SCHOOL TEST SCORES ARE GOOD SNAPSHOT
“This is what we need to look at, and we need to try to determine what’s happening – and if we can learn why, that can be very helpful to us,” said Jennifer Kubista EdD, superintendent of the district. Dr. Kubista made her observations at the final “community chat,” which was held at the Henry Hill Hawk meeting room this past week. However, she unveiled the test scores at the last school board meeting, prompting one board member to note the data sets were beginning to show trends.
The results were based on the previous years’ “Smarter Balanced Assessment” test, which showed this particular group, ages 12-to-13, improved more than 4% per year, for an overall rise of 16.6%. “Data collection is just so very important,” Dr. Kubista said. By having the same test annually and, in general, the same students taking it as they move through grades, “we can get information that is valuable.”
In a brief interview after the community chat, Dr. Kubista added that the data-building effort at the district is being designed so that different categories, even individual students, can be tracked over time to give a clearer picture of gains and losses in periodic testing. “We aren’t there yet, but we’re headed there,” she said.
CHS TRAINING A NEW ESSENTIAL GOAL
Asked during the meeting if such career preparation at the high school level has merit, Dr. Kubista said she is an advocate of it, noting that radiologic technicians earn as much as $75,000 annually -- and they don’t require a four-year college degree.
Career and technical education sustain high-school student involvement, she said. In fact, it’s linked to “on-time graduation,” she added. In addition, it means some high school graduates can “hit the ground running” in terms of immediate job opportunities, she said.