Results tagged “NAEP” from Dewey21C

Just the fact that there are headlines, is of course, a good thing.

It is interesting to see how this is being reported, particularly from the headline perspective. It's an amazing statement on how this is being reported, which in turn raises great questions as to whether these reporters understand the issues, do any analysis, or simply just print the press release.

It's also interesting to note the lack of comments from authoritative figures. Most of the pieces carry a quote from NAEP officials, and yes, Arne Duncan issued a statement. There are a couple of pieces with a comment from the National Endowment for the Arts.

But where is Diane Ravitch? What about Randi Weingarten? What about some of the big name school superintendents or school board presidents? How about a word on this from Checker Finn?

You've got the positive headlines: "Visual arts, music, stand as core component..." "Proportion of Schools Offering the Arts Stays the Same." "NAEP Finds Schools' Offerings in Arts Holds Steady."

You've got the negative headlines: "Study Finds Instruction in Art Lags in 8th Grade." Which was initially released yesterday as "Mediocre Arts Skills for American Eighth Graders."

You've got the fence sitting headline: "National Arts Test Scores offer Clouded Picture."

You've even got the insider headline: "What does 'P' in music mean? Twenty percent of J card.jpgstudents know." I have to say, with some embarrassment, that when I first read that headline, I found it confusing. Of course I know what p stands for as part of musical notation, hey, I have two music degrees from Juilliard (that's called playing the Juilliard card, which ordinarily doesn't count for much). That being said, my brain couldn't decode the "p" as part of text, out of context.

Here are nine headlines from a Google search this morning:


Nation's Report Card on the Arts for 2008 released

Baltimore Sun - ‎15 hours ago‎
The National Assessment of Educational Progress released on Monday the Nation's Report Card on the Arts for 2008, the first such report since 1997. ...

Study Finds Instruction in Art Lags in 8th Grade

New York Times - ‎16 hours ago‎
By SAM DILLON Music and art instruction in American eighth-grade classrooms has remained flat over the last decade, according to a new survey by the ...

National arts test scores offer clouded picture

The Associated Press - ‎16 hours ago‎
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Kids were taking fewer field trips to art museums even before the recession began to gouge school budgets, according to a nationwide ...

What does 'p' in music mean? Twenty percent of US students know.

Christian Science Monitor - ‎18 hours ago‎
Half of American eighth-graders can tell that a clarinet is playing the solo when they listen to the opening passage of Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue. ...

Picture is unclear on arts instruction in schools

USA Today - ‎Jun 15, 2009‎
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY Gather up a group of eighth-graders, pop in a CD of George Gershwin's seminal Rhapsody in Blue and turn up the volume. ...

NewsReleaseWire.com (press release) - ‎17 hours ago‎
RESTON, VA (June 15, 2009) - Recognizing that arts education is included in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) as part of the nation's core ...

Frequency of Arts Instruction Remains Steady Since 1997 on the ...

PR Newswire (press release) - ‎19 hours ago‎
WASHINGTON, June 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The frequency of arts instruction has remained steady for over a decade although significant racial/ethnic, ...

Proportion of Schools Offering the Arts Stays About the Same

Education Week News (subscription) - ‎22 hours ago‎
It's been more than a decade since the National Assessment of Educational Progress tested 8th graders in what they know and can do in the arts. ...

NAEP Finds Schools' Offerings in Arts Hold Steady

Education Week News (subscription) - ‎Jun 15, 2009‎
By Mary Ann Zehr About the same share of 8th graders attend schools where music and visual-arts instruction are offered as a decade ago--a proportion that ...


June 16, 2009 11:47 AM | | Comments (0)
It's been eleven years since the last arts assessment from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), known as the "Nation's Report Card." NAEP is also widely viewed as the gold standard of educational assessment.

On Friday June 15th, the 2008 "Arts Report Card" was released. Before I get into anything else, I do have to say how important it is that NAEP includes the arts. While there will be big and small issues to debate, the effort here is important and hopefully something that can be done again in less than 11 years, while being improved upon greatly.

Here's the link straight to the NAEP website.

Here's a link to the NAEP Commissioner's remarks.

Here's a link to Secretary Duncan's statement on NAEP.

Here's a good Duncan quote:

This Arts Report Card should challenge all of us to make K-12 arts programs more available to America's children and youth. Such programs not only engage students' creativity and academic commitment today, but they uniquely equip them for future success and fulfillment. We can and should do better for America's students.


Way to go Mr.Secretary!  Let's all keep that statement in mind when it comes to "Race to The Top" funds from the USDOE.

Here is Sam Dillon's piece for the NY Times: Mediocre Arts Skills for American Eighth Graders

A few notes:
1. NAEP looked at music and visual arts at the 8th grade level and includes both public and private schools
2. NAEP did not look at theater or dance.
3. Purely In terms of access, NAEP looked only at what was offered to students sampled, and found that there wasn't much change in the provision of art and music at the 8th grade level.
4. NAEP reports an achievement gap in art and music, tracking to "racial, ethnic, gender, and socio-economic levels."
5. NAEP sampled a total of 7,900 eigth-graders nationwide, assessing half for music and half for visual arts.

So, what to make of all this? I plan to come back with more analysis and commentary. A quick read:

1. It's good thing that this is revealing important issues concerning quality of instruction in art and music.

2. It appears to do a disservice to the equity and access issues by giving the impression the arts are holding their own over the past 11 years. While the access may appear relatively static in the sample, without getting into great details, it's lacking the relevant and necessary context of what's transpired over the past decade. A great deal of work has taken place since 1997 to restore arts education. If you consider that after all that work, that the arts are in the same place on the basis of access, well, that's much, much worse a situation than is indicated in the report. And of course, there's plenty of missing context in terms of what students should be receiving.

And, let's remember that the report relies on what administrators report concerning what is offered to students. This is the Achilles heel of most of these reports. We do not know what the kids are actually receiving. So, for those crowing about how this proves the curriculum hasn't narrowed as a result of NCLB, they better think again.

More to come, as I haven't had a chance to really kick the tires here.

In the meantime, here's a quote to chew on:

"The 2008 arts assessment shows students do not seem to be missing out on opportunities for, and access to, arts education, as many have argued in recent years," said Darvin M. Winick, chairman of the National Assessment Governing Board, which oversees and sets policy for NAEP. "But we do face consistent and wide racial/ethnic, gender, and socioeconomic gaps across the subject areas."

Vote now, choose one:
Applause?
or
Cough?


Here in New York City, middle school only 46 percent of middle school students are provided with the minimum arts requirements according to New York State Law. That means that we cannot find the means to provide a total of 108 hours of arts instruction across the middle school grades for each and every student.

Missing out on "opportunities for, and access to, arts education?" Ahem, cough
arts2008_nowavailable.jpg
June 15, 2009 12:13 PM | | Comments (1)
Okay, maybe it's really the second round, as the first could be viewed as the education portion of the stimulus package.

I've read a lot about Arne Duncan being a basketball player, but hadn't heard much about him liking to mix it up.
knockout blow.jpg
Yesterday Duncan spoke at a press conference in Maryland where he outlined what will be required of states in order to receive the second round of stimulus money. The Secretary is going to require significant reporting from each state on a number of key indicators.

There's a lot more here to the story that meets the eye: one of the requirements will be for states to disclose how they are scoring on the National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP), in addition to state and local tests. NAEP, long considered the gold standard, and a nationally uniform one at that, may be an early indicator as to how Duncan will seek to change NCLB, which has been widely criticized for having no uniform standard, since it allows states to design and run their own tests. What is more, many see a number of states having watered down their tests to cover up the truth about how their students are performing. Some districts that score well on the state tests, but poorly on NAEP, have dismissed NAEP. Bu hey, that's politics, not research.

Oh, by the way, there is a NAEP arts assessment.

This is going to get very, very interesting.

Okay, when did Duncan land his blow?

In response to South Carolina's Governor Mark Sanford's exclamation that he would not accept over $500 million in education stimulus money, Duncan took a very big swing, let's call it a near knockout left hook by explicating K-12 data from South Carolina indicating that only 15% of African American students are proficient in math and their graduation rates are among the lowest in America.

Oh snap!

Duncan went on to say: "for South Carolina to stand on the sidelines and say that the status quo is O.K., that defies logic."

Click here to read the story in The New York Times.

And click below to have your block knocked off...



April 2, 2009 9:27 AM | | Comments (0)

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