Re: “WA Superintendent Chris Reykdal seeks money to improve math scores” (Sept. 11, Schooling Lab):
Washington’s math decline shouldn’t be merely a pandemic aftershock or a funding shortfall.
Regardless of Okay-12 spending greater than doubling since 2013 and instructor pay rating among the many nation’s highest, eighth grade scores have been falling for over a decade, nicely earlier than COVID-19.
At the moment, 72% of scholars aren’t proficient, a steeper drop than the nationwide common, threatening future earnings, workforce readiness and the state’s financial well being.
Enrollment is shrinking, but staffing is at report highs, and added positions haven’t translated into higher instruction.
Different states with comparable challenges have stabilized or improved, underscoring that it is a systemic efficiency downside — rooted in declining tutorial effectiveness, misaligned spending, sluggish adaptation and complacency.
Proposals to reverse the development embrace focused instructor coaching, adoption of rigorous curricula, efficiency incentives, early intervention benchmarks, each day math integration, high-impact tutoring, frequent assessments and fostering a progress mindset.
However these measures will solely succeed if applied persistently statewide, measured transparently and backed by sustained political will.
With out that dedication, more cash alone won’t clear up Washington’s math disaster, and the hole between funding and outcomes will proceed to widen.
Michael J. Dooley, Olympia, (retired, 35-year profession on the Workplace of Superintendent of Public Instruction)
