Public Schools First NC
  • Home
  • About
  • Issues
    • Know the Issues
    • Leandro
    • Teacher Pipeline/Pay
    • Resilience
    • Education Budget
    • Segregation
    • Privatizing Public Schools
    • Education Justice
    • School Vouchers
    • Charter Schools
  • Engage
    • Sign Our Petition
    • Voter Information
    • Contact Elected Officials
    • Take Our Survey
    • Education Position Questionnaire
  • Resources
    • Fact Sheets
    • Legislative Updates
    • Newsletters
    • Advocacy Toolkit
    • Research and Resources
  • Events
    • Webinars
    • Film Screenings
    • Conference
  • Audiocast
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Donate!
  • Home
  • Recent News
  • Democracy
  • No Rich Child Left Behind

No Rich Child Left Behind

April 30, 2013 Written by admin

In the New York Times, Sean F. Reardon writes,

“…much of our public conversation about education is focused on the wrong culprits: we blame failing schools and the behavior of the poor for trends that are really the result of deepening income inequality and the behavior of the rich.

We’re also slow to understand what’s happening, I think, because the nature of the problem — a growing educational gap between the rich and the middle class — is unfamiliar. After all, for much of the last 50 years our national conversation about educational inequality has focused almost exclusively on strategies for reducing inequalities between the educational successes of the poor and the middle class, and it has relied on programs aimed at the poor, like Head Start and Title I.

We’ve barely given a thought to what the rich were doing. With the exception of our continuing discussion about whether the rising costs of higher education are pricing the middle class out of college, we don’t have much practice talking about what economists call “upper-tail inequality” in education, much less success at reducing it.

Meanwhile, not only are the children of the rich doing better in school than even the children of the middle class, but the changing economy means that school success is increasingly necessary to future economic success, a worrisome mutual reinforcement of trends that is making our society more socially and economically immobile.

We need to start talking about this. Strangely, the rapid growth in the rich-poor educational gap provides a ray of hope: if the relationship between family income and educational success can change this rapidly, then it is not an immutable, inevitable pattern. What changed once can change again. Policy choices matter more than we have recently been taught to think.

Read the entire opinion piece.

Democracy, Recent News
education policy, poverty
Indiana: Voucher Proponents Show True Colors
Why We Need a Moratorium on the High Stakes of Testing

Upcoming Events

There are no upcoming events.

View Calendar
Add
  • Add to Timely Calendar
  • Add to Google
  • Add to Outlook
  • Add to Apple Calendar
  • Add to other calendar
  • Export to XML

Tweets by PS1NC

Search

Public Schools First NC  •  PO Box 37832 Raleigh, NC 27627