all impatient, with good reason, but top-down changes don't happen overnight," Eastin said. "You have to get the word to the superintendents and school boards and teachers. People want instant results. I wish we could get them."
     California's education secretary, Gary K. Hart, urged teachers to use the test scores as a further wake-up call for change. He said a large part of the solution lies in the new legislative package that keeps the focus on reading.
     "We should not say that because we've had modest progress that's reason to congratulate ourselves," Hart said. "We need to build upon the actions that have been taken in the recent past. I hope these test scores will impress upon everyone the importance of this reform package."
     

* * *


     Score Differences

     The following chart shows the percentage of California public school fourth-graders who are proicient readers, based on a national test of reading skills.
     Asian: 31%
     White: 29%
     California average: 20%
     Latino: 8%
     Black: 7%

      Source: National Center for Educational Statistics

     
* * *


     The Scores by State

     California fourth-graders ranked second to last in a nationwide assessment of reading skills given last year. Below are the average scores for each of the 39 states that participated in the test.
     
State           1992  1994  1998
Connecticut      222   222   232
Montana           --   222   226
New Hampshire    228   223   226
Maine            227   228   225
Massachusetts    226   223   225
Wisconsin        224   224   224
Iowa             225   223   223
Minnesota        221   218   222
Kansas            --    --   222
Colorado         217   213   222
Oklahoma         220    --   220
Wyoming          223   221   219
Rhode Island     217   220   218
Kentucky         213   212   218
Virginia         221   213   218
Michigan         216    --   217
North Carolina   212   214   217
Texas            213   212   217
Washington        --   213   217
West Virginia    216   213   216
Missouri         220   217   216
New York         215   212   216
Maryland         211   210   215
Utah             220   217   215
Oregon            --    --   214
Tennessee        212   213   212
Delaware         213   206   212
Alabama          207   208   211
South Carolina   210   203   210
Georgia          212   207   210
Arkansas         211   209   209
Nevada            --    --   208
Arizona          209   206   207
Florida          208   205   207
New Mexico       211   205   206
Mississippi      199   202   204
Louisiana        204   197   204
California       202   197   202
Hawaii           203   201   200

* * *
     California ranks slightly higher in percentage of students who are proficient readers. Here are the states with the highest and lowest percentages.
     
                      % of students
                 at or above proficiency
State              1992      1994     1998
Connecticut          34        38       46
New Hampshire        38        36       38
Montana              --        35       37
Massachusetts        36        36       37
Maine                36        41       36
Nevada               --        --       21
California           19        18       20
Louisiana            15        15       19
Mississippi          14        18       18
Hawaii               17        19       17


      Source: National Center for Education Statistics

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