Reforms that could help narrow the achievement gap
06-01-07
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and
associates.
[ THIS ARTICLE ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN THE JUNE 2006 ISSUE OF POLICY PERSPECTIVES PUBLISHED BY WESTED.]
Reforms that could help narrow the achievement gap
Policymakers almost universally conclude that persistent
achievement gaps must result
from wrongly designed school policies — either expectations that
are too low, teachers who
are insuf. ciently quali. ed, curricula that are badly designed,
classes that are too large,
school climates that are too undisciplined, leadership that is too
unfocused, or a combination
of these. This exclusive focus on schooling is wrong. Without
complementary investments
in early childhood preparation, health care, housing, after-school
and summer programs,
and other social and economic supports, the achievement gap will
never be closed.
Read full text of this article in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
Richard Rothstein is research associate at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
[ POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON JUNE 1, 2007. ]
Sign Up to Stay Informed
Search EPI.org
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
- The perils of performance-based pay for teachers
- Teachers, Performance Pay, and Accountability
- The myth of private-sector performance pay
- Among college-educated, African Americans hardest hit by unemployment
- It’s not academic: Why charter schools close
- Caution: When Used as Directed, 401(k)s are Hazardous to Your Financial Health
- Don’t forget crumbling schools in crafting a stimulus
- Education Accountability Policy in the New Administration
- Grading Education: Getting Accountability Right
- The Case for Collaborative School Reform
- See more publications about: Education Student Achievement
