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Stronger Readers, Confident Thinkers: RCSD Students Continue to Make Academic Gains as Shown in 2025 State Assessment Results

Stronger Readers, Confident Thinkers: RCSD Students Continue to Make Academic Gains as Shown in 2025 State Assessment Results

What You Need to Know

  • RCSD students made clear gains in both reading and mathematics on the 2024–25 state assessments.
     
  • RCSD’s results match or slightly exceed statewide performance and compare well to similar districts in San Mateo County.
     
  • Students continue to recover academically after the learning disruptions caused by the pandemic.

Redwood City School District (RCSD) students are showing steady improvement in reading and mathematics, according to new results from the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP). The 2024–25 data show that 49% of RCSD students met or exceeded standards in English Language Arts and nearly 40% did so in Mathematics, both representing clear gains from the previous year.


Compared with last year’s results, student achievement increased across both subjects:

  • English Language Arts: 49.2% in 2024–25 compared to 46.9% in 2023–24
     
  • Mathematics: 39.6% in 2024–25 compared to 37.7% in 2023–24

These results also mark continued recovery following the statewide learning declines seen during and immediately after the COVID-19 pandemic. After several years of disrupted learning, RCSD students are steadily regaining academic ground and demonstrating growth in both core subjects.

Statewide, 49% of California students met standards in English Language Arts and 37.30% in Mathematics. RCSD’s performance is in line with or slightly above these averages, showing that RCSD students are keeping pace with statewide growth while continuing to build momentum.

To understand progress, RCSD also looks at other San Mateo County districts that serve similar student populations and share comparable demographics, including multilingual learners and families from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. The most recent scores show:

  • Jefferson Elementary School District: 46% in English Language Arts and 38% in Mathematics
     
  • Ravenswood City School District: 12% in English Language Arts and 7% in Mathematics
     
  • San Mateo–Foster City School District: 53% in English Language Arts and 49% in Mathematics.

These comparisons provide a meaningful benchmark for understanding how RCSD’s instructional investments are supporting students with similar needs across the region.


District leaders credit several ongoing initiatives that focus on early literacy, critical thinking, and student ownership of learning:

  • Literacy Initiative: Personalized reading instruction and guided practice that build comprehension and confidence.
     
  • Illustrative Math: Hands-on, collaborative problem solving that deepens understanding and engagement.
     
  • Student Goal-Setting Conferences: Structured opportunities for students and families to set goals, reflect on progress, and celebrate growth.
     
  • Professional Learning Partnerships: Collaboration with Teacher Created Materials and Komor Minds Creative Education to strengthen teaching strategies, especially for English learners.

Together, these efforts reflect RCSD’s mission to create a safe and supportive, inspirational and rigorous, joyful and inclusive environment for all learners.


Why Does This Matter?

When students experience steady growth in reading and mathematics, they gain skills that open doors for future learning and long-term success. RCSD’s continued progress shows what’s possible when students, teachers, schools, and families work together to ensure every learner feels supported, challenged, and capable.


Strategic Organizational Alignment

These results reflect progress across RCSD’s Local Control and Accountability Plan (LCAP) Goal 3: Academic Growth for Every Student, which focuses on helping all students strengthen reading and mathematics skills each year while ensuring that English learners and others who need additional support continue to make meaningful progress.

The Local Control and Accountability Plan (LCAP) is the district’s roadmap for connecting programs, funding, and goals to challenge and support every student to thrive.

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