Fewer than half of Minnesota students are proficient in math, as measured by statewide test scores released this week, and the growth of their reading skills has also lagged as schools navigated the tumultuous years of the pandemic.
The results provide the most substantive look so far of the toll on public school students — but they come with the caveat that participation in the standardized tests still lags pre-pandemic levels, muddying comparisons from year to year.
Overall, about 7% of students did not take the tests this year, but the participation rate varied by grade level and student group. Before the pandemic, about 2-3% of the state's students didn't take the annual assessments.
Still, the test scores confirm what educators and families have long suspected: Remote learning in the early days of COVID-19 and disruptions due to outbreaks in the fall and winter of 2021-22 left students academically lagging as society returned to normal in fits and starts.
"We know that it can be seen as disheartening. This is the first time our state and every other state has had to navigate a pandemic and educate our children," Education Commissioner Heather Mueller said.
On the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments and the Minnesota Test of Academic Skills, about 45% of the students tested met proficiency levels on math tests, while about 51% were proficient on reading tests.
Those scores are down from before the pandemic — with math scores taking the steepest slide. But results since 2019 make imperfect comparisons because no standardized tests were given in 2020, and more than 20% of the state's students didn't take the tests in 2021, many citing pandemic complications.
Michael Rodriguez, dean of the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota, wasn't surprised to learn students had more catch-up to do in math than in reading. He noted that children rarely take on rigorous math when not in class.