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KP schools show WASL scores improvement
By Lori Losee
KP News
Key Peninsula schools last year
made major strides in the Washington Assessment of
Student Learning, and staff and district officials are
looking at ways to assist schools to improve even more.
“We were probably a little
disappointed in this year’s scores (for the whole school
district), but I am proud of the progress that we have
made and the trend the last four or five years showing a
steady upward growth,” Peninsula School District
Superintendent Terry Bouck said.
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A sample of local
schools' 2005 scores. |
Bouck added that this one-year dip
allows the district to step back and analyze the scores,
and that is where the district’s Director of Research
and Assessment Amy Nelson comes in.
Elementary schools
Evergreen Elementary third-graders
scored the highest of all three KP schools in reading
and math. Vaughn Elementary saw improvement across the
board, with scores higher than state and district
averages in fourth-grade reading and writing as well as
fifth-grade reading. Minter Creek’s fourth graders also
scored higher than the state average in reading, writing
and math while fifth-graders’ reading and math scores
surpassed state averages.
This was the first time statewide
that third-graders and fifth-graders were given the
exam, which consisted of a reading and math section.
At the fifth grade level, this was
only the third year for the science WASL section.
“(Science) is relatively new and
we are getting our teachers trained on a different way
to approach this portion of the WASL because it differs
from the district’s (science) curriculum,” Nelson said.
Even before Evergreen Elementary
School Principal Jacque Crisman received her school’s
WASL scores, she knew what the scores were going to be
within 5 percent, thanks to the monthly assessments the
school does.
“We noticed that there was a dip in
our schools scores and we will look at specifically how
to help our students next year in those areas,” she
said. “With that said, growth does not always happen in
a straight line.
“What we also noticed (is) that if
we look at a trend line over time … our school continues
to improve. We are proud of our students and teachers.
We recognize how hard they work and appreciate their
efforts.”
Nelson said because Evergreen has
such a low testing population, scores fluctuate from
year to year and are sometimes hard to analyze.
“It is hard to define trends,” she
said. “But the great thing at Evergreen is that rather
than focusing on the overall school’s scores, they focus
on students who didn’t meet standards.”
Crisman said each year the school
staff looks at the previous year’s scores for individual
students. Staff then create plans and addresses
deficits.
“For students that we targeted, we
saw growth,” she said. “We are very proud of our
students who we worked extra hard with to make
individual growth.”
This school year, Evergreen has
four goals; math, reading, writing and climate. “One
goal we are focusing specifically on is math,” Crisman
said. “As a school we have planned time for our teachers
to really focus on math instruction and best practices.
We are also looking at our shortcomings on the WASL and
addressing those areas.”
Key Peninsula Middle School
After seeing a huge increase in
scores in 2005, Key Peninsula Middle School’s
seventh-graders showed the most improvement in reading
scores, which were higher than the state’s scores.
KPMS Principal Sharon Shaffer sees
her school’s WASL scores on an upward trend.
“We have continued to show growth
in student achievement over time,” she said. “We like to
view the results over a period of time, so that we can
track our trends.”
Nelson said that because the school
saw such a huge bump last year in math, school and
district officials expected scores to dip.
Shaffer added that with the recent
adoption of SpringBoard in school’s literacy blocks, she
expects the upward trend to continue in the area of
reading.
“A strong student achievement focus
for us at KPMS is in math,” she said. “While we have
made significant growth, we still have plenty of work to
do.
“Across the state, student
achievement in math has been a challenge. That is true
for us here at KPMS as well. We take seriously the
challenge of continuous and positive gains in
achievement for all of our students.”
“At KPMS, they have done an
excellent job,” Superintendent Bouck said. “The staff
continues to raise the bar and find ways of intervention
with struggling students.”
Bouck said as a way to reward the
hard work of the staff, the district is providing
additional assistance to the school to help review and
analyze test data and compile the results of a survey of
staff, students and parents. Funding is being provided
by voter-approved Initiative 728. The assistance will
also be used to help teachers and the staff for extra
planning time and to collaborate as teams to focus on
areas of improvement.
Peninsula High School
Nelson said one area where the
district expected to see a bump in scores was the math
section for 10th-graders.
“We did see an increase, but not
the 10 percent bump we expected, like we saw in reading
and writing,” she said. “Our (math scores) continue to
go up with our math aligned curriculum, but we will just
have to dig a little deeper into the results.”
Nelson said one reason why there
was such an increase in scores at the 10th grade level
at both the district and state levels was because
students saw the WASL as a graduation requirement and
not as an optional test.
At Peninsula High School, as at all
other public high schools across the state, last year’s
WASL held high stakes for the first time for 10th
graders. Last year’s 10th graders will be the first
class for whom passing the WASL is a high school
graduation requirement.
The school’s 10th-grade scores were
higher than state scores in reading, math, writing and
science (42 percent). The school’s science score was
also higher than the district’s score.
Nelson said that at PHS, 44.5
percent of 10th-graders who took the test last spring
met standard in all three graduation requirement areas
(reading, writing and mathematics). By comparison, at
Gig Harbor High School, 57.8 percent of the 10th-graders
met standard in all three areas.
Nelson cautioned, however, that
those numbers are not exact because of three reasons:
Special education students who took an alternative
method were not part of these total numbers, and PHS had
several students who took these alternative lower level
assessments; ninth-graders who elect to take the test
early are not included in these numbers; and students
who retook the assessment in August are not included in
these numbers.
Tenth-grade students are allowed to
take up to five retakes at the district’s expense. The
first of these retakes was offered in August, and scores
are expected in the next few weeks. Students only have
to retake the sections in which they fail.
If students fail the WASL after the
second time, they have three alternatives to the WASL,
including using their math SAT score, be a part of a GPA
cohort group, or build a portfolio of their work that
best represents the standards in the math, reading and
writing sections.
Overall, all five Key Pen schools
including Peninsula High showed growth over the past
year in at least one section of the WASL.
“The best news is that this
district has done a wonderful job of improvement,” Bouck
said. “We’ve always focused on continuous improvement
and focus on struggling students and find ways of
intervention to assist students to succeed.
“The WASL isn’t everything. In this
district, we look at a lot of things including the whole
child and what we can do to maximize their talents.”
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