Written by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
North Carolina’s public school students made small performance gains on standardized tests during the past school year, officials announced Wednesday. The proficiency levels are inching closer to percentages reached before the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered classrooms and led to remote learning.
The Department of Public Instruction released figures showing 54.2% of students were proficient on state exams during the 2023-24 school year, compared to 53.6% during the 2022-23 school year, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported.
The passing rate remains below the 58.8% proficiency rate during the 2018-19 school year. The first full school year during the pandemic — 2020-21 — the rate was just 45.4%, according to the newspaper.
State educators have said since 2022 that it would take time — perhaps four or five years — to rebound fully from the era of learning loss during the pandemic.
“There’s a lot of work that needs to be done,” state schools Superintendent Catherine Truitt said as the results were released at the State Board of Education meeting.
In other calculations, more individual schools met growth expectations on state exams and fewer schools were labeled as low-performing. The state uses an A-to-F grading system on schools that is largely based on proficiency rates. The state’s four-year graduation rate also ticked up slightly from 86.5% during the 2022-23 school year to 86.9% this past year, according to a department release.
Schools have spent hundreds of millions of dollars the last few years on learning recovery efforts, including tutoring and after school and summer programming. Temporary federal money toward these efforts dries up later this month, WRAL-TV reported.
Tammy Howard with the Department of Public Instruction’s accountability and testing office estimated the state is about 97% returned to pre-pandemic levels, according to the station.
“While test grades and letter outcomes cannot tell us everything we need to know about school and student success, North Carolina continues to see growth for most grades and subjects,” Howard said in the department’s release. “This is something to be proud of.”
Looking at grade-level tests, the passing rate on the third-grade reading exam was 48.6% during the 2023-24 school year, compared to 47.8% the previous year.
State leaders have said they expected early-literacy skills to improve over time as teachers become more comfortable with new reading instruction training that stresses phonics. All of the state’s elementary teachers completed the 160 hours of training this year, The News & Observer reported.
The results were released two months before voters decide who they want to succeed Truitt as superintendent. Democrat Maurice “Mo” Green and Republican Michele Morrow will be on the ballot. Morrow defeated Truitt in the March primary.
Featured photo via Orange County Schools.
Related Stories
‹
![]()
NC Legislators Aiming to Reopen Gyms Despite Cooper OrderGyms and fitness centers would get relief from North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper’s COVID-19 executive order that keeps them closed in a bill approved unanimously on Thursday by a Senate committee. The measure, which would allow the gyms and health clubs to reopen indoors at 50% capacity, is another effort by lawmakers to overturn Cooper’s restrictions that […]

Cooper Seeks Big Debt Package, Pay Hikes, Medicaid ExpansionWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper on Wednesday proposed a spending and borrowing spree by state government that he said is critical to fulfilling education, health care and infrastructure demands that were evident before the pandemic but have been exacerbated since. With state coffers filled with unspent funds and $5 billion […]

Gov. Cooper Extends Early Cutoff for Restaurant Alcohol SalesNorth Carolina’s governor is extending an executive order that limits the hours that restaurants can serve alcohol to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. Gov. Roy Cooper announced Monday that he’s extending his order that requires restaurants to stop serving alcoholic beverages at 11 p.m. until Oct. 2. State law usually allows sales until 2 a.m. The […]

As North Carolina Starts to Reopen, Gyms and Fitness Centers Remain Closed. What's Next?Dew was still fresh on the grass as Dana Harshaw set out evenly-spaced number tiles across a driveway one Saturday morning in Chapel Hill. “Everybody’s spaced at least six feet apart,” she said. “We provide hand sanitizer and Clorox wipes if anybody needs it, but everybody brings their own props. We’re not providing props to anybody […]
![]()
North Carolina Unemployment Rate Falls to 7.6% in JuneNorth Carolina’s jobless rate fell dramatically in June, the state announced on Friday, as restaurants, hotels and retailers bounced back since Gov. Roy Cooper’s COVID-19 restrictions were eased. The state’s seasonally adjusted unemployment fell from 12.8% in May to 7.6% in June, as the number of people on the job grew by 227,500 to more than 4.4 million people […]

N.C. Legislature Approves Bill Overturning Gov. Cooper's Order on BarsNorth Carolina legislators voted on Thursday to essentially overturn Gov. Roy Cooper’s order keeping bars closed due to COVID-19, deciding that serving customers outside for an economic punch was worth any additional risk of congregating. The legislation, approved by the Republican-controlled Senate and House, would allow bars to reopen outdoors only and allow additional seating outdoors […]

Trump Threatens to Move RNC Without Assurances from Governor CooperPresident Donald Trump threatened Monday to pull the Republican National Convention out of North Carolina if the state’s Democratic governor doesn’t immediately sign off on allowing a full-capacity gathering in August despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Trump’s tweets about the RNC, planned for Charlotte, come just two days after North Carolina recorded its largest daily increase in […]

North Carolina to Move Into Modified Phase 2 of Reopening on FridayGovernor Roy Cooper and state health officials announced on Wednesday afternoon the state will move into the next phase of its gradual reopening later this week. After two weeks of being in Phase 1, Cooper said the state has been hitting enough indicators and benchmarks for testing and tracing of COVID-19 to move into Phase […]

Chapel Hill Transit Announces Updates For 2025, Including Routes Returning to Full ServiceAfter operating at a deficit of service for nearly five years, the Chapel Hill Transit system is set to fully restore some of its routes in the new year. The local bus system said earlier in December that five routes with limited service times and frequency will return to full operations, as well as one […]

North Carolina Public School Students Inch Higher in Test ScoresNorth Carolina’s public school students made small performance gains on standardized tests during the past school year, officials announced Wednesday.
›
Comments on Chapelboro are moderated according to our Community Guidelines