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Black, Latino Students Perform at Levels of 30 Years Ago

Black Students

  Teresa Wiltz First Posted: 01/23/2012 4:44 pm Updated: 01/23/2012 5:17 pm

This piece comes to us courtesy of America's Wire.

WASHINGTON —- Educators are expressing alarm that the performance gap between minority and white high school students continues to expand across the United States, with minority teenagers performing at academic levels equal to or lower than those of 30 years ago.

Despite the hope that improving education for children of color would propel them to better life outcomes, Latino and African-American students are not being prepared in high school classrooms for brighter futures. While achievement levels have improved considerably for minority elementary and middle school students, educators say their academic performance drops during high school years.

How prevalent is the achievement gap at the high school level?

On average, African-American and Latino high school seniors perform math and read at the same level as 13-year-old white students.

"We take kids that start [high school] a little behind and by the time they finish high school, they're way behind," says Amy Wilkins, vice president for government affairs and communications at the Education Trust, a Washington-based educational advocacy group. "That's the opposite of what American values say education is about. Education is supposed to level the playing field. And it does the opposite. . . .While many people are celebrating our postracial society . . . there is still a significant hangover in our schools."

The Education Trust says African-American and Latino students have made little to no progress in 12th-grade reading scores since 1994, continuing to lag behind white students. Math achievement has also remained flat, with the gap between white students and those of color widening.

Educators cite these causes for the disparity in performance:

  • Lowered expectations for students of color

  • Growing income inequality and lack of resources in low-income school districts

  • Unequal access to experienced teachers

  • An increased number of "out of field" teachers instructing minority students in subjects outside their area of expertise

  • Unconscious bias" by teachers and administrators.

  • These factors, experts say, produce an opportunity gap for students of color.

"A 12th-grade education in a more affluent neighborhood is not the same as the education in a less affluent neighborhood," says Dominique Apollon, research director of the Applied Research Center, a national nonprofit with offices in New York, Chicago and Oakland, Calif. "Top students in low-income schools don't have the opportunity to be pushed further and further."

Wilkins adds that "school is their best chance of escaping horrible circumstances. To cut them some slack in school is not the appropriate response to racism and poverty in American culture. It is a response that ends up being deadly to the students."

School advocates say students of color, regardless of class, are frequently met with lowered expectations from teachers and administrators. With such expectations come lowered requirements in the classroom, they say. Students in low-income schools are more likely to be given an "A" for work that would receive a "C" in a more affluent school, according to "Raising Achievement and Closing Gaps Between Groups: Lessons from Schools and Districts on the Performance Frontier," an Education Trust study released last November.

Students of color are also less likely to be given advanced-level coursework. John Capozzi, principal of Elmont (N.Y.) Memorial Junior-Senior High School, is among educators who call that a civil rights issue. Capozzi says he frequently battles those coursework perceptions, even from fellow educators and accreditation officials evaluating his school.

"They have preconceived notions about minority kids," says Capozzi, whose students are primarily African-American and Latino. "A large part of my job . . . [is] dispelling the stereotypes of our kids. It's long been embedded in society."

"African Americans and Hispanics have been denied access to the more rigorous courses," Capozzi says. All students, he says, "should be thrown into vigorous classes" and be given proper academic support to ensure their success. If they don't have access to those classes, he says, they won't be adequately prepared for college.

Research from the Education Trust study supports his assertion: More white high school graduates were enrolled in college prep courses than were their African-American, Latino and Native American counterparts. Often, schools attended by those minorities do not offer advanced classes.

According to Pedro Noguera, professor of education at New York University, "Where there's tracking, [you have] obstacles to getting into the more rigorous classes, and the teachers aren't that committed to teaching. Those are all signs of a dysfunctional culture. . . .In many schools, instead of encouraging kids [of color] to take [advanced courses], they're discouraging them and putting up obstacles."

Coming from a middle-class family doesn't protect minority students from such obstacles. Wilkins says middle-class black youngsters aren't doing as well as their white peers. Many are placed in less competitive classes, and a black child with high fifth-grade math scores is less likely to be enrolled in algebra in eighth grade, according to the Education Trust study.

"A lot of the time, those [middle-class black] kids are in schools where they are in the minority," Noguera says. "If they don't have teachers that are encouraging them, they feel alienated."

Another obstacle for poor and minority students is that they are more likely than white students to have inexperienced and "out of field" teachers. According to Wilkins, minorities at high-poverty schools are twice as likely to be taught by "out of field" teachers — for instance, a math instructor teaching English or a science instructor teaching history. That, education experts say, is a recipe for disaster.

Low-income minority students are also more likely to have newly minted teachers, many of whom aren't equipped to help underperforming students get on track. According to the Education Trust, low-performing students are more likely to be assigned to ineffective teachers.

"Some of the least experienced teachers are put in classrooms with our most needy kids," says LaShawn Routé Chatmon, executive director of the National Equity Project based in Oakland. "This doesn't mean that new teachers can't serve needy students. But there is a trend of large numbers of teachers who aren't fully prepared."

The result? According to Chatmon, inexperienced teachers inadvertently perpetuate the achievement gap. Students performing below their grade must be taught at an accelerated level, she says. Teachers must be "warm demanders," showing students respect, encouraging them to be partners in their learning and communicating clearly that they are expected to master the subject matter, Chatmon says.

This is particularly critical in the early years of high school when students learn groundwork for more advanced coursework.

"All the research shows that ninth grade is a pivotal year, for all students, but in particular minority students," Capozzi says. "If you don't catch them in ninth grade, the rise in dropouts increases dramatically."

Poverty also hampers minority student achievement. Blacks and Latinos have been disproportionately affected by the economy, with more and more children falling into poverty, according to Apollon.

Minority students typically attend schools that lack resources. They are also more likely to attend schools where the student-teacher ratio is high, books and computers are outdated and teacher aides aren't available to provide extra help for those who need it most.

"Young people of color are overrepresented in the poorest schools and the poorest neighborhoods," Apollon says. "There is a cumulative and compounding effect of structural deficiencies in many schools."

The sluggish economy has forced many school districts to slash budgets, eliminating after-school programs and arts instruction. Many schools are underfunded, even in more affluent districts. But wealthier schools benefit because parents can organize fundraisers or pay for private tutors.

Poor parents working two and three jobs often don't have the wherewithal to advocate for their children, education experts say. Often, the parents themselves received a substandard education. This creates a dynamic in which generations of families are stuck in a cycle of underachievement.

Also part of the poor performance of minority students is "unconscious bias." Teachers may think that students from poor families are so traumatized that they can't learn, experts say, and so they don't push those children to excel. Chatmon says that as African-American boys grow physically, teachers often talk about being afraid of "their size" and tend to overpunish them. As a result, a disproportionate number of black male students are suspended and miss class instruction, making it that much harder for them to catch up.

"Unconscious bias clearly plays a role in tracking young boys of color in particular into the slower track courses," Apollon says. "Unconscious bias clearly plays a role in terms of discipline as well. Obviously, if you're being suspended from school, all the teachers think you're disruptive. They'll have lower expectations of students that have been labeled ‘undisciplined.' That certainly will have a negative impact on a student's ability to succeed."

America's Wire is an independent, non-profit news service run by the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education. America's Wire is made possible by a grant from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. For more information, visit www.americaswire.org or contact Michael K. Frisby at mike@frisbyassociates.com.

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This piece comes to us courtesy of America's Wire. WASHINGTON —- Educators are expressing alarm that the performance gap between minority and white high school students continues to expand across...
This piece comes to us courtesy of America's Wire. WASHINGTON —- Educators are expressing alarm that the performance gap between minority and white high school students continues to expand across...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lv1155
just asking
06:59 AM on 01/30/2012
Another factor that is important is the lack of parental knowledge regarding what their children are being taught and corresponding involvement that identifies these problems and forces the school to take action. I know of one case where a student's Geometry class consisted of making a binder with all the theorems and drawing the angles. Any student who completed the binder got a 3.0. We know that geometry helps to develop analytical thinking. The parent was involved and while she could not afford a private education did get her child a tutor. Result, the child just received her BA and is on her way to grad school. The education system in urban areas promotes ignorance which translates to failure for the child.
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09:26 PM on 01/29/2012
Anytime I read an article about education that does not include Asian students (who succeed at higher rates then white students) I know that there will be nothing said that can be used to improve the current education system.
05:07 PM on 01/29/2012
If they can learn the lyrics to over 100 rap songs and learn how to use the latest technology gadgets, they have the potential to learn anything with hard work and dedication. Parental support is needed too. Obama's mother taught him everyday at 4:00 a.m. before he went to school in Indonesia because she was not satisfied with the school system and he eventually went to Harvard as after High School. There is no excuse.
05:01 PM on 01/29/2012
But they can sing and dance like Beyonce and Nicki Minaj
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
10:02 AM on 02/04/2012
When they do it in class it's called "disruptive behavior."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jill in NYC
The cat ate my micro-bio.
01:24 PM on 01/29/2012
If a black or latino child is going to a school where the mindset of most of his peers is that doing well in school is "acting white", it's not easy for the parents to counter peer pressure like that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
10:38 AM on 02/04/2012
"it's not easy for the parents to counter peer pressure like that."

If it's too hard for the parents to deal with, then what do you think it's like for teachers, who have 160 or more kids whose bad attitudes towards education need countering?

The fact that you recognize the importance of peer pressure and the flawed view among some Black and Latino communities that academic excellence is a "white" characteristic means that you are pretty close to seeing what the real problem is with education and Black Americans.

There are really only two basic alternatives that can fix the problem:

A) The Black community as a whole changes its basic attitude about education and academic excellence.

B) A whole generation of Black children are removed from the Black community and raised in completely integrated boarding schools where disrupting class and failing academic work is most definitely NOT seen as high status behavior. This would result in the Black students' "Black American Culture" being replaced in part with a somewhat homogenized "American School Culture."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jill in NYC
The cat ate my micro-bio.
01:19 PM on 01/29/2012
This is totally unsurprising, considering that high schools in the inner cities have not improved in thirty years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
10:00 AM on 02/04/2012
And in those thirty years how many Chinese, Vietnamese, and white kids have gone through those very same schools and are now lawyers, doctors, engineers and scientists?

The schools are not the problem. Some form of mysterious discrimination by the teachers that is too subtle to detect is not the problem. Black kids only getting the "bad" teachers is not the problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Y Woodman Brown
live & let live
12:33 PM on 01/27/2012
"Poor parents working two and three jobs often don't have the wherewithal to advocate for their children, education experts say."

Ok, so you're telling me that more parents of black high school students work two or three jobs? but no of elementary school kids? how can that be?

Poor white parents aren't working two or three jobs? like they prefer to just be poor? how can that be?

And what? you're saying that one-job parents--who, apparently, are white--come-up to the school to complain that their white child got too low a grade and fight to have it raised? Is that how grading works? how on freaking earth could that be?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Y Woodman Brown
live & let live
12:29 PM on 01/27/2012
"Lowered expectations for students of color"

Whose expectations are lower? Black teachers in predominately black schools? how can that be?

Are we talking about fully integrated schools? Whatever color teachers have a lower expectation of black student than white? how could that be?

'Unconscious bias'? So, it's nobody fault...just some weird kind of racism that's built into teachers of any color? how could that be?

Don't the students take the same tests? Like, you're 14, in the 9th grade and take a test. If they're coming out of 8th grade with equal performance, then black and white kids ought score equally. How would a black kid get down-graded--can't happen unless it's an essay test...do they even do essay tests in school anymore?

Sorry man, I don't really get what they think is going-on here.
06:57 AM on 01/27/2012
There is also a major gap these kids face because they don't have parental and peer role models. They need a lot more learning support so that when they start struggling at early age the cumulative lag that rises with each grade is less something that affects these kids when they miss out in their learning a part. .American schools also need to built in the disciple in learning that makes Asian kids stay ahead and use technology help to make curriculum learning easy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
09:40 AM on 02/04/2012
"American schools also need to built in the disciple in learning that makes Asian kids stay ahead and use technology help to make curriculum learning easy."

Asian kids don't do well because of technology or because anyone is making things easier for them. Furthermore, they do not get the discipline that they need to succeed from the school. They get that discipline from their parents and their culture. If schools were to begin supplying the discipline that parents are failing to provide it would not be a pretty thing at all, and it's a safe bet that the Black and Latino communities would be the first and loudest to complain.

A couple weeks of resident Marine-Corps-style boot camp to start each year and school administrators who dispense corporal punishment to correct behavior problems would work. Sure, it would be better to use a system of rewards, but that would still require the parental involvement the lack of which is at the core of why certain demographics are failing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
09:40 AM on 02/04/2012
Another word about making learning easier: Academic development is like athletic development or artistic development. Having a machine ("technology") do your push-ups for you does nothing for your muscular development. If you have a machine shooting hoops for you, your agility and ability to precisely control your body will not improve. Having a machine practice the guitar for you will not help you develop the muscle memory to be able to play chords.

As with athletic and artistic excellence, academic excellence requires hard work. That doesn't mean that it can't be enjoyable, but it does mean that it can't be made easy.
10:19 PM on 01/26/2012
If you are a child living in the getto.Drug dealers and welfare moma's a common thing.Where joining a gang is your only protection in a rough neighborhood.How would you turn out ? Since having a baby means a free check and housing,why apply yourself in school and get a job ? I have known people in the getto and it is a lifestyle.They don't want to get out of it.Some strive for more with education and move away from friends and family,but they are rare.Look at Rap singers that make millions,but they still sell drugs and get killed by a rival gang.The culture must change itself.Stop living the thug lifestyle and make something of yourself.Many government programs for free college and work training programs.Minoritys are offered more help than the white people.It will only change when parents teach their children respect and encourage them to do more.If you must move to a different state and leave friends and family behind in the getto,do it ! Improve yourself.
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surfandshop
"What we think, we become."
06:57 PM on 01/26/2012
There are many ways to blame it on someone lese. The parents need to respect education and encourage thier kids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jill in NYC
The cat ate my micro-bio.
01:20 PM on 01/29/2012
When so many of their parents were high school dropouts, how much respect for education do you think these young people get?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
08:24 AM on 02/04/2012
And teachers are supposed to get them to learn anyway?

Old Ms. Appleby waves her magic chalk holder and suddenly Jaquan sees the value of training his mind? It doesn't work that way.
12:50 PM on 01/26/2012
My problem with this report is that in comparing the various groups it does not say that whites are performing at acceptable levels, only that blacks and Latinos are underperforming whites. It is my understanding from other research that ALL American school children are underperforming students from other countries. So, where does that leave us? Also, in reading the comnments I note some plausible reasons why minority students are experiencing problems. If we put them all together, we see that the problem is systemic, from bottom (family) to top (the structures of the educational system). Help and change are necessary, the needs are urgent if this problem is to be resiolved. I personally suspect, however, that there is no real intent on the part of the powers that be to fix it.
11:32 AM on 01/29/2012
Depends on the state. If you break those studies down by states, some states are performing at equatable levels to students from Finland for example.
12:17 PM on 01/26/2012
Funny how everybody but the parents and the students are blamed......everybody needs to do their share but the biggest share should come from parents and kids....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScarlettMocha
The Truth is Relative, relatively speaking
12:12 PM on 01/26/2012
Our children aren't failing, the education we provide OUR students is failing.
11:33 AM on 01/29/2012
I see more often than not that the school has made every effort to work with parents but they just have no interest in their child's education. What about parents failing their kids?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScarlettMocha
The Truth is Relative, relatively speaking
12:05 PM on 01/30/2012
You see wrong! Take those right wing blinders off and you might get another picture.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Protocolor
空耳モード
08:44 AM on 02/04/2012
Sorry, but parents and their culture/community are going to have to take some responsibility here. Actually, they're going to have to take just about all of that responsibility. Students who come to school prepared with some small amount of self-discipline and a little motivation of their own and with the intention of learning DO learn... at least as much as their bullying, disruptive and disrespectful peers allow.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScarlettMocha
The Truth is Relative, relatively speaking
03:30 PM on 02/06/2012
I hope u dont' take that negativity into the classroom everyday.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
QUATYL
11:47 PM on 01/25/2012
3 to 400 yrs of captivity will do that to a race of people, but I think we're doing pretty good for a people who have only been free 147 yrs. And even though we were free we had no rights, whites harrassed us day and night, bigotry was and is everywhere. while whites enjoy every comfort there white country has to offer. It's funny when they right these articles they never point out these serious and important facts. They want it to seem that there's no other factors involved, because the history of a people means everything to those people. Just like the rich white anglo american history means to white people.
12:24 PM on 01/26/2012
You will be a lot better off the day you stop living in the past and stop playing the victim......if you think that the whites always had it easy maybe you should read about how hard it was on the Irish, English and Scottish who came here to better themselves. They did not have food stamps or welfare, they lived in run down places, kids would work for a few pennies a week...etc. but they made it because they didn`t see themselves as victims and they didn`t mind working hard....
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QUATYL
12:49 PM on 01/26/2012
Nice try, the key point and you point it out in your post is the irish, english and scottish came here. They came here on their own, they were not brought here as slaves and whipped and violated in the worst ways and i know you know what i'm talking about. And you have the nerve to compare that to slavery. You say the kids worked for pennies, well the slaves worked for nothing and had no choice and they wern't free to go as they pleased as the irish, english and scottish were.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alpha Nerd
01:48 PM on 01/26/2012
I don't like the victim card and I'm Black, but don't take it there. What the Irish, Scottish and Italians went through pales in comparison to what Blacks went through. They may have had it hard, but they were still able to get decent middle class jobs as firemen, police officers or in closed union shops. The laws of the country at the time kept Blacks out of those jobs, which would have helped them to buy homes, save money, put their kids through college and able to leave their kids an inheritance when they passed away. They also didn't have their prosperous neighborhoods burned to the ground. So let's not go there.
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surfandshop
"What we think, we become."
06:59 PM on 01/26/2012
what a big whiner. Help your selves, quit blaming everyone else. Oh and encourage your people to get a good education.
10:15 AM on 01/29/2012
Thank you for that blessing. Just like a lot of folks, this is not real for you.You don't want to hear about, It just doesn't make your day. Sorry for the inconvenience.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
QUATYL
12:05 PM on 02/04/2012
Don't throw your white guilt my way, my post is just all facts, now you take it anyway you want. Clean it up for your race if you want to but facts are facts and you know it. I you had nothing to do with it, so i'm not putting on you but you can't argue with facts. People like you even want to deny the holocaust. You try to blame what happened to a race on the race it happened to. Very sad and very obvious this white guilt.