Income levels not so important for test results, C.D. Howe study claims.TORONTO -- A C.D. Howe Institute Study suggests that schools with many low income families should be compared with other schools in the same type of neighbourhood especially when comparing the results on standardized standardized pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures. standardized morbidity rate see morbidity rate. standardized mortality rate see mortality rate. provincial tests. Family income levels do not tell the complete story, the researchers claim. A study of provincial test scores of Ontario elementary schools elementary school: see school. , Signposts of Success: Interpreting Ontario's Elementary School Test Scores, reports that while there is a strong relationship between the social and economic characteristics of the community in which a school is located and the school's achievement levels on standardized tests A standardized test is a test administered and scored in a standard manner. The tests are designed in such a way that the "questions, conditions for administering, scoring procedures, and interpretations are consistent" [1] , those factors explain less than half of the variation in school performance. They report that some students from homes less affluent and with less well educated parents have high achievement results, while the results of some schools whose students come from homes with affluent, well-educated parents are lower than might be expected for schools in such advantaged neighbourhoods. The authors, David Johnson David Johnson may refer to:
Among the factors the report highlights, is team approaches among teachers in the primary and junior divisions (kindergarten kindergarten [Ger.,=garden of children], system of preschool education. Friedrich Froebel designed (1837) the kindergarten to provide an educational situation less formal than that of the elementary school but one in which children's creative play instincts would be to Grade 3 and Grades 4 to 6, respectively) to preparing their students. 519-884-0710 x2540 |
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