The School District of Philadelphia

Office of Communications and Community Relations
School District of Philadelphia Education Center
440 North Broad Street, Suite 102
Philadelphia, PA 19130-4015
(215) 400-4040

#094-08 June 30, 2008

School District of Philadelphia Test Scores Show Strong Gains for an Unprecedented Sixth Year

PSSA 2007-2008 Test Scores Reveal Gains in Math and Reading and Subgroups


PHILADELPHIA - The School District of Philadelphia today released the 2007-2008 Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) test results, which show a record sixth consecutive year of growth in math and reading scores. Math scores rose 4.1 percentage points over last year, or 29.5 percentage points since 2002, and reading scores rose 4.2 percentage points, or 20.9 percentage points since 2002. (See Chart 1.) The PSSA is administered every year in reading and math to all third through eighth grade and eleventh grade students.

"The School Reform Commission is immeasurably pleased that we now can claim six consecutive years of test score growth," said Chairwoman Sandra Dungee Glenn. "Our results are due to the effective efforts of teachers and principals, the support of parents, regional and central administration, and most importantly to the hard work of our students. Our history of six years of test score increases corresponds to the period during which the SRC has directed additional targeted resources to our schools. This underscores the fact that large, diverse urban school districts can be successful in raising student achievement, given adequate resources. This message is a timely one, since the Pennsylvania legislature is currently deliberating on a State budget which contains Governor Edward G. Rendell’s proposal to provide additional funding for all of Pennsylvania’s public school systems. That is something that is vitally needed here in Philadelphia in order to continue this upward progress."

The sixth year of test score increases is marked by strong gains across all grades in the number of students scoring Advanced or Proficient in math and reading with the exception of 4th grade reading scores, which showed no change. (See Chart 2.) PSSA results reported by groups also show increases in all categories when reported by race/ethnicity, students with disabilities, English language learners, and economically disadvantaged students. (See Charts 5-8.)

"I congratulate the educators, students and parents of the School District of Philadelphia for this significant achievement," said Superintendent of Schools Arlene C. Ackerman. "I can assure the citizens of Philadelphia that any large, diverse urban school system in America would be happy to claim a system-wide gain of this size. That it was accomplished here in Philadelphia is a tribute to the leadership of the School Reform Commission and my predecessors. Moreover, it will give me, my administrative team, and our principals and teachers a platform on which to build further student success."

The percentage of students scoring Below Basic, which is the lowest performance level, continued to decline. Students in the 5th and 7th grades demonstrated the greatest decline in both reading and math. In the 5th grade, students scoring Below Basic in reading declined by 4.9 percentage points and in math by 6.4 percentage points. Seventh grade decreases in the Below Basic category were even more dramatic. In reading the numbers declined by 6.2 percentage points and math 8.8 percentage points. (See Chart 4.)

"We are very proud of our students, our teachers and all of the staff members, whose creativity and commitment have fueled annual achievement gains," said Jerry Jordan, President of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers. There are few districts in the country that have sustained academic growth for six years consecutively. We cannot stop striving for excellence, and we must never be complacent, because there are still too many children who are not making enough progress academically to graduate from high school on time and prepared for work and college. We must do more to insure all children receive greater access to a high quality education in our schools."

Following are highlights of the 2008 PSSA test results for the School District of Philadelphia.

Percentage of Students Scoring Advanced or Proficient by Grade

Percentage of Students Scoring Below Basic by Grade

Percentage of Students Scoring Advanced or Proficient by Group

Percentage of Students Scoring Below Basic by Group

PSSA Reading Results by Management Type

PSSA Math Results by Management Type

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