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Homeschooling Success
Last week Islam-Online featured an article about homeschooling. The following are the results of extensive research done on homeschoolers in the United States of America. Overall, homeschoolers do much better than their public school counterparts. How do home schoolers measure up?
F O O T N O T E S FIGURE 1: * Developmental Standard Score (DSS) is the test publisher's (Riverside) scale used for public, private, and home school students to describe each student's location on an achievement continuum that spans grades K through 12. The DSS scale varies by subject area. Scale capped at 300 because differences at the top are inappropriately exaggerated. FIGURE 2: * "Other" includes all those enrolled more than 2 grades ahead or more than 1 grade behind. FIGURE 3: * Grade Equivalent Scores (GES) are a reference point for interpreting DSS scores. A GES approximates a child's development in terms of grade and month within grade. (For example: A DSS composite score of 170 can be viewed as the typical DSS score earned by students in the ninth month of the second grade or a GES score of 2.9.) FIGURE 4: * Scale capped at 300 because differences at the top are inappropriately exaggerated. FIGURE 5: * Composite Percentile Score refers to the percentile corresponding to the mean composite scaled score. FIGURE 6: * Composite Percentile Score refers to the percentile corresponding to the mean composite scaled score. http://www.hslda.org/nationalcenter/statsandreports/rudner1999/Rudner2.asp | ||||||||||||||||
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