Southern charter school state handily beats Kentucky in new ACT test results
The new ACT results are out, and I already posted a blog earlier today with the news that Kentucky did edge up slightly in ranking among those states where ACT testing is essentially universal.
But, a really big story concerns how Kentucky stacked up against hurricane-racked schools in Louisiana. Louisiana rebuilt its post-Katrina school system largely by harnessing the power and flexibility of charter schools to move out much more quickly than traditional, regulation- and union-constrained public schools could ever accomplish.
Here is our comparison graph again of states where ACT testing is virtually or totally universal.
Note that Louisiana, one of the nation’s strongest charter school states, and also a Southern state, outscored Kentucky by 0.6 point for the 2011 high school graduates’ ACT Composite Score. Here is a further breakdown of ACT Composite Scores by race for the two states:
In particular, notice that blacks in Louisiana outscored Kentucky’s blacks by a full point on the ACT Composite Score. That is a notable difference.
However, the white situation is much more dramatic. Kentucky’s whites languished behind whites from Louisiana by a whopping 1.6 points! That is a very dramatic difference in state-to-state comparisons.
Keep in mind, both states tested all of their graduates, so these comparisons are quite appropriate.
When you consider the challenges Louisiana has faced, this is clearly rather remarkable performance – for them. Good job, Louisiana!
The situation shows that Kentucky could make stronger educational gains, faster, if it would finally establish a good charter school program.
Data sources: ACT Profile Reports for Kentucky and Louisiana, on line here.