General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How would you answer this test question? From a 1st grade Common Core test. [View all]Recursion
(56,582 posts)I did a post a while back on the non-existence of a crisis in education, so I'll just stick with those numbers. (Unfortunately many of these charts only go back 20 years, so let's stick with that window...)

Note that Native American/Aleutian kids are actually in a crisis, and we need to do something about that ASAP.

Fewer kids are dropping out

College enrollment has continued its multi-decade increase

As has at-least-associate's degree attainment among enrollees.

Full graduation from college is up

(Those are slightly different definitions of "graduation"
Students today continue to do better than their parents did.
The biggest clearinghouse for this info is definition The Nation's Report Card by the Department of Education. The 2012 results are here but difficult to embed. This page compares students today with students in 1973 (you can configure it to make different comparisons; this is just a generic "vs. their parents"
.
(You'll also see that the difference wash out by age 17. Would be interesting to find out why. So in that sense I overstated the case: high school grads are statistically identical today to grads 30 years ago, but younger students are performing much better)
Reading (Age 9):
All students +13 points
White students +15
Black students +36
Boys +17
Girls +10
Reading (Age 13):
All students +8
White students +9
Black students +24
Boys +9
Girls +8
Math (Age 9):
All students +25
White students +27
Black students +36
Boys +26
Girls +24
Math (Age 13):
All students +19
White students +19
Black students +36
Boys +21
Girls +17
What will be really interesting will be to see how the currently-13 cohort does in 4 years...
Note also that NAEP changed testing formats in 2004 which made scores drop slightly, so it wasn't a case of the test "dumbing down".