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What Will Decrease Educational Inequality?

What Will Decrease Educational Inequality?
photo by: Tom@HK
Wisconsin Center for Education Research

Student’s educational outcomes are boosted or hindered by their families’ socioeconomic background. Although certainly not fair to the student, such inequality is likely to persist throughout the 21st century, despite much rhetoric and a few policies directed against it.

WCER researcher Adam Gamoran says that reducing gaps in student achievement in the coming century will depend on preserving policies that emphasize reducing inequality and on developing new initiatives. Throughout the 20th century, both the structure and the process of schooling remained largely unchanged. Despite periods of experimentation, schooling still consists of a teacher facing a group of students in a classroom, nested within a school within a school district and governed locally. Dominated by textbooks, lectures, and recitation, instruction has remained fundamentally unchanged, even though new tools offer other approaches to class work, homework, and teacher-student interaction. The rates of high school completion for White and “minority” students nearly reached parity over the course of the 20th century, yet the rates of college enrollment and completion are still far apart. A 1999 report from the U.S. Department of Education showed that 27.5% of Whites had obtained bachelor’s degrees or more, but only 12.2% of Blacks had reached that level. Blacks, moreover, tend to take longer to receive their high school certification, increasing their overall disadvantage. And although test scores are converging over the long term, the 1996 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) revealed significant Black-White gaps among 17-year-olds, even though the gaps had declined since the 1970s.

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