Now Reading
Nat'l report card gives Az schools a D for academics
"Tucson's independent watchdog news"
Local news

From the archive: This story is more than 5 years old.

Nat'l report card gives Az schools a D for academics

  • The national report card on schools measured math and reading scores for fourth- and eighth-grade students to get an academic achievement score. It also looked at finances, school choice, workforce preparedness and several other measures.
    Jessica Goldberg/Vaughn Hillyard/Cronkite NewsThe national report card on schools measured math and reading scores for fourth- and eighth-grade students to get an academic achievement score. It also looked at finances, school choice, workforce preparedness and several other measures.
  • Arizona was one of 20 states, with the District of Columbia, to get a grade of D or worse for their students’ academic achievement on a national report card.
    Map courtesy U.S. Chamber of Commerce FoundationArizona was one of 20 states, with the District of Columbia, to get a grade of D or worse for their students’ academic achievement on a national report card.

Arizona schools got a ‘D’ for their overall academic achievement on a national report card released Thursday by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation.

“Leaders and Laggards: A State-by-State Report Card on K-12 Educational Effectiveness,” graded states on how well their schools are performing and how well prepared students are for today’s job market.

The report, based on 2013 data, showed slight improvement for all states since the first report was released in 2007. Despite gains, however, the picture was still grim.

Arizona was one of 20 states and the District of Columbia to get a D or worse for their students’ academic achievement in the new report. And the U.S. as a whole continued to trail other nations on standardized test results, the report said.

Arizona school officials could not be reached to comment on the results Thursday, but other groups that work with schools in the state were not surprised by the grade.

“I see that this is our reality,” said Eileen Sigmund, president and CEO of Arizona Charter Schools Association. She wondered if the scores show that schools are “doing a disservice to our students, ultimately our state.”

A spokesman for the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry said the national report reflects the concerns of the state’s business community – concerns that some groups in the state are working to fix.

“The business community understands some of the concerns that were raised in the ‘Leaders and Laggards’ report, but we’re not just sitting on our hands,” said Garrick Taylor, the state chamber spokesman. “We are doing something about it.”

The report is an issue for the chamber, he said, because it means employers are having trouble finding qualified applicants for jobs.

Workforce readiness was just one of several areas assessed in the report, from parental choice to finances to return on investment.

The academic achievement category was based on math and reading proficiency exams taken by fourth- and eighth-grade students, and comparing the 2013 averages with the percentage change in those scores from the 2007 report.

In Arizona, fewer than 30 percent of students were deemed proficient on the National Assessment of Educational Progress reading tests for fourth- and eighth-graders in the new report. Nationally, the proficiency rate was 34 percent and 35 percent, respectively.

For the math exam, 40 percent of Arizona fourth-graders were proficient, 2 percentage points below the national average; 31 percent of the state’s eighth-graders were proficient, 3 percentage points below the nation.

Taylor said the chamber has become active in education reform because it can open the door to economic development in the state.

“A high-performing education system will lead to greater job growth, which will in turn lead to a healthier economy,” he said.

Taylor pointed to “A for Arizona,” an initiative of the chamber and the Tucson Hispanic Chamber of Commerce to increase the number of top-performing low-income schools in the state. It is aimed at those schools that have “rejected the claim that their demography is destiny and have instead chosen to be excellent,” Taylor said.

Sigmund said teachers have the ability to change things.

“I think our first line of defense is teachers,” Sigmund said. “That is ultimately who is going to be making the difference for our students.”

Arizona did get an ‘A’ in the parental options category, which looked at how much control parents have over their child’s education.

Sigmund said she still finds hope in what schools can do to better prepare students for the workforce.

“I think we are starting to see a lot more cohesion towards a comprehensive solution,” she said.

Below the curve

Arizona schools got a grade of D for their academic achievement on a national report card on school performance from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The state’s grades included:


  • Academic achievement: D
  • Academic achievement for low-income and minority students: D
  • Return on investment: B
  • Truth in advertising: C
  • Postsecondary and workforce readiness: D
  • 21st-century teacher force: C-
  • Parental options: A
  • Data quality: C
  • Technology: C
  • International competitiveness: D
  • Fiscal responsibility: B

Be a watchdog with us!

Unlike most news outlets, the Tucson Sentinel publishes our stories without a paywall. We believe a healthy community depends on everyone having access to quality independent journalism. As a nonprofit organization, we're committed to providing real reporting to all Southern Arizona residents.

Help us keep digging into the desert dirt, so we can bring you stories you can't find anywhere else

A single story can cost us thousands of dollars to report – some take months & months of dogged digging, others require paying for tall stacks of records that officials don't want to provide. Some mean driving to remote corners of Pima County, & some see our reporters sitting through endless government meetings to make sure they get the whole story & not just a quick headline. Our award-winning newsroom has some of the best reporters, photographers & editors in the state, and we're dedicated to getting the story right.

Our pioneering effort (we were one of the very first local nonprofit news outlets in the entire country) to rebuild local journalism will only work if enough people join our Watchdog Club community of paying members. Please join today for as little as $15/month.

For those who can't afford to contribute right now, please sign up for our free Watchdog Update newsletters, & help the spread word about the Sentinel to your friends, family, neighbors & co-workers. Your contributions help the Sentinel sustain & grow our nonprofit newsroom & bolster our commitment to delivering the important independent news our community needs to thrive.

A smarter Tucson is a better Tucson — and the Sentinel shines a light on this town because we love it. Please join with us today.

 

Subscribe and stretch your donation over time:

$15/mo. Cub Reporter
$25/mo. Printer's Devil
$40/mo. Stringer
$50/mo. Correspondent
$100/mo. Senior Correspondent
Enter your own monthly amount (number only)

Or give a secure one-time gift with PayPal or your credit card:

$60 Cub reporter
$120 Printer's Devil
$250 Stringer
$500 Correspondent
$1,000 Senior Correspondent
$2,500 Trusted Source
Enter your own amount (number only)

The Tucson Sentinel is published by Tucson Investigative Reporting Center Inc., an Arizona nonprofit organization. Your contribution is tax-deductible.

— 30 —

Best in Internet Exploder

we read thousands of pages of public records so you don't have toauthentically local news & community viewsyou've got questions. we get answers.