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Posted on September 2, 2010   print  

National Math and Science Initiative Announces Second Year of Student Achievement Gains

National Math and Science Initiative Announces Second Year of Student Achievement Gains

The National Math and Science Initiative has announced that its Advanced Placement Training and Incentive Program helped boost the number of students who passed the AP tests in math, English, and science by 98 percent between 2008 and 2010.

The NMSI program is designed to increase teacher effectiveness and student achievement. During the 2009-10 school year there was an 84.6 percent increase in the number of students who passed AP exams at the seventy-five first-year APTIP schools — more than eleven times the national increase of 7.5 percent, and an improvement from the 52 percent increase recorded by the first cohort of sixty-five schools in 2008-09. The results from schools that participated both years were significantly better than the national two-year increase of 13.6 percent.

In addition, there was a 107.3 percent increase in math, science and English AP exams passed by African-American and Hispanic students during 2009-10 and a 91.5 percent increase in exams passed by female students. The first cohort of schools reported a 154.6 percent increase in passing math, science, and English scores in two years among African-Americans and Hispanics, which is almost six times the national two-year increase of 27.7 percent. Among female students attending the first cohort of schools, a 116.4 percent increase in passing math and science scores in two years was reported, which is almost thirteen times the national two-year increase of 9.2 percent.

This year, APTIP will be implemented in more than two hundred and twenty public high schools across six states — Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and Virginia — and is expected to reach three hundred and fifty schools by the fall of 2012.

"Experience has shown that students passing AP courses in high school are much more likely to complete a college degree — and even those who do not pass benefit from the rigorous curriculum and achieve more success in college," said Tom Luce, CEO of NMSI. "The continued increase in student achievement in these courses confirms that it is possible to take a proven program such as APTIP...and expand it across the country so more students will benefit."

“National Math and Science Initiative's Year Two Results Boost Student Achievement by 98 Percent, Opening Doors to College.” National Math and Science Initiative Press Release 8/30/10.

Primary Subject: Education
Secondary Subject(s): Elementary and Secondary Education
Location(s): National

FC015298



Related Links
NPO Spotlight - National Math and Science Initiative (5/11/10)
Carnegie Corporation of New York Awards $6.35 Million to Transform Education Workforce (4/22/10)
Teach For America Receives $1.4 Million to Recruit Math, Science Teachers (6/14/09)
ExxonMobil Foundation Awards $1.6 Million for New Orleans Advanced Placement Program (10/06/08)

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