Schools
State Increases Standards for School Testing
The score needed to achieve a "proficient" rating on the New York state standardized tests for math and English changed for the 2010, and future, exams.
The New York State Board of Education changed the percentages required for "proficient" ratings on their standardized tests earlier this month, according to the Commack School District. New requirements say students in eighth grade need to have between a 660 - 680 in order to pass both math and English, depending on the grade level and test.
The change in standards means that students who were proficient in previous years may now only meet the basic standard.
Commack students in third - eighth grades took the tests two months ago and 73 percent of students met the new math standards while 78 percent met the new English standards, the district said, placing them in the "proficient" range.
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Chancellor Merryl H. Tisch said that these new grade requirements – which have been increased from 650 to levels that vary by grade – will enable students to be college-ready and earn better scores on the high school level. It allows students a more accurate reading of student's abilities with the varied levels for each grade, according to the department of education's research.
John King, Senior Deputy Commissioner for K-12 Education said these standards do not change what students have learned, but set the bar higher for educators, parents and students alike.
Find out what's happening in Commackfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In order to create the new standards, the state board of education gathered information from the state Testing Advisory Group (TAG) and CTB/McGraw-Hill, the state's testing contrator.
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