State Assessment: Alaska’s Students Struggling in Both Reading and Math

Introduction 

Results from Alaska’s new statewide standardized assessment, the Alaska System of Academic Readiness (AK STAR), offer a glimpse of how Alaska’s students are doing post-pandemic. Although not directly comparable to the Performance Evaluation for Alaska’s Schools (PEAKS) ratings with which Alaskan parents might be familiar, the AK STAR still offers valuable information about the relative standings of Alaska’s schools and districts. 

On the mathematics portion of the AK STAR, three out of four students were not meeting grade-level expectations. In conjunction with difficulties in reading, these results suggest that one-size-fits-all education no longer works — or never worked — for three-quarters of Alaska’s students. Public charter school students continued to outperform their counterparts in traditional public schools in both reading and math. Giving families more choices to find the kind of education that works best for them would immensely help Alaska’s students recover from learning loss. 

Key Takeaways 

  1. About 30% of all students were proficient in ELA statewide, and 23% were proficient in math. Although the exams are not directly comparable, proficiency has declined by almost 10 percentage points across all grades in both subjects since the 2021 PEAKS. 
  2. Eighth graders were the least proficient in math — with fewer than a thousand students statewide meeting eighth-grade standards — and third graders were least proficient in reading. 
  3. Of the five major school districts in Alaska, Anchorage reported the highest proficiency in ELA (34%) and math (27%). 
  4. In math, 36 schools reported 10% or fewer of their students proficient, while in ELA, 26 reported 10% or fewer of their students proficient. Results are not provided in more detail for very-low-performing schools for privacy reasons, so they may have up to 10% of students testing proficient, but they may have as few as zero students who do so. 
  5. Among districts, 11 reported 5% or fewer students proficient in math, while eight reported the same in ELA. This means some districts may have up to 5% of students testing proficient, but they may have as few as zero. 

Methodology 

The AK STAR assessment contains two sections, English language arts (ELA) and mathematics, which public schools are required to administer for students in third through ninth grade. Since 2016, parents have been allowed to opt their children out of standardized testing. The AK STAR exam was administered for the first time in the spring of 2022 in the hopes of reducing testing time and providing continual feedback via interim assessments.  

AK STAR replaces PEAKS as Alaska’s standardized assessment. Proficiency rates between the two exams are not directly comparable because of differences in the tests’ design and cut scores. Results from PEAKS are available from 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2021. 

Although the 2022 AK STAR exam participation jumped almost 15% from the corresponding PEAKS rate for 2021, the reported number was relatively low compared with pre-pandemic years. PEAKS 2019 reported almost 91% participation, while PEAKS 2021 only reported 65%. For the 2022 AK STAR exams (math and ELA), the statewide participation rates were both approximately 80%.  

The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED) cautions against interpreting state- and districtwide results from the 2022 AK STAR as representative of all students in Alaska, citing a “significant disparity” between the participation rates of non-correspondence schools and correspondence schools (one of the state’s public charter school options). Nearly 93% of students in non-correspondence schools participated, while only 15% of correspondence school students did. While correspondence students aren’t well-represented by the data, students in traditional public schools are. 

The switch in exams, the relatively low overall participation rate compared with pre-pandemic years, and the low participation rate of correspondence school students necessitate caution when drawing conclusions. However, it remains useful to compare relative standings between grades, districts, and schools, as well as to gauge the direction of progress. Parents and policymakers should continue to hold schools accountable for the quality of education they provided during the pandemic and their efforts to help students catch up. 

As with PEAKS, the State of Alaska reports percent proficiency, or the portion of students testing proficient within a school or district divided by the total number of students tested (times 100). Proficient students meet or exceed the achievement-level descriptors (ALDs) for the subject. Proficient students test either “proficient” or “advanced,” while not-proficient students test at the “approaching proficient” or “needs support” levels. 

Some schools must report their percent proficiency as a range because of privacy concerns with small numbers. These “suppression” rules are the same for AK STAR as for the PEAKS exam. If either achievement level (proficient or not proficient) contains between zero and two students, “the percentage of students at each achievement level will be reported as a range.” For schools with fewer than five students tested in total, no results are reported. This report excludes schools testing fewer than five total students. 

Schools’ and districts’ reporting ranges imply that zero, one, or two students tested within that proficiency level (proficient or not proficient), because if both levels reported more than three students, exact percentages would be calculated. For proficiency levels reported as a range, such as “5 percent or fewer,” this report assumes the most-generous upper bound of five percent. However, the reporting protocol suggests the actual number of proficient students is much lower, probably in the single digits — a travesty for any school or district purporting to educate its students. 

Figure 1 shows the proficiency ratings by school on the AK STAR exam. The PEAKS Data Map shows PEAKS proficiency ratings by school for 2018-2021 and AK STAR proficiency ratings for 2022. School markers are in their approximate geographic location. Schools marked in red report 51–100% of all grades below proficient on the ELA portion of the AK STAR. Schools marked in yellow report 31-50% of all grades below proficient on the ELA portion of the AK STAR. Schools marked in green report 0-30% of all grades below proficient on the ELA portion of the AK STAR. By clicking on a school marker, users can see the name of the school, ELA and math proficiency rates for all grades, and any available information about proficiency rates for specific grades. 

Figure 1: AK STAR Proficiency Ratings by School, 2022 

Source:  Alaska Policy Forum “PEAKS Data Map”, 2022

State-Level Findings from Alaska Public School Student Results  

Statewide and across all grades, 70% of students fell below proficient in ELA, while 77% of students fell below proficient in math. Due to the change in examinations, direct comparisons cannot be made in proficiency rates between PEAKS and AK STAR. However, students have clearly lost ground: fewer students, 60% and 67%, were not proficient in ELA and mathematics on the 2021 PEAKS, respectively. The AK STAR uses “approaching proficient” and “needing support” as the two categories equivalent to “below proficient” and “far below proficient” on the PEAKS exam. 

The percentage of students rated as not proficient in ELA on the AK STAR test is similar to the results of the most-recent NAEP exam, which found 76% of fourth graders and 74% of eighth graders not proficient.  

Statewide, grade levels display a noticeable variation in proficiency in both subjects. Eighth graders were the least proficient in mathematics. Only 12%, or barely over 930 students statewide, met eighth-grade expectations in math. This is obviously concerning, given that eighth-grade math is foundational to high school mathematics — and to avoiding remedial math courses in college. That said, the result is inconsistent with the results of the NAEP exam, which found 28% of eighth graders proficient or advanced in math. 

Third graders were the least-proficient grade in reading. Only 21% of third graders statewide met third-grade expectations in reading. Similar to math for eighth graders, reading by the end of third grade is crucial to students’ ability to learn other subjects in subsequent school years. 

Figure 2 shows the 2022 AK STAR percent proficiency results by grade in both reading and math statewide. Sixth graders were the most proficient in reading, and fifth graders were the most proficient in math. In every grade except third grade, percent proficiency in math lagged reading. The grade with the largest gap in percent proficiency between reading and math was eighth grade, where the percentage of students proficient in reading exceeded those proficient in math by almost 17 points. 

Figure 2: Percent Proficiency by Grade, 2022 AK STAR 

Source: Department of Education and Early Development 2021-2022 Statewide Results  

District-Level Findings 

Skagway School District reported the highest percent proficiency in mathematics and reading. Almost 59% of the tested students were proficient in mathematics, and 70% were proficient in reading. Skagway was also the district with the highest percent proficient on the 2021 PEAKS exam, but with a higher percentage in both ELA (82%) and math (77%). Of its 71 enrolled students, almost 99% participated in both exams in 2022.  

The district with the lowest percent proficient was the Lower Yukon School District, which reported 0.77% of its students proficient in ELA and 0.58% in math. Only eight students — of its total enrollment of 1,089 — were proficient in ELA, and only six students in math, with 95% of its students participating. 

However, the Lower Yukon School District should share this dubious distinction with the three districts reporting “5% or fewer” proficient, as the suppression rules suggest that zero, one, or two students were proficient there. These districts are the Yupiit School District and Kashunamiut School District for reading and math, with Yukon Flats joining for math alone. 

The five major school districts — Anchorage, Fairbanks North Star Borough, Juneau Borough, Kenai Peninsula Borough, and Matanuska-Susitna Borough — saw declines in the percentage of students proficient since the 2021 PEAKS exam. However, the change in the test format prevents determination of the size of declines. Nonetheless, all five districts performed within a narrow range of each other, with maximum differences of 2.0 percentage points in ELA and 3.5 percentage points in math. The Anchorage School District had the highest percentage of its students proficient in both ELA and math, at 34% and 27%, respectively. 

Table 1 shows the five major school districts and the percentage of students proficient in ELA and math across all grades. Because ELA and math may have slightly different participation rates, the rate shown is the lowest of the two for that district.

Source: Department of Education and Early Development 2021-2022 Districtwide Results 

Key Findings 

  1. Only one in five third graders are proficient in ELA at a time when mastery is crucial to the learning of other subjects in fourth grade. 
  2. Almost nine out of 10 eighth graders are not proficient in math and are unprepared for high-school mathematics. 
  3. In math, 11 districts reported 5% or fewer of their students testing proficient, while eight reported the same in ELA. 
  4. The lowest-performing district in Alaska, the Lower Yukon School District, only reported eight students proficient in ELA and six in math. However, several districts with suppressed statistics may have fewer than three students proficient in one or both subjects. 

Resuming standardized testing in 2021 and switching to an assessment that can provide continual feedback across the school year were critical first steps to understanding the learning loss Alaska’s children suffered because of school closures and hastily implemented online/hybrid learning in 2020. Continuing to prioritize reading through careful implementation of the Alaska Reads Act will build a foundation of literacy for the future.  

For many students, mathematics challenges undoubtedly justify additional remedial time and one-on-one tutoring, which unspent American Rescue Plan funds could help support. Yet, the most enduring lesson of another lackluster standardized assessment goes beyond pedagogy and funding: Schools aren’t working for three-quarters of Alaskan students. Strong charter performance offers hope to those families selected from long wait lists, but funding must follow students to the educational settings that work best for them.  

Going Deeper 

Table 2 lists the percentage of students in all grades proficient in math in Alaska’s 54 school districts, while Table 3 lists the percentage of students in all grades proficient in reading. Ranged results are presented as reported, the five major school districts are highlighted in gold, and the lowest-performing districts, those reporting proficiency of five percent or fewer, are highlighted in red. 

Source: Department of Education and Early Development 2021-2022 Districtwide Results 

 Source: Department of Education and Early Development 2021-2022 Districtwide Results