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Grade 9 students at Ottawa Catholic schools continue to do well on province-wide math tests, according to results released Wednesday.
At the Ottawa Catholic District School Board, 89 per cent of Grade 9 students doing academic math scored at or above the provincial standard, a score that has held steady at between 85 and 90 per cent since 2010. Among students taking applied math, 62 per cent were at or above the provincial standard last spring. Scores have climbed steadily in this category since 2010, when only 47 per cent of student met or exceeded the standard.
They may do well at it, but students at the Catholic board don’t necessarily like math very much. The survey showed that only 39 per cent of students agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I like mathematics.” That dropped to 25 per cent when the statement was “Mathematics is one of my favourite subjects.”
Students at French-language schools in the Ottawa area also did well. At the French Catholic board, for example, 86 per cent of students in academic math scored at or above the provincial standard, compared to an average of 82 per cent of students across the province. At the French public board, 90 per cent scored at or above the provincial standard, compared to 82 per cent across the province.
Scores aren’t available for students in the province’s English-language public schools, because teachers on job action last spring refused to administer the EQAO tests. For that reason, province-wide results for English students aren’t available either.
Scores are available for individual schools at the EQAO website: http://www.eqao.com/en
查看原文...
At the Ottawa Catholic District School Board, 89 per cent of Grade 9 students doing academic math scored at or above the provincial standard, a score that has held steady at between 85 and 90 per cent since 2010. Among students taking applied math, 62 per cent were at or above the provincial standard last spring. Scores have climbed steadily in this category since 2010, when only 47 per cent of student met or exceeded the standard.
They may do well at it, but students at the Catholic board don’t necessarily like math very much. The survey showed that only 39 per cent of students agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I like mathematics.” That dropped to 25 per cent when the statement was “Mathematics is one of my favourite subjects.”
Students at French-language schools in the Ottawa area also did well. At the French Catholic board, for example, 86 per cent of students in academic math scored at or above the provincial standard, compared to an average of 82 per cent of students across the province. At the French public board, 90 per cent scored at or above the provincial standard, compared to 82 per cent across the province.
Scores aren’t available for students in the province’s English-language public schools, because teachers on job action last spring refused to administer the EQAO tests. For that reason, province-wide results for English students aren’t available either.
Scores are available for individual schools at the EQAO website: http://www.eqao.com/en

查看原文...