Tuesday, 5 July 2016

KS2 SATs National Picture Emerging...!

For the original TES Article: Follow link here.
More pupils reach expected standard in writing than in reading
The first results for this year’s controversial Sats tests show that 53 per cent children reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics.
The DfE results reveal how much tougher the tests are this year. Last year 80 per cent of pupils achieved what was then the expected level 4 in all of reading, writing and mathematics.The government has decided to release national level figures earlier than usual, to help headteachers compare their school’s performance with others. 
The statistics out today show that:
66 per cent of pupils achieved the expected standard in reading.
74 per cent of pupils achieved the expected standard in writing - which is teacher assessed.
70 per cent of pupils achieved the expected standard in mathematics.
72 per cent of pupils achieved the expected standard in spelling, grammar and punctuation (Spag).
The number of schools below the floor standards – which can trigger academisation – will not be known until the progress measures are published later this year. But education secretary Nicky Morgan has said that any rise in the number of schools below the floor standards will be limited to one percentage point, meaning a maximum of six per cent of schools will be affected.
More than 550,000 ten and 11-year-olds took the tests in May and in previous years, headteachers have been able to benchmark their results with previous years, but this is the first year of the new tests and so it is not possible to compare results.
The government said when it introduced the new tests that the new expected standard would be similar to a level 4b under the previous system of levels. But there has been concern from teachers who said that the new tests were much tougher than that – with a standard more similar to the previous level 5.
In 2015, there were 80 per cent of pupils at level 4b or above in reading and 49 per cent at level 5.  In mathematics, there were 77 per cent at level 4b or above and 42 per cent at level 5. Seventy-three per cent reached level 4b in Spag and 56 per cent were at level 5.
In writing, 87 per cent of pupils achieved the level 4 and 36 per cent achieved the higher level 5. Writing results are assessed by teachers and there was no information for numbers attaining level 4b.
This year, pupils have had their raw marks converted to a scaled score, where a scaled score of 100 means they have met the expected level.
The statistics also show that the average scaled score in reading and mathematics was 103. In spelling, grammar and punctuation it was 104.

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