New statewide standardized test results show that Minnesota students made no overall improvement in math, reading or science this year, despite pledges from many state and local school leaders to improve test scores.
In reading, nearly 60 percent of students mastered state standards, compared with 59 percent in 2014. In math, 60 percent of students met math standards, down from nearly 62 percent in 2014. There was also little progress in closing the state's persistent achievement gap between white and minority students. White students continued to outperform students of color by more than 20 percentage points on average.
Minnesota Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius said she was not satisfied with the results, but added that they do not paint a complete picture of student achievement.
"This is one measure at one point in time," she said. "It does not look at students who move from not proficient to partially proficient."
The stagnant Minnesota Comprehensive Assessment scores come after a testing season plagued with computer glitches, multiple attacks by computer hackers and other testing problems.
Cassellius said there is no statistical evidence that the technical glitches had any impact on student test scores.
Cassellius said she believes the state is seeing stagnant scores in reading because the test is still relatively new and teachers are getting used to the more rigorous curriculum. The state changed its reading exam in 2013 and saw a dramatic drop in scores, from 75 percent proficiency to 58 percent. Scores have gone up only 1 percentage point since then.