Nationally, Only 4% of Black High School Graduates Are Ready for College
17 on ACT predicts dismal future for
Black students who want to go to college
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ACT Takers Make Marginal Gains in College Readiness, but Achievement Gaps Remain
By Molly Redden
August 17, 2011
The number of high-school graduates who took the ACT and met all
four of its college-readiness benchmarks has risen for the third year in
a row, with the ACT also testing its largest class ever this year.
Twenty-five percent of the class of 2011 met the ACT College
Readiness Benchmarks in math, science, English, and reading. The
benchmarks are the ACT's measurement of the likelihood a student will
earn a C or higher in a typical first-year college course in that
subject.
The gains, though, were marginal: 24 percent of all class of 2010
test-takers met the four benchmarks last year. The average composite
score was nearly the same this year as it was last year, up from 21.0 to
21.1.
"There is still a significant range of students in there this year,
with a quarter of them not meeting any benchmarks," said Jon L.
Erickson, interim president of the ACT's Education Division. For those
who consider the benchmarks to be an evaluation only of students who
have self-selected themselves as collegebound, Mr. Erickson said, "that
should be some cause for alarm."
But not all the test takers plan to attend college, he pointed out,
as more states have started to test all of their high school students
with the ACT, making the test an increasingly accurate barometer of
trends in higher-education preparedness among all high school students.
More than 1.62 million graduating seniors took this year's test, or
49 percent of the class of 2011. The highest proportion ever, 26
percent, were African-American or Hispanic/Latino. Robert A. Schaeffer,
public-education director for the National Center for Fair & Open
Testing, says those numbers are consistent with overall demographic
trends in the U.S. collegebound high-school population.
The racial-achievement gaps reported last year have persisted among
this year's graduating class, however. The average score was 17 for
black students, 18.7 for Hispanic/Latino students, and 22.4 for white
students, each up only 0.1 point from last year. Asian students' average
composite score was 23.6, up from 23.4 last year, and American
Indians/Alaska Natives' average score fell, by nearly half a point, to
18.6. Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander students' average score this year
was 19.5, and was not measured last year.
The percentages of students meeting benchmarks vary widely among
races, too. Forty-one percent of Asian students and 31 percent of white
students had the minimum scores for college readiness in all four areas,
compared with 15 percent of Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders, 11
percent of American Indians/Alaska Natives, 11 percent of
Hispanic/Latino students, and 4 percent of black students.
Improvement 'Isn't Strong Enough'
Taking the long view, Mr. Erickson says that over a period of about
five years, the ACT has found encouraging trends in mathematics and
science, even though a low proportion of students meet the
college-readiness benchmarks in those areas-45 percent and 30 percent
this year, respectively, up from 43 percent and 29 percent last year.
"We're seeing a positive gradual improvement," he says. "But gradual isn't strong enough."
But across the board, he says, students' reading and writing skills
have failed to improve. Fifty-two percent of test-takers passed the
college-readiness benchmarks for reading this year, and 66 percent
passed the benchmarks for English, the same proportions as achieved by
the class of 2010.
"Reading in many places falls off the map when students get to high school," Mr. Erickson says. "Nobody owns reading."
Mr. Schaeffer cautions against using the test as a measure of
college readiness, as the ACT's measurements have never been
independently evaluated. But they provide a consistent measurement of
how graduating high-school classes compare from year to year, he says,
and he agrees that the outlook is worrisome.
"Reading is one of the major things that was the focus of No Child
Left Behind," says Mr. Schaeffer. "If you graduated in 2011, you
experienced No Child Left Behind for nearly all of your education, from
fourth grade onward. Yet this shows there has been very little progress
made. No Child Left Behind has been a failure by measure of these tests.
"
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Few Students Are Ready for College Coursework, ACT Says
Percent of students in the United States deemed college ready in all four tested areas for 2011
Asian - 41%
White - 31%
All students - 25%
Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander - 15%
American Indian/Alaska Native - 11%
Hispanic/Latino - 11%
Black/African-American - 4%
Note: The ACT designated as ready high-school students who met minimum benchmark scores on its subject-area tests. Those scores were set to indicate a 50-percent chance of obtaining a grade of B or higher or about a 75-percent chance of obtaining a C or higher in a credit-bearing college course requiring skills in that subject area.
Average composite scores on the ACT by sex and race/ethnicity, 2011
Men - 21.2 Women - 21.0 Asian - 23.6 White - 22.4 Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander - 19.5 Hispanic/Latino - 18.7 American Indian/Alaska Native - 18.6 Black/African-American - 17.0 All students - 21.1 Note: The ACT exam is scored on a scale from 1 to 36.
Source: ACT
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Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Only 4% of Black High School Graduates Are Ready for College
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