NOTES ABOUT THE 1999 FINDINGS: NEW HAMPSHIRE
These pages present highlights for your state from the 1999 National Education Goals Report and the companion 1999 Data Volume. The annual Goals Report uses 27 national and 34 state-level indicators to measure progress made toward the eight National Education Goals since 1990, when the Goals were established.
This fact sheet summarizes your state’s progress in key educational areas during the 1990s. Please note the following points:
Goal 3: Student Achievement and Citizenship
Goal 1: Ready to Learn
Goal 2: School Completion
Goal 3: Student Achievement and Citizenship
Goal 5: Mathematics and Science
7. Types of information presented: Four categories of information are provided for your state:
a. Highest-Performing States are states that have performed well in comparison to others. This does not mean that the Goals Panel considers performance in these states to be as high as it should be in order to meet the Goal. It is simply a means of recognizing those states that are doing particularly well relative to others, and that are closest to achieving the Goal by this measure of progress.
b. Most-Improved States are those that made the greatest improvements over time. These states may not yet be among the highest-performing states in the nation, but they were the most successful at pushing their performance in the right direction. "Most-improved" does not necessarily mean that the Goals Panel considers the amount of progress made to be sufficient. It is simply a means of recognizing those states that have made the greatest progress toward the Goal by this measure.
c. Areas of Improvement lists each area in which your state’s performance has improved, compared to where it stood at the beginning of the decade.
d. Areas of Decline lists each area in which your state’s performance has declined, compared to where it stood at the beginning of the decade.
Copies of both reports are available on the Goals Panel’s Web site, at www.negp.gov
NEW HAMPSHIRE – Data Highlights
1999 National Education Goals Report
I. HIGHEST-PERFORMING
New Hampshire placed among the highest-performing states in the nation on 7 measures of progress during the 1990s:
Goal 1: Ready to Learn
1. the percentage of 2-year-olds who have been fully immunized (85%);
2. the percentage of infants born at low birthweight (6%);
3. the percentage of mothers who receive early prenatal care (90%);
Goal 3: Student Achievement and Citizenship
4. the percentage of public school 4th graders who are proficient in reading (38%);
Goal 4: Teacher Education and Professional Development
5. the percentage of public secondary school teachers who hold a degree in their main teaching assignment (71%);
6. the percentage of public secondary school teachers who hold a teaching certificate in their main teaching assignment (96%); and
Goal 5: Mathematics and Science
7. the percentage of degrees earned by minority students that were awarded in mathematics and science (50%).
II. MOST-IMPROVED
New Hampshire placed among the most-improved states in the nation on 1 measure of progress during the 1990s:
Goal 6: Adult Literacy and Lifelong Learning
1. increasing the percentage of U.S. citizens who reported that they registered to vote.
III. AREAS OF IMPROVEMENT
New Hampshire improved on 10 measures of progress toward the Goals during the 1990s:
Goal 1: Ready to Learn
1. New Hampshire reduced the percentage of infants born with one or more of four health risks (from 35% in 1990, to 33% in 1997).
2. New Hampshire increased the percentage of mothers who received early prenatal care (from 86% in 1990, to 90% in 1997).
3. New Hampshire increased the number of children with disabilities enrolled in preschool (from 29 per 1,000 3- to 5-year-olds in 1991, to 48 per 1,000 3- to 5-year-olds in 1998).
Goal 3: Student Achievement and Citizenship
4. New Hampshire increased the percentage of public school 8th graders who were proficient in mathematics (from 20% in 1990, to 25% in 1992).
5. New Hampshire increased the numbers of Advanced Placement examinations receiving grades high enough to qualify students for college credit. (The number of AP examinations receiving a grade of 3 or higher increased from 51 per 1,000 11th and 12th graders in 1991, to 91 per 1,000 11th and 12th graders in 1999.)
Goal 5: Mathematics and Science
6. New Hampshire increased the proportion of degrees earned by all students that were awarded in mathematics and science (from 39% in 1991, to 43% in 1996).
7. New Hampshire increased the proportion of degrees earned by minority students that were awarded in mathematics and science (from 46% in 1991, to 50% in 1996).
8. New Hampshire increased the proportion of degrees earned by female students that were awarded in mathematics and science (from 36% in 1991, to 40% in 1996).
Goal 6: Adult Literacy and Lifelong Learning
9. New Hampshire increased the percentage of U.S. citizens who reported that they registered to vote (from 67% in 1988, to 73% in 1996).
10. New Hampshire increased the percentage of high school graduates who immediately enrolled in college in any state (from 56% in 1992, to 58% in 1996).
IV. AREAS OF DECLINE
There are 4 measures of progress where New Hampshire’s performance has declined during the 1990s:
Goal 1: Ready to Learn
1. The percentage of infants born at low birthweight in New Hampshire has increased from 5% in 1990, to 6% in 1997.
Goal 4: Teacher Education and Professional Development
2. The percentage of public secondary school teachers who held a degree in their main teaching assignment decreased from 80% in 1991, to 71% in 1994.
Goal 7: Safe, Disciplined, and Alcohol- and Drug-free Schools
3. The percentage of public high school students who reported using marijuana increased from 21% in 1993, to 28% in 1995.
4. The percentage of public high school students who reported that someone offered, sold, or gave them an illegal drug on school property increased from 26% in 1993, to 32% in 1995.
This information may be viewed on-line: www.negp.gov/issues/publication/99statefact/nh.htm