EDITORIAL
As usual, it’s hard to make perfect sense of the latest test score
numbers coming from our schools. The release last week of the Academic
Performance Index -- based for the first time on more than just Stanford
9 tests -- showed a number of Huntington Beach schools doing extremely
well compared to the rest of the state. At the same time, many of those
schools seem to perform less well when matched against schools with
similar socioeconomic demographics.
For the most part, school officials at all three districts were
unconcerned by the numbers, saying it was unwise to overreact to a single
set of scores. We agree -- for the most part. Numbers are both easy to
manipulate and rather limited representations of how students, let alone
schools, are performing. High schools, for instance, have a roughly 25%
change in student body each year as seniors graduate and freshmen take
their place.
At the same time, the disparity between how our schools rank statewide
and then compared to similar campuses is often extreme. Both middle
schools drop in the Huntington Beach School District, Dwyer from an eight
in the state ranking to a two, and Sowers from a nine to a two. All of
the district’s elementary schools also fared worse in comparison to
similar campuses. At the high school level, Edison, Huntington Beach and
Marina all dropped from nines to a two, five and five, respectively.
Are these results the equivalent of a four-alarm fire? No. But they do
suggest there may be a bit of smoke to put out on our campuses -- before
there are any flames.
Passing the school bond is one obvious key to improving our schools.
But it should not stand alone. Our school officials, teachers and parents
need to continue finding new ways to make our schools better, to stoke
the fire of our children’s education.
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