Wisconsin ACT scores remain high

From the Department of Public Instruction
Wisconsin students - with a 22.2 composite score on the ACT for the seventh consecutive
year - outperformed the national composite score and percentage of students meeting ACT College
Readiness Benchmarks: the minimum ACT score that corresponds with passing college-level classes.
Sixty-eight percent (44,275) of the state’s 2006 graduates took the ACT at some time during their
sophomore, junior, or senior years of high school. Minority-group students were 10.9% of Wisconsin ACT-takers, a participation increase
of 2 percentage points from five years ago.
The
state’s 22.2 composite score missed first place
among the 25 states where the ACT is the
predominate college admissions test by one-tenth
of a point. The national composite score
was 21.1.
“Overall, Wisconsin beat the nation on
the ACT,” said State Superintendent Elizabeth Burmaster. “Our 2006 graduates showed consistent
performance on their subject-area and composite scores and in attaining college readiness benchmarks.
This achievement is directly related to higher percentages of our students taking a college-preparatory
curriculum, which is proven to make a difference on ACT scores and future college success.
“We must encourage all students to take rigorous high school courses that fit their career
interests,” Burmaster said. “While we should celebrate exceeding national averages as an educational success, Wisconsin students, with our support, can do more. To improve academic performance we must
encourage parents to be involved in course selection so our students take the rigorous classes that will
better prepare them for
postsecondary studies,” she said.
ACT recommends a core
curriculum of four years of English
and three or more years each of
mathematics, science, and social
studies. In Wisconsin, 57% of
students reported taking a core curriculum compared to 54% nationally. State students taking a core
curriculum had a composite score of 22.9 and subject area scores that were 2.2 to 1.5 points higher than
students who didn’t take the ACT-recommended core course work. Nationally students who took a core
curriculum had a composite score of 22.0 and subject area scores that were 2.6 to 2.0 points higher than
students who took a less rigorous high school curriculum.
Seventy-seven percent of state students earned a benchmark score of 18 on the ACT English test
compared to 69% nationally. A benchmark score is the minimum score needed on an ACT subject-area
test to indicate a 50% or better chance of earning a “B” or higher grade or about a 75%
chance of earning a “C” or better in the corresponding credit-bearing college courses.
In mathematics,
52% of state students earned the benchmark score of 22 or better compared with 42%
nationally, meaning these students are ready to take college-level algebra. Sixty-one percent earned a
21 or higher on the ACT reading test, compared with 53% nationally. The reading score corresponds
with readiness for college-level social studies course work.
For science, 35% of Wisconsin students
earned a 24 or higher, meaning they are ready for college biology classes. Nationally, 27% of
students earned the science (biology) benchmark score.
On ACT subject-area tests, 2006 graduates posted scores that were identical to last year with one
exception. Wisconsin’s ACT English score was 21.5 (20.6 nationally), mathematics 22.0 (20.8 nationally),
reading 22.4 (21.4 nationally) and science 22.2, down one-tenth of a point from last year, (20.9 nationally).
Wisconsin’s composite score was 22.2. The national composite score was 21.1, which was up two-tenths of
a point from the previous year.
Minority-group students represented 10.9% of Wisconsin ACT test-takers, a slight increase
from 2005 and 2.1 percentage points higher than participation in 2002 when 8.7% of ACT-takers
were minority-group students. Generally,
Wisconsin’s composite scores by racial/
ethnic group were higher than the nation,
with the exception of African-American
and Asian students.
“We know there is a gap in
achievement between students of color,
economically disadvantaged students, and their peers,” Burmaster said. “To close that gap, we must hold
steady in supporting 4-year-old kindergarten and the P-5 and Student Achievement Guarantee in
Education (SAGE) programs, that reduce class sizes in lower grades and provide a solid educational foundation
for our students. We must sustain our efforts to expand gifted and talented programming at the middle school
level and continue support for Wisconsin Educational Opportunity Programs that counsel
students to take rigorous courses,
introduce them to college-level
studies, and provide career and
educational planning,”
Burmaster said.
This was the first year
that ACT reported scores from
the optional writing assessment. About 48% of Wisconsin students elected to take the writing exam
compared to 36% nationally. Wisconsin’s average score on the essay was 7.9 points on a two- to 12-
point scale. Nationally, the average score on the essay was 7.7 points.
Nationwide, more than 1.2 million public and private school students took the ACT at some time
during their high school career. The ACT is scored on a scale of one to 36.
DPI news release and charts
Posted August 16, 2006