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Assessing the Academic Mobility on Test and Non-Test Outcomes for Students from Third Grade through High School. Working Paper No. 330-1125

Title: Assessing the Academic Mobility on Test and Non-Test Outcomes for Students from Third Grade through High School. Working Paper No. 330-1125
Language: English
Authors: Dan Goldhaber; Stephanie Liddle; Suvekshya Gautam; National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER) at American Institutes for Research (AIR)
Source: National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER). 2025.
Availability: National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research. American Institutes for Research, 1000 Thomas Jefferson Street NW, Washington, DC 20007. Tel: 202-403-5796; Fax: 202-403-6783; e-mail: info@caldercenter.org; Web site: https://caldercenter.org
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 76
Publication Date: 2025
Document Type: Reports - Research
Education Level: Elementary Education; Junior High Schools; Middle Schools; Secondary Education; High Schools
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education; Tests; Testing; Elementary School Students; Middle School Students; High School Students; Longitudinal Studies; Academic Achievement; Achievement Gap; Progress Monitoring; Racial Differences; Gender Differences; Predictor Variables; Scores; Grade Point Average; Course Selection (Students); Graduation Rate; Attendance; Discipline; Mathematics Achievement; Language Arts; Learning Trajectories
Geographic Terms: Washington
Abstract: While achievement gaps have been widely studied, less attention has been given to how these gaps relate to students' patterns of "academic mobility"-- that is, how students' relative academic standing changes from early to later grades. Using rich administrative data from Washington state, we apply an academic mobility framework to examine both test-based and non-test outcomes for student subgroups defined by race/ethnicity and gender, tracking their progress from 3rd grade through high school. Our findings align with prior research: after controlling for other student characteristics, higher performance on 3rd or 8th grade assessments strongly predicts better high school outcomes, including test scores, GPAs, college-level course-taking in math and ELA, graduation rates, and lower rates of absenteeism and disciplinary incidents. We also find that early math achievement is a stronger predictor of later outcomes than early ELA performance. Although some initially low-performing students demonstrate upward mobility, 3rd grade test scores remain powerful predictors of long-term academic trajectories. Students who begin behind tend to stay behind. Though magnitudes of academic mobility vary significantly across outcomes and subgroups, Asian students, especially Asian females, were the most upwardly mobile subgroup while Black males were often, though not always, the least mobile. Gender gaps also vary in size nearly always favoring females. Our results underscore the need for earlier and more intensive interventions to change the educational trajectories of students who struggle academically.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2025
Accession Number: ED677235
Database: ERIC