Archive for June 2010

Achievement Gap in Higher Ed Persists

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

College competition is fierce. It serves to widen the achievement gap at elite colleges. There is an interesting comment at the end of the article on moving resources to community colleges. I am a big fan of community colleges, particularly our local ones, Dutchess and Ulster.  The Community College Research Center at Teacher’s College is a great source for research and analysis about the unique approach of these colleges.

Many community colleges provide more of a vocational than academic approach, a good thing in diversifying educational opportunities. However, if the achievement gap issue is a result of economically disadvantaged students not having access to elite academic environments, how will reallocation of resources to community college programs bridge that gap? Or will it only make it larger?

We need vocational programs balanced with academic programs. But if we channel students and resources to either higher education choice based purely on economic advantage (or lack thereof) and not on merit, the inequity persists, grows and festers.

Evidence based success

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Research shows that the KIPP model program is working to significantly and meaningfully close the achievement gap for its students.

AND, that the program’s biggest standard criticism, that the school takes the the most capable students from the underperforming schools, is not the reality that anti-charter critics like to make of it.

“the study didn’t find any evidence that KIPP is systematically enrolling more high-performers from their school districts. On average, the report says, KIPP middle schools have students who are more likely to be living in poverty and are more likely to be black or Hispanic than are students from the schools around them. Back when they were in 4th grade, the study also found, a majority of the KIPP middle school students had lower test scores on average than did students in their local school districts.”

I am a fan!

Sustainability, the over-used buzz word. What does it mean?

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Just because it’s overused doesn’t mean it isn’t important. And lately, there has been a lot of questioning about just what does sustainability mean? One of those words that you’ve said so often that one day, when you are using it in conversation it sounds foreign and you aren’t sure if you are even pronouncing it right. Anyway, here is an interesting analysis, a short version. And a longer, legal case study . Both of which really make me think about what sustainability means, and how to achieve it.