Schools

MCAS Scores Slump In Test's Return To Schools: Patch PM

Also: Disgraced ex-Fall River mayor sentenced to six years for crimes of corruption, concerning details in Green Line crash report and more.

MASSACHUSETTS — It's Tuesday, Sept. 21. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • The spring MCAS scores are out, and they are on balance worse than the last time the standardized tests were administered before the pandemic.
  • The operator of the Green Line train that crashed into another train near Agganis Arena on July 30 placed the master controller in 'full-power position' prior to the accident which injured 27 people, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report.
  • The 29-year-old disgraced former mayor of Fall River was sentenced to six years in prison for crimes of corruption at City Hall.

Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.

Today's Top Story

MCAS.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The spring scores for the standardized test that many hate and others tolerate were released this morning, and the big picture wasn't promising.

State education officials said results showed that "many more students had gaps in their knowledge of math and, to a lesser extent, English language arts" compared to scores from 2019, which was the last year MCAS was administered. The test was skipped in 2020 due to the pandemic forcing a shift to remote learning.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

This is how the State House News Service summed up the results:

The percentage of students in third through eighth grade receiving a score of "meeting expectations" or higher in math and English each dropped from 2019, the most recent previous year the test was given after the exams were skipped in 2020 amid the sudden pivot to remote learning.
In math, the percentage fell from 49 percent in 2019 to 33 percent in 2021, while for the English language arts test, it dropped from 52 percent in 2019 to 46 percent in 2021.
The percentage of 10th graders scoring at least in the "meeting expectations" category ticked upwards to 64 percent this year, from 61 percent in 2019. The amount of 10th grade students reaching that level on their math tests fell, however, dropping to 52 percent from 59 percent.

Read more here.


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Also Today

BREAKING: Jasiel Correia, the 29-year-old former mayor of Fall River who left office amid scandal, was sentenced to six years in prison for crimes of corruption during his messy tenure at City Hall. The sentencing comes even after Correia had eight convictions vacated by a federal judge Monday.

'Full-power position': The operator of the Green Line train that crashed into another train near Agganis Arena on July 30 placed the master controller in 'full-power position' prior to the accident, which injured 27 people, said the National Transportation Safety Board in a preliminary report Tuesday. According to federal investigators, the striking train was going 31 miles per hour, three times the speed limit, when it crashed into another going 10 miles per hour.


Don't look now, but the rescheduled Boston Marathon is in less than three weeks. If you're running or know someone with an interesting story who is, email mike.carraggi@patch.com.


Picture This

Photo from Boston Fire Department

Some Beacon Hill residents woke up to water rushing into their homes after a contractor struck a 30-inch water main.


By The Numbers

500 (or so): That's how many refugees the International Institute of New England said the organization will likely resettle, many of them coming from Afghanistan following the United States' withdrawal.

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