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Reading Scores on National Exam Decline in Half the States

The results of the test, which assesses a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students, will inevitably prompt demands for policy change.

A student reading in the library at a school in Baltimore in May.Credit...Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — America’s fourth and eighth graders are losing ground in their ability to read literature and academic texts, according to a rigorous national assessment released Wednesday that is likely to fuel concerns over student achievement after decades of tumult on the educational landscape.

Two out of three children did not meet the standards for reading proficiency set by the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test administered by the National Center for Education Statistics, the research arm of the Education Department.

The dismal results reflected the performance of about 600,000 students in reading and math, whose scores made up what is called the “nation’s report card.” The average eighth-grade reading score declined in more than half of the states compared with 2017, the last time the test was given. The average score in fourth-grade reading declined in 17 states. Math scores remained relatively flat in most states.

Only 35 percent of fourth graders were proficient in reading in 2019, down from 37 percent in 2017; 34 percent of eighth graders were proficient in reading, down from 36 percent. Overall student progress in reading has stalled in the last decade, with the highest performers stagnating and the lowest-achieving students falling further behind.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Wednesday called it a “student achievement crisis.”

“Think about the mom or dad who cannot read, and so does not read to their own children at bedtime,” Ms. DeVos said as she released the scores. “Think about what that portends for their lifelong learning.”

Ms. DeVos dismissed calls — including those from Democratic presidential candidates — to increase school funding to improve the worst-performing schools. She has championed programs that allow tax dollars to follow children to the schools of their choice, including private schools, religious schools and charter schools, and has rejected the view that more money would lift struggling schools.

Representative Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut and chairwoman of the House subcommittee that oversees the Education Department’s budget, sharply disagreed.

The Daily Poster

Listen to ‘The Daily’: America’s Education Problem

How have decades of attempted reform, and billions of dollars, failed to improve students’ performance across the country?
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Listen to ‘The Daily’: America’s Education Problem

Hosted by Michael Barbaro; produced by Adizah Eghan and Austin Mitchell; with help from Kelly Prime; and edited by Lisa Chow and Lisa Tobin

How have decades of attempted reform, and billions of dollars, failed to improve students’ performance across the country?

michael barbaro

From The New York Times, I’m Michael Barbaro. This is “The Daily.”

Today: For decades, the U.S. has spent billions of dollars trying to close its education gap with the rest of the world. New data shows that all that money made no difference. Dana Goldstein on how that could be.

It’s Thursday, December 5.

Dana, when did the United States start to feel a sense of anxiety around the education levels of our children in relation to the rest of the world?

dana goldstein

Well, I think back to 1957.

archived recording

But the biggest news to come out of Russia was the story of the year, perhaps of our generation.

dana goldstein

And that was the year that the Russians beat us to space —

archived recording

That radio beep signaling not merely a red scientific triumph but the launching of mankind into a new era, the dawn of the age of space. Sputnik and Muttnik, they were called.

dana goldstein

— with their Sputnik satellite. And this triggered a sort of national conversation and anxiety in the United States among our political leaders and the public. We were the country that beat back tyranny and saved the world in World War I and World War II. What did it mean that this other nation could outperform us in this new frontier of space? And that was the start of a conversation about our schools, and if they were preparing kids to compete on the global stage. This continues in the 1980s with the rise of Japan and the rise of China and with the reduction of these good factory jobs that used to ensure Americans a middle-class life. So by the 1990s, there’s a consensus among education reformers and politicians who care about this that maybe it would be helpful to have Washington play a role and the federal government got involved. And a few governors, whose names we’ve all heard of, like Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, are those that agree.

archived recording (george w. bush)

Now, oftentimes, we talk about our children having self-esteem. You can’t teach self-esteem. But when we teach our children to read, write, add and subtract, they learn self-esteem. They earn it. And that’s the whole vision for America, is that every child gets educated.

dana goldstein

When George W. Bush was running for president, this was the conversation that he was immersed in, and, in fact, he makes education reform and the idea of a bigger role for Washington part of his pitch as a different kind of, quote, “compassionate conservative.” That’s how he defines himself. He says he really does care about those that are getting left behind in this new globalized economy. And he says he really does care about helping low-income students and students of color do better academically so they can compete.

archived recording (george w. bush)

Good to meet you all. Thanks. What grade are we in?

archived recording (students)

6th.

archived recording (george w. bush)

Cool, let me ask you a question.

archived recording

Make it math.

archived recording (george w. bush)

How many of you are going to go to college?

archived recording (students)

Me!

archived recording (george w. bush)

Good. How many of you read more than you watch TV?

archived recording (students)

Me!

archived recording (george w. bush)

Tell the truth.

archived recording (student)

Honestly.

archived recording (george w. bush)

O.K., good. [LAUGHTER] How many of you practice math more than you watch TV? [LAUGHTER]

michael barbaro

And at this moment, what is the relationship between the federal government in Washington and states when it comes to education?

dana goldstein

So it’s pretty hands-off. They send money, especially money for schools that serve a lot of low-income children, but they don’t have a lot of requirements attached to that money. They also oversee civil rights in schools, so they’re on the lookout to see if there’s racial discrimination, gender discrimination. But they don’t tell states how they should oversee schools. And all this starts to change when George W. Bush is elected president, and he represents this group of people who think this approach has been too hands-off. And we’re not going to really be able to compete with the rest of the world where education systems are very centralized and much more top-down than our American system if we don’t have some leadership from Washington. And that’s why he proposes and signs into law the No Child Left Behind Act.

michael barbaro

And what is No Child Left Behind?

dana goldstein

No Child Left Behind is basically a testing law. It asks states to test students in third through eighth grade every year in math and reading and once in high school, and this is totally new.

michael barbaro

Hmm.

dana goldstein

The federal government has never before asked states to test students. And it’s interesting because I am 35, and my whole education preceded this law. And I have just a few memories in elementary school of taking standardized tests, and they weren’t really something people talked about a lot. It’s completely different now. And I think for a lot of adults who didn’t go through this system, they may not realize how different it really is.

michael barbaro

And what was the thinking behind suddenly requiring standardized testing in No Child Left Behind?

dana goldstein

I mean, the thinking was pretty simple. If you don’t collect this data, you just can’t know how students are doing. And if you don’t know how students are doing, you can’t help them improve. So with these test scores, you can finally say, how are low-income students doing? How are African-American students doing? How are immigrant students doing? If you don’t collect this data nationally, you don’t know.

michael barbaro

Hmm.

dana goldstein

So while the data is very helpful to education researchers, the No Child Left Behind Act is widely seen as a failure.

michael barbaro

Why?

dana goldstein

I think two big reasons. The first is that all 50 states had total freedom to define for themselves what was going to be on all these tests.

michael barbaro

It wasn’t one test.

dana goldstein

No, it was 50 different tests. And so Alabama might have a lot easier of a test than Massachusetts. And so it becomes really hard to compare how kids are doing across the states. And suddenly, it seems like this isn’t actually that helpful of a national tool if the states are basically allowed to set their own yardstick. Each of these governors has an incentive to make themselves look good. And the other big reason why it failed was just the tests were not that high quality, and the teachers were teaching to the test because schools could be declared failing if students were not moving forward on these exams and not scoring well enough.

archived recording (barack obama)

Thank you. Thank you, everybody.

dana goldstein

And when Barack Obama is elected president —

archived recording (barack obama)

Leadership tomorrow depends on how we educate our students today, especially in math, science, technology and engineering. But despite the importance of education in these subjects, we have to admit, we are right now being outpaced by our competitors.

dana goldstein

— Barack Obama agreed with George W. Bush about a lot when it came to education. He believed in a bigger role for Washington. He was deeply concerned about achievement gaps, similar to George W. Bush. They represented sort of the two sides of the coin within this bipartisan consensus.

archived recording (barack obama)

So make no mistake, our future is on the line. The nation that out-educates us today is going to outcompete us tomorrow.

dana goldstein

He comes up with his own policies that he hopes are going to address the flaws of No Child Left Behind while sort of better succeeding in the original goal. He is going to have better tests, basically, and he’s going to hold schools and teachers accountable to more high-quality standards, and they’re going to be shared across the country instead of 50 states.

michael barbaro

So what does that solution look like?

dana goldstein

So it’s convenient for President Obama that a bunch of governors and education reformers and philanthropists like Bill Gates, they were already kind of together trying to solve this problem. And they had started talking about something that would come to be called the Common Core State Standards, which would be a national effort to write curriculum standards in reading and math that all 50 states could hopefully share. And Obama takes a look at this, and he loves the idea. The Obama administration did give money, through a program called Race to the Top —

archived recording (barack obama)

We’ve launched a $4 billion Race to the Top Fund.

dana goldstein

— to states that adopted the Common Core.

michael barbaro

And how did that work?

dana goldstein

The way it worked is states were competing for about $4 billion in federal funding. It was the recession. The states were broke. They were desperate for cash, and they would have done pretty much anything that was asked of them. And Obama gave them a lot of priorities that he wanted them to fulfill to get this money, and one of them was to adopt rigorous shared standards. He did not specifically say the Common Core, but that’s what it was, because the effort was already underway, and all across statehouses across the country, people knew about this.

michael barbaro

So, again, as with No Child Left Behind, this is not the federal government mandating one vision of American education, but they’re profoundly encouraging it.

dana goldstein

Yes, encouraging it. And right off the bat, within the first year, the vast majority, over 40 of the states, said, O.K., we’re in. We’re going to do the Common Core.

archived recording 1

California Board of Education today unanimously approved new and rigorous guidelines.

archived recording 2

New uniform educational standards are expected to raise the bar for students in Maryland starting next year — the Common Core Standards program.

archived recording 3

This curriculum is really going to be historic, and it’s going to help better prepare our students for this hyper-competitive global economy.

archived recording 4

Certainly, the federal government has stepped up with a Common Core Standards and the idea that we develop a national test to test children, really, in all of the skills, not just in the —

dana goldstein

And those tests do hit the market, and that does become how many teachers and parents and students first encounter this thing — the Common Core — is through the tests.

michael barbaro

So did Obama’s vision here of national standards and incentives for states to adopt them, did it succeed in its goals?

dana goldstein

It did not quite work out as intended. It’s actually this incredible, strange moment where people on the far right and the far left agree that they don’t like, in fact, they detest the Common Core. On the left, it’s really about anti-testing fervor. Parents hated that their kids were going to school and being presented with these multiple-choice problems, and the curriculum was narrowing to these math and reading tests, so social studies, arts, even science. The number of minutes per day that kids were encountering all these wonderful things was decreasing because the teachers were so stressed out about these math and reading exams. And what parents on the left were saying is this is not what I want from my child’s public school.

archived recording 1

[CHANTING] End Common Core! Our kids deserve more! End Common Core!

archived recording 2

Parents, in fact, are deciding to opt out —

dana goldstein

There’s the birth of this opt-out movement, which is a movement to encourage parents to opt their kids out of sitting for these exams.

archived recording

— in places like New York State, where as many as 165,000 students opted out.

dana goldstein

So this opt-out movement really reaches a peak in New York State in 2015 when 20 percent of students opt-out, and in some schools, it’s close to 100 percent.

archived recording 1

Thankfully, most of us began to listen to the cries for help coming from our children. Parents refuse to allow their children to be part of the Common Core testing machine. [CHEERING] Whoo! Whoo. Whoo-hoo.

dana goldstein

At the same time, Tea Party activists on the right are railing against the Common Core.

michael barbaro

Why?

dana goldstein

They see it as a sort of classic big government, federal incursion into local control.

archived recording (michele bachmann)

We need to do an education what’s always worked historically and that’s local control.

dana goldstein

You have Tea Party darling Michele Bachmann —

archived recording (michele bachmann)

I would take the entire federal education law, repeal it. Then I would go over to the Department of Education. I’d turn out the lights, I’d lock the door, and all the money back to the state and localities.

dana goldstein

— railing against the Common Core. And all of a sudden, where it had been acceptable for Republicans to join with President Obama and support this thing, all of a sudden, in states across this country, it’s not O.K. anymore. And it’s also not O.K. in many places to be a Democrat who speaks in favor of this because of the opposition on the left. So you see all these states, more than 20 states, start to roll back these laws, and states start to pull out of the agreement to use shared tests and start saying, we’re going to go get our own test and develop our own test.

michael barbaro

So there’s a pretty broad-based refusal to adopt this idea of a national set of standards and curriculum. But that would seem to make a system that’s built on the goal of centralization basically impossible.

dana goldstein

Yeah, it’s really, really hard to do anything centrally in our system because we don’t have a system that was created to be centralized. Local control was sort of the founding orthodoxy of American public education in the 19th century. Our Constitution does not include the word education. There is no sort of role for the federal government that allows them to reach into schools, reach into classrooms, change practices. It’s all sort of, you know, carrots and sticks, options. And it doesn’t work that well. It’s very, very hard to make change on a national scale when that’s the system that you’ve built.

michael barbaro

So whatever consensus had been achieved by this point through the Bush and Obama eras that this was a worthy goal, national standards, a national system, that starts to unravel.

dana goldstein

It’s starting to fall apart.

michael barbaro

We’ll be right back.

Dana, so bring us up to today. Where are we in this process?

dana goldstein

So over the past few weeks, two big new pieces of evidence have come out, and they paint a pretty depressing picture for American education and American kids. The first was the gold-standard tool that researchers use to look at American education. It’s called the National Assessment of Educational Progress. It showed that only one-third of American fourth and eighth graders can be considered proficient readers — just a third. And across the board at every level, students had declining reading scores over the past two years.

michael barbaro

Declining.

dana goldstein

Yeah, going down. With all these efforts to make things better, those scores were going down. So this was a very sad day for many in the world of education, the world that I’ve been covering for over a decade. And then just a few days ago, I had another sad story to report, which was on the test that is considered the gold-standard international global test — the Program for International Student Achievement — it showed that there were 20 percent of American 15-year-olds who do not read as well as they should at age 10. So they really are missing very basic reading comprehension skills. And it found that American performance is flat in both reading and math since 2000. So this entire time period —

michael barbaro

Wow, 20 years.

dana goldstein

— that we’ve been discussing, ever since George W. Bush was elected and No Child Left Behind, through President Obama and Race to the Top and Common Core and effort after effort to try to get American kids to do better on these types of international exams, American performance has not changed. It’s stagnant.

michael barbaro

Despite not just all those programs but, I presume, the billions of dollars spent to put them in place.

dana goldstein

Many, many billions of dollars — private dollars, public dollars, all of that.

michael barbaro

This all sounds quite bad and quite depressing. But I wonder, ultimately, how much the scores you’re describing here, especially comparing U.S. students to international students, really matters? Because the United States very much remains a global superpower. We have one of the strongest economies on the planet. We have low unemployment. So if you kind of swallow your national pride, is this really a crisis?

dana goldstein

I think it is. I mean, how can you feel pride when you think about that 15-year-old who can’t read as well as a 10-year-old should? With those types of literacy skills, they’re not going to be suited for work that’s going to pay a living wage in this economy that we’re living in. And just beyond that, beyond what happens to that person on the job market, education is about so much more. That person needs to be a citizen. That’s why we started public education in the United States, so that we could create people who would be good voters and make wise choices about who their leaders should be. And there’s this one statistic from the international exam that just came out that I just keep going back to, because this number upset me, which was that only 14 percent of American students could distinguish, reliably, between fact and opinion.

michael barbaro

14 percent is kind of extraordinary. How did they measure that?

dana goldstein

So I have a sample question from the exam here in front of me that illustrates what it is that American kids can’t do. And the exercise goes like this. It shows students two pieces of writing. One is a news article about research on milk and whether it has health benefits or health detriments.

michael barbaro

So this is classic journalism.

dana goldstein

Pretty much. Yeah. And the second is produced by a group that students are told is called the International Dairy Foods Association, and it speaks to all the wonderful benefits of drinking milk.

michael barbaro

So this is something from a trade group.

dana goldstein

Exactly. Students are then presented with a series of statements based on what they’ve read, and they are asked to determine, is this a fact or an opinion? And I’ll give you an example. “Drinking milk and other dairy products is the best way to lose weight.” Fact or opinion?

michael barbaro

Opinion.

dana goldstein

Exactly. It’s opinion put forward by people that want the public to purchase more milk products.

michael barbaro

The trade group.

dana goldstein

Exactly. And these are the types of questions that the majority of American students were not able to get right.

michael barbaro

They’re failing to distinguish between fact and opinion, between that which is being told to them by people with specific interests and those that are objectively true, the result of research or investigation by reporters.

dana goldstein

Exactly. And think about the implications of this in a world where there’s so much misinformation on social media, political advertisements that are trying to sway your opinion.

michael barbaro

Foreign countries interfering in elections.

dana goldstein

Exactly. And we can’t even agree, for example, in this country whether it is Ukraine or Russia that influenced our election in 2016, even though we know it was it was Russia that meddled — there really is no question on the facts. So when I hear that, you know, only 14 percent of American students are getting this type of question correct, I think it raises big questions not just about our economic competitiveness, or are these kids well-suited to the workforce, but about our country, our future. Are they being prepared to be citizens? And how will that affect all of us?

michael barbaro

Mm-hmm.

dana goldstein

So these questions about education performance are very deep. They go to the core of who we are as Americans and what our future will hold.

And it makes me think that some of our core American values of American exceptionalism and individualism and local control, these orthodoxies which we’re proud of and rightfully so in many ways because they’ve contributed to what’s different about the United States and driven local innovation, but they’re also now contributing to this intractable, difficult, important problem to solve, which is how do we truly prepare our kids to succeed, not just as workers but also as human beings and as citizens of this country?

michael barbaro

Dana, thank you very much.

dana goldstein

Thank you so much, Michael.

michael barbaro

We’ll be right back.

Here’s what else you need to know today.

archived recording (michael gerhardt)

If what we’re talking about is not impeachable, then nothing is impeachable. This is precisely the misconduct that the framers created a Constitution including impeachment to protect against.

michael barbaro

During testimony on Wednesday, three law professors told the House Judiciary Committee that President Trump’s attempts to pressure Ukraine into investigating his political rivals crossed constitutional lines and amounted to impeachable conduct. One of them, Stanford Law professor Pamela Karlan, was asked whether the president’s conduct was grounds for impeachment even if the investigations he requested were never carried out.

archived recording (pamela karlan)

Imagine that you were pulled over for speeding by a police officer. And the officer comes up to the windows and says, you were speeding. But, you know, if you give me 20 bucks, I’ll drop the ticket. And you look in your wallet and you say to the officer, I don’t have the 20 bucks. And the officer says, O.K., well, just go ahead, have a nice day. The officer would still be guilty of soliciting a bribe there, even though he ultimately let you off without — without your paying.

michael barbaro

But a law professor called by Republicans on the committee, Jonathan Turley of George Washington University, testified that Democrats had not sufficiently proven their case against the president.

archived recording (jonathan turley)

I’m concerned about lowering impeachment standards to fit a paucity of evidence and an abundance of anger. I believe this impeachment not only fails to satisfy the standard of past impeachments but would create a dangerous precedent for future impeachments.

michael barbaro

That’s it for “The Daily.” I’m Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

Image
Betsy DeVos, the education secretary, speaking at a press conference in Washington on Wednesday.Credit...Michael A. McCoy for The New York Times

Rather than “exploiting” the result of the test “to spread lies and promote her privatization agenda, Secretary DeVos should join House Democrats and families across our nation by supporting increased investments in our public education system,” she said.

School-district leaders and education advocates said the steep losses among the lowest-performing students reflected structural barriers beyond schoolhouses.

“This is a disturbing pattern, one that is consistent with our nation’s growing economic inequality and history of structural discrimination in education, housing, and access to opportunity,” said Mike Magee, the chief executive of Chiefs for Change, which represents state and district education leaders.

A growing body of research indicates that reading instruction is uneven across the country and often ineffective.

Peter Afflerbach, an expert on reading and testing at the University of Maryland, called the eighth-grade declines “troubling” and “precipitous,” especially for the lowest-achieving students.

Eighth graders at the bottom 10 percent of reading achievement lost six points on the exam compared with similar students two years ago, while students at the middle lost three points. Students in the top 10 percent lost only one point.

White, black, Hispanic, Native American and multiracial students all lost ground in eighth-grade reading, while there was no significant change for Asian students. Eighth grade is crucial because it prepares students for high school and beyond.

The most recent research on reading, Mr. Afflerbach said, has undermined a long-held view that children learn to read until the fourth grade, and then “read to learn” in higher grades. Because of that view, too many schools have assigned elementary students short passages instead of challenging them with longer, thematically rich texts and books.

The new eighth-grade results show “the students haven’t developed the reading comprehension to deal with text complexity,” he said.

Washington, D.C., was the only city or state to have significant improvement in eighth-grade reading, according to a federal analysis of the data. The District of Columbia Public Schools was the fastest-improving of 27 urban systems that participated in a separate analysis of large districts. It also demonstrated growth in fourth- and eighth-grade math.

Lewis D. Ferebee, the chancellor of the District of Columbia Public Schools, attributed the gains to a broad range of policies, including universal preschool, higher pay and performance bonuses for teachers, and home visits to help educators understand their students’ family contexts.

He also talked about “cornerstones” — the district’s effort to teach vocabulary and reading skills through shared experiences. Elementary students take lessons in how to safely ride a bike, and go on a field trip to Nationals Park, the city’s professional baseball stadium, where they run the bases.

“While that sounds super fun, embedded in that experience is a very rich literacy lesson,” Mr. Ferebee said.

He acknowledged, however, that the system still had work to do, especially in closing income-based achievement gaps.

Catherine Snow, a literacy expert at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said educators need to learn how to integrate foundational reading skills, such as knowledge of letter sounds and combinations, into lessons that will excite young children.

“If the task you’re engaged in is researching lizards’ reproductive cycle or discussing who Harry Potter’s best friend was and why, those are intrinsically motivating tasks,” Ms. Snow said. “They drive you back to texts to find information.”

This year, eighth-grade reading scores in 31 states dropped two to seven points — which the federal government deemed significant — compared with their performances in 2017. Indiana, New Hampshire and Virginia had the largest declines. Fourth-grade reading scores dropped in 17 states, with New Jersey’s six-point drop the largest. Only one state, Mississippi, improved, the data showed.

James F. Lane, the superintendent of public instruction in Virginia, said that while grade-level proficiency was a goal, the school system “must also recognize that Virginia’s schools are enrolling increasing numbers of students whose learning is impacted by poverty and trauma.” He said the school system needed to recruit and retain high-quality teachers and equip them to meet the needs of a “changing student population.”

Average math scores fared considerably better, particularly among fourth graders. Nine states had significant increases in fourth-grade math, compared with 2017. Again, Mississippi led the pack. The eighth-grade score in three states improved, while those in six states declined.

American students have made large gains in math and small gains in reading since 1990. But those improvements began to level out around 2009. There is no consensus on why that happened.

The Council of the Great City Schools, a coalition of large urban school systems, said it saw a hopeful story in the new data. Over the past two decades, city students, who are more likely to be poor or not fluent in English, have moved closer to national achievement averages in both math and reading.

Some researchers consider the National Assessment of Educational Progress test to be the gold-standard measure of learning nationwide, but others argue it is unfair to judge schools using an exam that may have little connection to the material teachers cover in the classroom. In many cases, the federal exam is more challenging than state-level standardized tests.

“Someone has got to hold states accountable,” said Jim Cowen, the executive director of the Collaborative for Student Success, a group that defends the roles of standards and testing in public schools.

Erica Green reported from Washington, and Dana Goldstein from New York.

Erica L. Green is a correspondent in Washington covering education and education policy. More about Erica L. Green

Dana Goldstein is a national correspondent, writing about how education policies impact families, students and teachers across the country. She is the author of “The Teacher Wars: A History of America's Most Embattled Profession.” More about Dana Goldstein

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: DeVos Calls Slump in Reading Scores a ‘Student Achievement Crisis’. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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