ISAT scores inching up

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Last spring, students in third, fifth, sixth and eighth grades took the Illinois Standards Achievement Test in reading and mathematics, while students in fourth and seventh grades were tested in reading, mathematics and science.

Across the state, the number of students meeting or exceeding state standards across the state continued to inch up, climbing from last year’s 78.7 percent to this year’s 79.1 percent.

Of the 12 districts with elementary schools in Bureau County, six school districts saw their scores decline, with the biggest drop seen by Dalzell, which dropped more than eight points. Three school districts were below the state average, and the DePue School District failed to make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), due to the scores in the category of reading.

On Saturday, we saw how the six top-scoring school districts in the country performed. Here’s how the other six districts did.

Dalzell

Although Dalzell saw the largest drop, it still was able to achieve the seventh highest score in the county, with 83 percent of its students meeting or exceeding the state standards. Because individual class scores are not released for privacy reasons when fewer than 10 students take the test in each class, the only scores that were released were for the district’s eighth-graders, which saw almost 82 percent of the students meet or exceed standards in reading, but less than 73 made that goal in math.

Princeton

The Princeton School District was the only district in the county in which the percentage of students meeting or exceeding state standards remained the same, holding steady at 81.8 percent.

Math scores were higher than reading scores in all but the sixth and eighth grades, and were led once again by the third-graders, where almost 88 percent of the students met or exceeded the standards. However, it was those very same third-graders who scored the lowest score in the district, with less than 70 percent of the students reaching their goal in reading.

One piece of good news for the district is that it made Adequate Yearly Progress this year. In 2007, the district failed to make AYP because the subgroup of students with disabilities failed to score high enough in reading.

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