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Trump plans to sign an executive order aimed at dismantling the Education Department; Advocates push Alabama Senate to fully end grocery tax; More Wyomingites get degrees, but anti-DEI law could slow progress; Competition prepares students for environmental science careers.

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White House attacks the judge who moved to block deportation of Venezuelans. Ukrainian President agrees to a limited ceasefire. And advocates say closing CFPB would put consumers on the hook for 'junk' charges and predatory fees.

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Cuts to Medicaid and frozen funding for broadband are both likely to have a negative impact on rural healthcare, which is already struggling. Plus, lawsuits over the mass firing of federal workers have huge implications for public lands.

Report: CA students make modest improvements, but lag after pandemic

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Monday, February 10, 2025   

California's 5.8 million public school kids have made small gains in 4th grade math and reading since 2022.

They're still behind pre-pandemic levels, according to new data from the 2024 Nation's Report Card.

Since 2019, California grade four math scores are down 2% and reading scores are down 4%.

Peggy Carr is a commissioner with the National Center for Education Statistics. She said the good news is chronic absenteeism rates, which doubled during the pandemic, are dropping.

"So, some improvement but not enough," said Carr. "And this wouldn't be so worrisome if we had not found a consistent and strong correlation between absenteeism and student performance. You have to come to school to learn."

Schools in Los Angeles are a bright spot, with 4th-grade math scores up 2% from 2019 levels. However, San Diego schools saw a 2% drop.

California students score slightly below the national average in 4th and 8th grade math and reading.

Martin West is vice chair of the National Assessment Governing Board. He noted that fewer kids are reading for fun, and thinks the rise of screen-based childhood has big implications for education.

"I could actually imagine it being something that creates both declines at the bottom and at the same time accelerates students at the top," said West, "because screens can be a remarkable source of enrichment if you know how to use them right."

The report card shows there are still huge racial gaps. For example, in 4th grade math, Hispanic children make up 75% of kids who score below the 25th percentile.




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