Schools

Loudoun Schools Make Gains In All Standards Of Learning Test Subjects

Standards of Learning results show improvements in math, reading and other test subjects at Loudoun County Public Schools.

Loudoun County Public Schools continues to outperform state averages in Standards of Learning tests and saw gains in all subjects across the school division.
Loudoun County Public Schools continues to outperform state averages in Standards of Learning tests and saw gains in all subjects across the school division. (Emily Leayman/Patch)

LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA — Loudoun County Public Schools saw gains in all subjects in the 2023-2024 Standards of Learning standardized tests.

According to Virginia Department of Education data released Tuesday, the English reading pass rate for LCPS was 81 percent, up one point from the last year. The math pass rate was 79 percent, three points up from the last year. There were 90 percent of students passing the English writing, up nine points. In history/social science, the 82 percent pass rate was a two-point increase. LCPS had a 75 percent pass rate for science, up one point from last year.

The pass rates across LCPS were higher than the state average in all subjects. The state averages were 73 percent in English reading, 71 percent in math, 76 percent in English writing, 65 percent in history/social science, and 68 percent in science.

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"We know that when we are intentional about funding and supporting public education, great things can happen," said Superintendent Aaron Spence in a statement. "We still have work to do, but I am proud of everything our dedicated educators have accomplished to get us where we are today."

Statewide, Gov. Glenn Youngkin's office said the SOL results reflected the start of learning recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The overall pass rate in math increased from 69 percent to 71 percent. The English reading pass rate remained the same at 73 percent.

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"Today’s promising data shows that when we have high expectations for our students, teachers and schools, they meet them when using proven approaches and tools," said Virginia Secretary of Education Aimee Rogstad Guidera. "We know what works. Every school in the Commonwealth must know and understand each student’s academic progress and mastery and provide tailored supports and teaching that will put every student on track to succeed in life."

According to the Virginia Department of Education, 70 percent of school divisions showed improvements in third to eighth grade reading scores, 10.7 percent maintained scores, and 19.1 percent had declines. In third to eighth grade math, 75 percent of school divisions saw score improvements, 4.6 percent maintained scores and 19.8 percent had declines.

In high school, the math pass rate increased from 81 percent to 84 percent. However, the reading pass rate declined from 85 percent to 84 percent.

Most LCPS student subgroups had gains in reading and math. Students with disabilities had a reading pass rate increase from 50 to 52 percent and math pass rate increase from 48 percent to 53 percent. Economically disadvantaged students' reading pass rate increased from 57 to 29 percent, and the math pass rate increased from 52 percent to 58 percent. English learners had an improvement in math from 41 to 45 percent, but the reading pass rate declined from 36 to 25 percent.

"We are encouraged by the overall improvement in SOL scores across the division, and we will remain dedicated to addressing the unique needs of each student," said Ashley Ellis, chief academic officer at LCPS. "This includes providing targeted academic interventions and support systems for our English Learners and students with disabilities. LCPS will continue to focus on ensuring that every student has the opportunity to achieve their full potential."

Chronic Absenteeism and Other State Education Focuses

Along with SOL results, the Virginia Department of Education provided an update on another statewide focus: chronic absenteeism. Youngkin's office reiterated the benefits of regular school attendance, as chronically absent students (attending less than 90 percent of the school year) performed 19 percentage points below other students in reading and 26 points below in math.

Statewide, the rate of chronic absenteeism fell from 19.3 percent to 16.1 percent, with 40,974 fewer students chronically absent in the last school year. Virginia K-12 students collectively had 1,276,522 less absent days to allow 8,935,654 more hours of instruction, according to a Virginia Department of Education estimate.

Chronic absenteeism rates by school division will be released later in the fall. LCPS said it worked to reduce absenteeism in the last school year and had a reduction of schools with chronically absent students. In 2022-2023, 18.8 percent of LCPS students missed 10 percent or more of the school year.

The state is running an All in VA initiative through the 2025-2026 school year to address learning loss through high-intensity tutoring, extended time for tutoring, summer programs and personalized supplemental math and reading resources. The initiative also focuses on reducing chronic absenteeism with a Chronic Absenteeism Task Force, an action kit for divisions and other strategies.

The Virginia Department of Education is also accelerating the implementation of the Virginia Literary Act in kindergarten to third grade to support early literacy. The state initiative includes new instructional strategies for literacy and requires additional professional development for teachers. LCPS added four professional development days in the 2024-2025 school year to help the school division meet the state requirement.

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