When the standardized test scores were presented at a meeting of the Cambridge School Committee last night, district officials lauded an increase in district scores from previous years.
“Rather than small incremental progress we’ve seen in the past, this seems different,” committee member Alan C. Price said.
Passing scores in the 10th grade—which determine whether or not students may graduate from high school—increased 9 percent over the past three years in English and 10 percent since last year in math.
This year 63 percent of Cambridge 10th-graders already have the necessary scores to graduate when they are seniors, compared with 49 percent of 10th-graders in 2002 and 53 percent in 2001.
And the district—plagued by persistent gaps in achievement in minority and low-income students—also boasted a higher passing rate of black and Hispanic students as compared with the state.
But scores among Asian, white and non-native English speaking black students slipped this year, and the district lagged behind state scores for special education and low-income students.
Nonetheless, officials and committee members emphasized their progress at a time when morale in the system is low after years of declining enrollment and a divisive battle over school mergers.
“We need to do more publicizing of the positive in our system,” said Executive Director of Student Achievement and Accountability Maryann MacDonald, who announced the district’s results. “We are doing as well as and in some cases exceeding our counterparts in the state.”
MacDonald recognized two schools, the Fletcher-Maynard Academy and the King School, for showing marked increases in performance this year.
Leaders of both schools shared their strategies with the committee.
They said they had worked to align their school curricula with the test, extended class periods, provided after school programs, and focused on literacy in both language arts and math classes.
Their presentation was met with effusive praise from committee members.
