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PTA president reacts to state SAT scores

By The Associated Press
Posted 6:35AM on Tuesday 14th September 2010 ( 14 years ago )
ATLANTA - One of the biggest supporters of education in Georgia says don't get down on the students or their teachers because of another poor showing on the SAT.

The president of the Georgia PTA, Sheila Cornelius, tells Georgia News Network don't judge schools by one test. Concentrate, instead, on the new, tougher cirrirula students will be learning.

Both Hall and Gwinnett County schools are reporting that their students who took the SAT outpaced students on the statewide level... and Gwinnett students topped the national average. (See separate story.)

Georgia high school students fared worse on the SAT college-entrance exam for the fourth year in a row, according to a report released Monday.

The state's average score on the test was 1453, a seven-point drop from last year and a 24-point drop from 2006 when scores began to decrease steadily. The state also lags behind the national average score of 1509, which stayed flat this year.

Part of Georgia's decline is because the number of test-takers increased to 66,000 from last year's 63,000. Typically, states with larger pools of test takers have lower scores, particularly in states like Georgia with large minority populations that historically do not do as well on the exam as their white classmates.

This year, the scoring gap between Georgia's black and white students remained the same at 279 points with both groups dropping a point. That beats the national gap of 303 points between black and white students.

State schools Superintendent Brad Bryant said Georgia has revamped its math curriculum, which should show up in the scores when the high school class of 2012 takes the SAT. He said he is requesting data from the College Board, which administers the SAT, on how students taking harder classes perform on the test compared to students who do not.

``What I'm anxious to see is how our students that have worked their way through this more rigorous curriculum start to catch up with the rest of the nation in spite of the more diverse student population we're testing,'' Bryant said. ``That's what we believe to be the foundational stepping stone to get us to better results on the SAT.''

The biggest decline for the state was in writing, where students scored 475 compared to last year's 479.

In math, Georgia students scored 490, a one-point drop from 2009. The critical reading score this year was 488, down two points from last year.

Tim Callahan, spokesman for the Professional Association of Georgia Educators, said the scores show the state still isn't doing what needs to be done for children while making millions of dollars in cuts to schools.

``It just indicates that there's much, much more work to be done in terms of beefing up our curriculum and training our teachers on that curriculum, which has not been done,'' said Callahan, whose group represents nearly 80,000 Georgia educators.

Nationally, average scores on the SAT college entrance exam held steady this year as a record number of students and more minorities than ever took the test. The status quo was an improvement over a slight downward trend over the previous five years.

The average SAT score nationally remains down nine points since 2006, when the writing section was first included and the test moved to a combined 2400-point scale.

http://accesswdun.com/article/2010/9/232203

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