Report Shows Narrowing Achievement Gap Between Different Student Groups

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kikus of AL 6:01PM June 12, 2010

Interesting article as for me. It would be great to read a bit more concerning this theme. Thank you for posting this information.

MarkRight of AL 6:18PM March 09, 2010

After reading these comments, I now know why American schools have failed. We have racist people that have spent years relegating minorities to terrible neighborhoods, with underfunded and decrepit schools with the worst teachers. Of course, we all pay for this evil in the end. We do not produce enough engineers(40,000 per year) and consequently import two hundred thousand from China and India each year. Most Americans are ignorant of math.Even our brightest come out last on international test. As they say, ignorance is bliss. I hope you fools sleep well at night.

C. Norman slappy: It is apparent you never attended a real college. Your critical thinking skills are very low!

Bill of CA 9:45PM November 11, 2009

You hit the "nail" on the head with a lot of your comments. The bar that the state and the federal government has is "irrelevant". Before long more than the students will be "left behind". I believe national vouchers may solve some of the "ills" of the broken public educational system.

grad student of GA 7:40PM October 29, 2009

I am an experienced educator as well as an adminstrator in a public elementary school of almost 700 students. The bar that the state and or federal government has set is irrelevant to the achievment of students. The achievement of students should only be measured by what is taught and not what the federal government has decided that children need to know.

It begans with socialization of children, experiences, and backgrounds that childen of poverty and children of color come to the table with. NCLB intent is good in theory, however in reality it is an injustice to the public schools. It is not that one race of children are more smarter than another; it is simply that different sets of children have had more pre-school prepraration. Poor parents and parents of color must be educated in how to prepare their children for school. Educated parents have more verbal exchange with their children. As well, they are constantly preparing them for the school social process. While familes of poverty are busy trying to get through the day. I have made visits to children's home where the living room is the student's bedroom. These homes are not conducive to homework or home support.

I also believe that teachers have the potential to hava a greater impact on children than their environment. Even with that they are swimming against the tied to excellerate the academic process to prepare their students for a standardized test, regardless if it is normed nationally or not. What we find is that students become parrots and can recite what they have heard however it is catergorized in psychological terms as dicontextualized learning. More simply put they have no life experience to attach new learning to. Simply put they can say a word but have no idea what it is, what it looks like and cannot make relevant connections to the topic, word, or meaning. Therefore when you ask these students to tell what the authors purpose is or what the main idea is or even what the story is about you get blank stares or answers that are incorrect. Children of poverty have to be taught to answer questions and think. Research has shown that children of color and of poverty are rarely if ever asked questions in their home that they do not know the answers to. Therefore they are never required to think or process information.

However, I know the acheivement gap is closing. We have more teachers that are getting better professional development into reading and what it takes for children to become readers. Unfortuantely, real estate agents have made a living at selling property based on this fallous of good and bad schools. There are so many great things happening in schools everyday in America. But, the media systematically seek the negative. The media in my opinion has contributed in conjuntion with real estate agents to this so called acheivement gap. If you studied schools around the world due to advances in knowledge are all undergong their own challenge

Faye of TN 1:07AM October 22, 2009

I'm an online social science major w/education concentration at Ashford University in Clinton, IA, and we're currently studying this very subject (NCLB and other school reform efforts). As a future teacher, when I first read the headline I was happy and hopeful, but as I read further into the article, my hope turned into frustration. What good comes of the Center on Education Policy declaring that the achievement gap is narrowing if this declaration is based on artificially lowered bars by states that, according to this article, may just be trying to paint a pretty face over an ugly problem? Since NCLB is a federal act, why can't there be nationally uniform bars of standards which define proficiency in each subject?

As an African-American, I find it very demeaning for any government, whether state or federal, to take it upon itself to conclude that young students who look like me must be incapable of achieving academically at the same levels of their majority counterparts. This is equivalent to students cheating on tests. Only difference is, minority students are being cheated out of a more valuable education and a better shot at a successful future.

C Norman-Slappy of GA 1:51AM October 21, 2009

Greetings ALL,

The achievement Gap is narrowing in some areas as the statistics show. I think that this definitaley requires progressive attention to detail on the positive aspects. If some skills have improved, then heavy focus should weigh in how to build upon the gains. It requires continued effort to solve the negative aspects, as Jack Jennings highlighted.

I believe that the idea that alot of the basic skills learned, as mentioned in the article, are reflected in the NAEP's data, which shows NCLB's has been somewhat stagnant for a major period in its process. It has proven a to be a difficult task and obviously unbalanced. We cannot only meet our own standards, but globally we rank relatively low in reading and math! When it is time for NCLB revisions I hope we are ready to balance the system of education and it's value to match the on society; therefore, we must reconstructb the economic, social, and environmental make up.

An engineer constructs buildings and architects design them, as well as various other labor needs to complete a project; therefore, a teacher is constructing an educational framework and embedding information into the students system of learning! such that the mind retains information from the educational environment programed through the curriculum coursework

BLEE of VA 10:56PM October 15, 2009

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