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The results in reading weren’t nearly as hopeful as they were in math: Fourth-graders continued to lose ground in 2024, with reading scores slightly lower, on average, than they were in 2022 and much ...
Student math scores are down from pre-COVID levels, the National Report Card finds. October 24, 2022 5:00 AM ET. Sequoia Carrillo ... While reading scores stayed more steady ...
Average scores in reading for 2022 declined five points last school year, to 215 out of a possible 500, compared to 2020. Those in math dropped seven points, to 234, the data showed.
The nation's young people scored an average 5 points lower in reading than kids who tested before the COVID-19 pandemic in 2019, from 220 to 215 for fourth graders and from 263 to 258 for eighth ...
New national test scores show a bleak picture of American education in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.. Fourth and eighth graders' literacy skills dipped – once again – on the U.S ...
Almost five years have passed since COVID-19 first disrupted America's schools, and new data, known as the Nation's Report Card, offers cause for hope — and concern. The good news: In math, many ...
The research shows students' reading achievement in those grades dropped below pre-pandemic averages. Distracted students: What an American school day looks like post-COVID ...
Reading scores saw their largest decrease in 30 years, ... “We still are not back to our pre-COVID numbers, ... post-COVID — and spring 2022, ...
Reading skills have dropped. Pre-COVID, 41% of MCSD students met grade level literacy proficiency standards, according to the district. That number trailed the state average of 51%.
On the reading portion, the scores dropped from 263 to 260. Both shifts were statistically significant. Among 9-year-olds, there was no statistically significant difference from 2012 in math or ...
Virginia students in grades 3-8 are showing an overall struggle in reading and math test scores when compared to pre-pandemic numbers, state officials said.
Student reading scores statewide lagged through COVID-19 pandemic, ... “If you think about a second grader, they were in pre-K in the spring of 2020,” Hagen Alvarado said.