The results of the first NAEP technology and engineering test offer useful information for STEM education stakeholders. Eighth-grade girls outscored boys: 45% of girls and 42% of boys scored at the proficient level or above on the exam. Achievement gaps were prominent: 18% of Black students and 28% of Hispanic students achieved proficient or better, compared to 56% of Asian and white students. Only 5% of English language learners scored proficient or above. The computer-based Technology & Engineering Literacy test (TEL), administered in 2014, was designed to measure students’ ability to understand technological principles, their collaboration skills, and their ability to solve technology and engineering-related problems. It was administered to more than 21,000 students in more than 800 schools nationwide. Full results here.
Afterschool STEM is the Career Pathway Infrastructure to Make America’s Talent Strategy Real
By Camsie McAdams, STEM Next’s Director of the Institute for a STEM Ready America In a new call to action for employers to move beyond