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State of Student of Color and American Indian Students Presentation September 11, 2009 Association of Metropolitan School Districts St. Paul, MN By: Emmanuel Dolo, Ph. D. Research Director Minnesota Minority Education Partnership.
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State of Student of Color and American Indian Students Presentation September 11, 2009 Association of Metropolitan School Districts St. Paul, MN By: Emmanuel Dolo, Ph. D. Research Director Minnesota Minority Education Partnership
Minnesota Minority Education Partnership and Minnesota College Access Network: Vital Community Resources www.mmep.net www.mncollegeaccess.org
Diversity Expanding Among Students of Color and American Indian Students Representation of Non-English Language Global Regions Among MN K-12 Students Source: Minnesota Department of Education 2007
Poverty and Students of Color and American Indian Students in MN K-12 Public Schools Eligibility for Free and Reduced Lunch Source: Minnesota Department of Minnesota 2008
The Poor and Poverty Rate in Context Tom Gillaspy, State Demographer says: “The poor are those unable to purchase a minimum adequate market basket of goods and services.” • Poverty rate in Minnesota is 9.5% Poverty Rate in St. Paul: • Below the poverty line = 18.9% Source: City-Data.com
What’s at Stake? Why Shall I Care? • MN will not be producing enough skilled people to satisfy workforce demands. • Adults without college education are less likely to participate in civic activities, volunteer for community organizations, or pay taxes. • They are more likely to be unemployed, incarcerated, or in poor health. Source: Learnmoremn.org
Poverty Declines As Education Increases 2005 ACS. Rates for population age 25 and older. Differences significant at 90% confidence
Significant Reading Disparities 2008 MCA Reading Results Grades 3, 7, & 10 Percent of Test Takers at Proficiency or Above Source: Minnesota Department of Education
1600 American 1550 Indian Asian/Pacific 1500 Islander Hispanic 1450 Black 1400 White 1350 1300 1250 1200 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Persistent Outcomes Gap – Even with Scores Rising for All Student Groups Third Grade Minnesota Comprehensive Assessment Reading Scale Scores 1999 - 2005 Source: Minnesota Department of Education
What’s at Stake? Why Shall I Care? • Minnesota’s competitiveness will diminish as would its quality of life • The inequality gap will continue to widen between the affluent and the poor • The middle class would shrink Source: MMEP’s Experience and Predictions
Significant Math Disparities 2008 MCA Mathematics Results Grades 3, 8, & 11 Percent of Test Takers at Proficiency or Above Source: Minnesota Department of Education
1650 1600 1550 American Indian 1500 Asian/Pacific Islander 1450 Hispanic Black 1400 White 1350 1300 1250 1200 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Persistent Outcomes Gap – Even with Scores Rising for All Student Groups Third Grade Minnesota Comprehensive Assessment Math Scores 1999 – 2005 by Ethnicity Source: Minnesota Department of Education
Serious Disparities in High School Graduation Rates Source: Minnesota Department of Education
Disparities in High School Drop Out Rates Source: Minnesota Department of Education
Framework for Addressing Math Disparities • Environment as Integrated Context (EIC) is a product of a cooperative of 12 states including Minnesota, premised on the notion of interdisciplinary, collaborative, student-centered, hands-on and engaged learning. • “When I taught the kids math skills measuring, in the classroom, they forgot it. When students had a chance to use these skills on our nature trail, they not only learned better, but could apply and remember the math skills longer.” Kim Flynn –Math Teacher-Jackson County Middle School, Kentucky
Aspirations: High across all racial/ethnic communities 2007 Minnesota Student Survey Minnesota Department of Education and Minnesota Department of Health 2007
Pursuing Opportunity Percentage of ACT Participation Compared to Enrolled 12th Graders Source: Minnesota Office of Higher Education 2008 (ACT)
College Readiness Source: Minnesota Office of Higher Education, 2008
College Participation Rates Source: MN Office of Higher Education 2008
Most Students of Color are Likely to Enroll in Two Year Colleges Source: Minnesota Office of Higher Education
WHAT IS THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP? • Poor minority students as a group score lower on achievement measures than middle class and non-minority students • The achievement gap means different things to different people. • Could mean disparities between White and Black students or minority students in general; males and females; or ELL and regular students
WHAT ARE THE CAUSES OF THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP? • The causes are complex • Research attributes it to two major causes: • Factors related to social economic status • Factors related to the school and school environment
Framework For Closing Achievement Gap [Environment as an Integrating Context Learning Framework] Access: Equitable access to basic enabling conditions, including qualified, effective teachers, rigorous curriculum based on state standards, safety nets and accelerated interventions. Culture and Climate: Safe learning environment, promoting sense of belonging, fostering strong positive relationships among students, staff, and between school and home community Source: www.etap.org/media/pdf/EIC_AFrameworkforlearning_Final_3_30_06.pdf
SOCIAL ECONOMIC STATUS • Living in pervasive and persistent poverty • Poor health • Frequent changes in residence and transferring from one school to the other • Parents with low level of education and thus low level of involvement with school work • Institutionalized racism
Culturally-Based Teaching Practices • Pedagogy that recognizes and integrates students’ culture, values, and life history. • Draws teaching strategies that not only preserves student’s cultural knowledge, but also to fosters academic achievement. • Teachers ought to affirm students’ cultural strengths whether they are indigenous members of the culture or not.
Cultural Sensitivity & Proficiency • Important part of educators’ attitude. • Makes students and stakeholders feel welcomed • Integrates students in school environment.
Components of Academic Achievement Proficiency in three Rs Intercultural Competency Identity Development: Putting pieces of one’s life history together Proficient in reading writing & math Understands other cultures and interacts in diverse settings High self-concept Puts missing pieces of personal & group life history together
BEST PRACTICES • Invest in high quality pre-K programs for low income people • Improve alignment between educational systems from pre-K to college • High expectations for students • Rigorous curriculum and robust instructional and social supports to students • Cultural congruence in instruction to enhance identity development
BEST PRACTICES • Smaller class size • Higher teacher quality • Summer enrichment program • Increase parent involvement • Make closing the achievement gap and continuous academic growth benchmarks for judging school and district performance • Recruit, retain, support and reward highly qualified teachers especially in schools that serve high percentages of low income students
BEST PRACTICES • Provide culturally-relevant professional development for all school personnel • Professional development should also focus on the use of data to guide reforms • Share successful practices • Change structure of state school financing to target more resources to schools and students that need it the most • Invest in continuous state-specific research on the causes of and solutions to the persistence of the achievement gap
Policy Recommendations • Develop and adopt policies that require schools to measure the growth of students from individual starting places but set goals that assure that each child reaches standard • Establish measurable goals for closing the achievement gap for each school and for the district as a whole and report progress to the public on a regular basis. Source: Debora Boeck – www.wssda.org
Policy Recommendations • Use measures to evaluate the effectiveness of strategies implemented by schools to close the achievement gap • Establish comprehensive data management system to collect, disaggregate, and provide continuous targeted feedback to improve or close the achievement gap. Source: Debora Boeck – www.wssda.org
Discussion Starters • How does the school district collect, analyze, and disseminate student performance data? • What’s the data and assessment literacy among community members? • What is the community’s understanding of existing student achievement data? • How is the community using the assessment data to accelerate students’ academic achievement?
Discussion Starters • How is community addressing issues related to parent engagement practices? • Have the school learning environment been assessed? How? • Do students view their teachers as approachable? • What do discipline statistics say about practices? • Does the community have specific strategies for supporting effective teaching?
What’s behind the academic disparities? No single cause This is a social justice issue: to be addressed by the entire society This is a personal responsibility issue:to be addressed by the children, families and leaders of particular communities This is a school performance issue: to be addressed by public school systems All of this needs to be informed by sound research based on the knowledge and desire that exists in communities of color. Source: Ron Ferguson, Harvard Achievement Gap Initiative
Selected Sources Used • Closing the achievement gap: Report of Superintendent Jack O’Connell’s California P-16 Council (January, 2008) • Partners in closing the achievement gap: How charter schools can support high-quality universal pre-K. Democrats for Education Reform (2008). • Deconstructing the discourse of the achievement gap: In the Middle School closing the achievement gap inquiry group. • Rich Jones. (2006). The Bell Policy Center – Policy Brief. Understanding and closing Colorado’s achievement gap. • Andy Hartman (2002). The Bell Policy Center. Neither English Immersion nor bilingual education alone will close achievement gap. • Jennifer Sharp-Silverstein (2005). The Bell Policy Center. Understanding Colorado’s achievement gap: An analysis of student performance data by race and income. • National Center for School Engagement. (2006). Parent engagement in Jacksonville: partnering to help at-risk students achieve. • Ron Haskins & Cecilia Rouse. (2005). Closing the achievement gap. Brookings & Princeton. • Closing the achievement gap: Focus on Latino students. American Federation of Teachers (2004). • Veda Brown. (2006). National impact: The real gap in closing the academic achievement gap: Parent accountability and No Child Left Behind.