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The ACT exam is taken by high schoolers, often with the aim of scoring high enough to get into a college or university. But according to new data, ACT scores in Oklahoma have dropped to their lowest in the past 20 years.
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The test measures reading and math proficiency for fourth- and eighth-graders. It's administered every two years, but the pandemic delayed the 2021 report until now.
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The vast majority of Oklahoma’s class of 2022 took the ACT after a lull in participation due to the pandemic. The average test score suffered as a result.
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The class of 2022's average ACT composite score was 19.8 out of 36, marking the first time since 1991 that the average score was below 20.
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Each spring, Oklahoma students take a battery of tests. They improved in 2022, the second year of normal testing after the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
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For Oklahoma's high school class of 2021, participation in the ACT test was as low as it's been in at least a decade. The pandemic and cost-saving measures combined to slash the number of students who participated.
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For the first time since the pandemic began, Oklahoma students, parents and educators have results from statewide assessments available. At first glance the results aren’t pretty.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a bill into law late Wednesday that will require high school graduates in Oklahoma to pass a citizenship test before they can receive their diploma.
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After a year off, spring assessment tests will once again be conducted across Oklahoma. So, how are districts prepping for the tests and how is it…
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A bill that passed out of the House of Representatives Monday would require high school students to pass the United States citizenship test in order to…