Test Scores for Berkeley Public Schools
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Test Scores for Berkeley Public Schools
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November 2003
I'm a newbie to the BUSD and am wondering about choosing
the right school. When are the information times? Can you
do tours? The schools I'm most interested in in our ''zone''
are Thousand Oaks and Jefferson. Secondly, the STAR scores
listed on the web site are pretty poor for most of the
schools. Are these tests a good measure for the schools'
capabilities?
The visiting days, and information nights are available on the
BUSD website http://www.berkeley.k12.ca.us
As to test scores: Berkeley scores are really quite good, and
improving. They are higher than both the state and the county
average. However, they do reflect the number of
socioeconomically disadvantaged students the district serves,
because children from families with higher incomes score better
than those from low incomes. This means BUSD scores will
always be lower than those in suburban districts (like Orinda/
Moraga) or very wealthy districts (like Piedmont). It is important to
look at the test scores as broken down by demographics to see
how your own ethnic group is fairing. Anything over 800 is meeting
the state standard. Now, if more middle- and upper- class families
in Berkeley sent their kids to public schools, the aggregate scores
would go way up!
happy BUSD parent
Look at test scores with a questioning eye. Look at
subcategories (African-American, white, Hispanic, low-
income, etc) not just the overall school score (in Berkeley
white, non-low income students are generally 200-300 test
points higher than other subgroups - so if your child is
white, the subgroup score/trend is probably more relevant
than the overall school score - and whether your child is
white or of color (high or underachieving) the school's
response to the achievement gap is important - schools
SHOULD be expecting ALL students to achieve. Look at trends
(test scores improving?). More importantly VISIT THE
SCHOOL! Check out the hallways, the playgrounds, the
principal's office - get a feel for the school's overall
approach to discipline/expected student behavior. Go to a
PTA meeting/School Site meeting and talk to active parents
(and find out whether there IS an active parent community -
and a sense of school community?). Check out after school
programs if you will need extended day care. Look at more
than kindergarten - get a sense if there is a cohesive,
schoolwide expectation for each successive grade. Ask
about/talk to the principal - is he/she out and about?,
value community decision-making?- proactive or reactive? -
RESPECTED or ignored? Are teachers engaged in ongoing
training in differentiated teaching? dealing with diversity
(class and race)? working as a team within grades? Look at
bulletin boards and what's in classrooms. Do at least most
classes/bulletin boards show student work (and check out
quality of work!) and/or creative? And of course, consider
your child's personality/needs - for example, some public
schools are more structured than others, are more art
oriented, etc.
Karen H.
this page was last updated: Apr 10, 2004
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