The percentage of eleventh and twelfth graders taking AP courses has risen from 13 percent to 21 percent between 2000 and 2005. Scores on college placement tests increased in 2005. High school principals indicated the CAHSEE has had a positive influence on instruction and that they are implementing new ways to identify students who need additional help.
For this report, HumRRO conducted additional
analyses of Exit Exam results of English learners. The report shows that
students who had been English learners but were reclassified as fluent in
English passed both portions of the Exit Exam at higher rates than students overall.
But, Exit Exam results have consistently shown that students still classified
as English learners have had more difficulty than other subgroups in passing
the Exam, even though more than half of those students have attended public
school in the United States for 10 years or more."HumRRO's evaluation highlighted aspects of the
achievement gap about which I remain very concerned," O'Connell
said. "This deeply
concerns me as one in four students in California is learning the English
language, and the pass rate among English learners is among the lowest of all
demographic subgroups. The evaluation found that many students are still
classified as English learners after as many as 10 years in our public
education system. Clearly this
is unacceptable. These results indicate that we are not teaching our students
English quickly enough. We need to redouble our efforts and develop new
strategies to help these students. We cannot retreat from our rigorous
standards in English or any other subject, but we must raise our expectations
and improve our approach to assisting these students so they will be ready to
succeed in the challenging global economy of the 21st century."
The HumRRO report included several
recommendations for policymakers to consider regarding the CAHSEE."I fully embrace the
policy recommendations included in this report, chiefly that we improve the
preparation of students in middle school and that we continue to focus efforts
on helping students who are struggling with the CAHSEE in their
sophomore and junior years, as well as helping students in the Class of 2006
who did not graduate with their class continue with their education,"
O’Connell said. "I also agree strongly with the recommendation that the
California Department of Education gather more lessons from schools that have
been successful in helping students achieve proficiency in English, a process
that we have already begun. We will also work to share these best practices
with schools that have high populations of students who have not successfully
met the CAHSEE requirement. Improving the collection and sharing of best
practices so we can serve as a broker of expertise is one of my primary goals
for the Department of Education." The Year 7 Independent Evaluation of the
CAHSEE can be found at Year 7 Evaluation - California High School Exit
Examination (CAHSEE).

