A Sort of Deep Dive into Bergen County Schools State Assessment Reports

Disclaimer: This is a loaded post. Thanks for reading nonetheless.

I’ve been looking at Bergen County schools state assessment reports for sometime and it wasn’t until recently that I decided to do a comparison of the results across two different school years and I noticed that some of the schools in certain towns either remained about the same or underwent a pretty decent % change when it comes to its students performing at proficiency (L3) and beyond (L4,L5).

I did the comparison for 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 grade 8 Math testing. Why did I choose grade 8 math? I felt like it might be the year and subject that might be the hardest, but I’m no teacher. I’m just a parent with two kids that will start school soon. Maybe I should check the other grades, like 3rd grade math testing scores for this analysis?

For more details on what data and stats I’m referring to, please look at: https://www.nj.gov/education/assessment/results/reports/

For additional reference, the L proficiency has been defined as follows:
Levels 1 and 2 indicate below-grade-level proficiency. Levels 3 and 4 indicate students performed at grade-level or above. Source for this is https://njedreport.com/scoop-first-peek-at-new-jersey-state-test-scores/#:~:text=Levels%201%20and%202%20indicate,)%2C%20math%2C%20and%20science%2C%20math%2C%20and%20science).

The comparison is listed below and my questions are:

  • What happened in these school districts (or Towns) that caused the proficiency of the student population to drop so much? One example is Maywood with a 21% change between the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 school year?

  • Similarly, for a school that saw a positive % change, what contributed to this? Did the town hire more teachers? Did the town get more funding? Did the student to teacher ratio change?

  • Is a one year analysis enough to say: “Maywood schools aren’t great because of the drop in proficiency level” or “Norwood and Waldwick significantly improved the proficiency levels and therefore these school districts have become competitive.”

  • For those school districts that have maintained consistency in test scores across the two school years, I am interpreting the consistency and small percent change as a town with a historically great school district. Is this an accurate assumption?

  • For Ramsey: I believe there’s a blue-ribbon school, but how competitive does it really get when you compare it to say, New Milford? Just by looking at this data, I’m inclined to moving to New Milford instead of Ramsey (not saying I’m doing this, but it’s just an example). Is this logic flawed?

Thanks for reading. Again, I’m just a parent that will soon have kids in public schools and wanted to understand how this works. I didn’t go to any of these schools. I went to a school that was considered great at that time, but now it has become mediocre.

2021-2022 2022-2023
Town L3-L5 L3-L5 % change
Allendale 86% 90%
Ho-Ho-Kus 80% 90% +10%
Harrington Park 77% 86% +9
Waldwick 65% 81% +16%
Upper Saddle River 72% 79%
Northvale 67% 78% +11%
Wyckoff 60% 77% +17%
New Milford 70% 75%
Closter 69% 75% +6%
Woodcliff Lake 82% 75% -7%
Demarest 86% 73% -13%’
Ramsey 60% 70% +10%
River Edge / Oradell 70% 70% +10%
Paramus 61% 70% +9%
River Vale 70% 70%
Tenafly 72% 67%
Fair Lawn 55% 66% +11%
Haworth 45% 65% +20%
Maywood 86% 65% -21%
Cresskill 57% 64% +7%
Norwood 38% 64% +26%
Midland Park 38% 59% +21%
Westwood 51% 58% +7%
Dumont 55% 57%
Hasbrouck Heights 52% 56%
Hillsdale 64% 56% -8%
Mahwah 52% 55%
Montvale 65% 55% -10%
Bergenfield 38% 52% +14%
Teaneck 55% 52%
Park Ridge 48% 40% -8%

submitted by /u/balenciagagucciprada to r/bergencounty
[link] [comments]

SOURCE