Class and Schools: Using Social, Economic, and Educational Reform to Close the Black-White Achievement Gap.Class and Schools: Using Social, Economic, and Educational Reform to Close the Black-White Achievement Gap, by Richard Rothstein (Economic Policy Institute). Nobody who followed Richard Rothstein's columns in the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times or his earlier work on education will be surprised that his new book ascribes most of the black-white achievement gap to social class and economics. In effect, he devotes this book to affirming James Coleman's 1966 finding that school differences have far less impact on achievement differences than do family characteristics, the mightiest of which, Rothstein says, is socioeconomic status socioeconomic status, n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion. . Rothstein insists that contemporary school reforms cannot overcome that influence and therefore urges (if the country is serious about the gap closing) that we focus on equalizing income, housing, health care, and such. Indeed, Rothstein states, "If the nation can't close the gaps in income, health, and housing, there is little prospect of equalizing achievement." He also tries to debunk de·bunk tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug. some well-known examples of schools and educators that succeed with disadvantaged minority youngsters. He deprecates claims made by, among others, the Heritage Foundation, the Education Trust, KIPP KIPP Knowledge Is Power Program Academies, Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom, and Jaime Escalante's biographers This literature-related list is incomplete; you can help by [ expanding it]. Biographers are authors who write an account of another person's life, while autobiographers are authors who write their own biography. , insisting that the achievements don't amount to much or couldn't be replicated or that the schools engage in cream skimming Skimming An electronic method of capturing a victim's personal information used by identity thieves. The skimmer is a small device that scans a credit card and stores the information contained in the magnetic strip. . The book, therefore, seeks to throw ice water on just about every popular form of contemporary school-centered reform. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] And he does not hesitate to gore left as well as right, warning, for example, that today's spate of "adequacy lawsuits" (which seek to reshape school finance by having judges force states to spend "adequate" amounts of money on schooling) runs a risk of overpromising. Is he right? Do we quit trying to fix the schools we've got while we wait for radical social changes to be made? Is this not a counsel of despair that plays right into the tendency of some educators to say, "We're doing all that should be expected of us, given the kids we're being sent from the homes they're being sent from, so stop demanding more from us?" Readers may also wish to read an important new essay by sociologist George Farkas, "The Black-White Test Score Gap" (Contexts, Spring 2004), which says that the racial rift is caused, more than any other thing, by divergent di·ver·gent adj. 1. Drawing apart from a common point; diverging. 2. Departing from convention. 3. Differing from another: a divergent opinion. 4. child-rearing practices (and preschool opportunities). Farkas doesn't exactly contradict con·tra·dict v. con·tra·dict·ed, con·tra·dict·ing, con·tra·dicts v.tr. 1. To assert or express the opposite of (a statement). 2. To deny the statement of. See Synonyms at deny. Rothstein, but he offers a more hopeful and actionable scenario instead of, in effect, suggesting that we sit on our hands until the Promised Land arrives. |
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