Subscribe
Receive the weekly DocuTicker Newsletter.
Find out more »

Enter your
email address:

My Account »

Bookmark and Share

Testimonial?
If you find DocuTicker useful, please supply a testimonial »

Home > DocuBase > Article

« All DocuBase Articles

 

Achievement Gaps: How Black and White Students in Public Schools Perform in Mathematics and Reading on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

July 20, 2009 10:55

Achievement Gaps: How Black and White Students in Public Schools Perform in Mathematics and Reading on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
Source: National Center for Education Statistics
From Executive Summary:

In 2007, mathematics scores for both Black and White public school students in grades 4 and 8 nationwide, as measured by the main NAEP assessments of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), were higher than in any previous assessment, going back to 1990. This was also true for Black and White fourth-graders on the NAEP 2007 Reading Assessment. For grade 8, reading scores for both Black and White students were higher in 2007 than in the first reading assessment year, 1992, as well as the most recent previous assessment year, 2005.

White students, however, had higher scores than Black students, on average, on all assessments. While the nationwide gaps in 2007 were narrower than in previous assessments at both grades 4 and 8 in mathematics and at grade 4 in reading, White students had average scores at least 26 points higher than Black students in each subject, on a 0-500 scale. This report will use results from both the main NAEP and the long-term trend NAEP assessments to examine the Black-White achievement gaps, and changes in those gaps, at the national and state level.

+ Full Report (PDF; 1 MB)


Category:


Source:




DocuTicker sponsored by:

Articles

DocuBase Archive »

Article Categories

All Article Categories »

Sources

All DocuBase Sources »

Source Categories

All Source Categories »

Archive

All Archives »

Subscribe

Receive the DocuTicker Newsletter each week.

Find out more »

FreePint Family

ResourceShelf is part of the FreePint Family of sites and resources to support information and knowledge work.

Learn more about the
FreePint Family »