Published Online: May 7, 2009
Published in Print: May 13, 2009

Updated: June 10, 2009

Report Roundup

ETS Tracks Causes of Scoring Gaps

“Parsing the Achievement Gap II”

Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.
Article Tools
  • PrintPrinter-Friendly
  • EmailEmail Article
  • ReprintReprints
  • CommentsComments
  • Bookmark and Share

The United States has made little progress over the past six years in reducing the disparities, both within and outside of schools, that keep poor and minority students from achieving the same kind of academic success as their white and better-off peers, a reportRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader from the Educational Testing Service says.

The April 30 report, a follow-up to a 2003 study by the Princeton, N.J.-based testing giant, tracks national progress in reducing gaps between students of different racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups on 16 factors that have been linked to student achievement. It notes, for instance, that:

• While students of all racial or ethnic groups are taking more rigorous courses in high school, black students are still underrepresented among those taking Advanced Placement exams.

• In percentages of 8th graders taught by uncertified teachers, the gap has increased between Hispanic students, whose teachers are far more likely to lack certification, and white students.

• At all grade levels, teachers in high-minority schools are more likely to have larger class sizes than teachers in low-minority schools. That gap has widened since 2003.

• Among 8th graders in 2007, 52 percent of black students had a teacher who left before the school year's end, compared with 44 percent of Hispanic students and 28 percent of white students—roughly the same proportions as in previous years.

• Poor and minority children continue to be more likely than other children to be exposed to environmental hazards, such as lead and mercury.

• More than half of black 8th graders, compared with a fifth of white students, watch an average of four or more hours of television each weekday­—a gap that has not changed since 2000.

“What I find troubling is that this issue is still on the table,” said Edmund W. Gordon, a professor emeritus of psychology and education at Teachers College, Columbia University, who commented on the report. “While some progress has been made, it’s not nearly enough.”

Vol. 28, Issue 31, Page 5


You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login | Register
Ground Rules for Posting
We encourage lively debate, but please, no profanity or personal attacks. By commenting, you are agreeing to abide by our user agreement.

Back to Top Back to Top

February 10, 2010 | RSS | All RSS feeds All RSS feeds

Advertisement

Most Popular Stories

Viewed

Emailed

Recommended

Commented

Advertisement
K-12 Industry Solutions

Webinars

Edweek.org Webinar Calendar

View a complete list of archived and upcoming webinars at our event calendar page. Past events include "Making Algebra Easier" and "Quality Counts 2009: Portrait of a Population."

PD Directory

Browse our exclusive directory of more than 200 K-12 professional development products and services.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Sponsored Advertiser Links

EW Archive