Font Size: a A A

An analysis of the impact and focus of preparation efforts to improve student performance on the Stanford Nine mathematics test

Posted on:2004-11-23Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:American UniversityCandidate:Dickens, James CFull Text:PDF
GTID:2457390011956574Subject:Education
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
The District of Columbia Public School System uses the results of the Stanford Nine mathematics test to determine if students have acquired functional and advanced skills in mathematics. The impact of the student's performance on this test is significant, for the testing outcome may impact a student's eligibility to graduate from high school and the careers of educators involved with this process can be negatively affected. In fact, poor test scores have already resulted in teacher transfers, principal firings, and total school transformations.;The Stanford Nine mathematics test scores for high school students are very low. A student's performance falls in one of three categories: Below Basic, Basic, Proficient, and Advanced. For the last three years, nearly 80% of the students tested fell in the Below Basic category. Hence, the motivation for this research was to document how schools are preparing students for the test and record what kind of impact that test preparation efforts are having on teachers and students. Intensive interviewing revealed that students and teachers feel that they are unfairly pressured to reach testing goals although they are not provided the necessary time or resources to succeed. Many of the students admitted that they do not take the test seriously because their performance on the test does not positively or negatively impact their immediate academic standing in school. The research outcomes did not support the assumption that test score differences were due to varying teaching methods. The teachers interviewed from the four high schools offered similar strategies for attacking typical Stanford Nine mathematics problems, and some of the schools used the same strategy to engage the entire student population in test readiness activities. The results of a sample test administered to high school students from the four schools showed a strong relationship between test scores and socio-economic factors; the schools whose students were products of poor neighborhoods generally posted lower test scores. Also, hypothesis testing results indicated that there was not a significant relationship between grades and sample test scores.;It is apparent that a plan to improve Stanford Nine mathematics scores for high school students will require a comprehensive effort that involves social as well as educational reforms. Higher test scores will become a reality if students are held accountable for their performance, if parents are motivated to support the educational process more aggressively, and if educators continue to embrace effective test preparation strategies.
Keywords/Search Tags:Stanford nine mathematics, Preparation, Student, Impact, Performance, School, Test scores
PDF Full Text Request
Related items
Correlation between reading skills and mathematics performance: An analysis of Stanford Achievement Test scores from grades 6 to 11
The relationship of teacher efficacy, mathematics anxiety, achievement, preparation, and years of experience to student Iowa Tests of Basic Skills mathematics test scores
Will a music and spatial -temporal math program enhance test scores? An analysis of second -grade students' mathematics performance on the Stanford -9 Test and the Capistrano Unified School District CORE Level Test
The impact of student attendance and other variables on elementary academic achievement as measured by Stanford Achievement Test scores at grades 2 and 5 in rural, suburban and urban school districts in Missouri
Predictors of student achievement in grade 7: The correlations between the Stanford Achievement Test, Otis -Lennon School Ability Test, and performance on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) math and reading tests
Comparison of LEAP test scores of 4th grade students taught by mathematics specialists and self -contained teachers
The effect of a proportional reasoning-based test preparation instructional treatment on the mathematics achievement of eighth grade students
The impact of a specialized mathematics curriculum for eleventh-grade at-risk students on their New Jersey High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA) mathematics test performance
The relationship of elementary school size to the 1996 Stanford Achievement Test scores of fifth-grade students
10 Job -embedded staff development and its impact on teacher instruction and student performance