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Governor Gregoire and Superintendent Bergeson Propose Temporary Change in Math Graduation Requirement

For Immediate Release: November 27, 2006

Students in classes of 2008, 2009 and 2010 to either pass WASL math or take and pass math coursework to meet graduation requirement

OLYMPIA - Governor Chris Gregoire and Superintendent of Public Instruction Dr. Terry Bergeson today announced they will propose to the legislature that graduating seniors have a temporary alternative to the Washington Assessment of Student Learning standards of math achievement.

Governor Gregoire and Superintendent Bergeson are proposing that students who have not passed the high school WASL continue to take rigorous math classes until they graduate or pass the test. Taking the test or an approved alternative would be required annually. The option of allowing students to graduate without passing the math WASL would remain in place for three years � for the graduating classes of 2008, 2009 and 2010.

�I want to let students and parents know that we are listening to their concerns and we believe this plan promotes math skills without penalizing responsible, hard-working students and teachers,� said Governor Gregoire. �Students who graduate high school without meeting competitive standards show up in remedial math courses in our colleges and universities and we end up paying for math education twice. We owe it to these students to prepare them before they graduate high school.�

�We have a comprehensive plan to improve math teaching and learning in our schools,� said Superintendent Bergeson. �Teachers, students, parents and government leaders must all share responsibility for making education work and assuring that Washington has a workforce that can compete.�

The comprehensive plan includes clarifying and prioritizing our standards, adjusting the WASL accordingly, identifying a limited menu of curricula, diagnostic assessments and intervention materials aligned with our standards and tests, and creating a new and better system to prepare teachers and provide them with the professional development they need to improve the teaching of math at all levels.

In its final report, the Washington Learns committee made recommendations to improve math and science and to provide more accountability in the educational system, including the development of a menu of math curricula that will meet standards necessary to compete globally.

Students in the class of 2008 are the first class to benefit from the assistance opportunities offered as a part of Governor Gregoire's 2006 supplemental budget. Over $28.5 million is available to school districts to help students succeed in meeting standards. The opportunities school districts offer include summer math courses, tutoring and refresher assistance.

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