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David C. Berliner Regents’ Professor Emeritus Arizona State University Inequality and Schooling: Why the USA is Falling Behind in Education.

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Presentation on theme: "David C. Berliner Regents’ Professor Emeritus Arizona State University Inequality and Schooling: Why the USA is Falling Behind in Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 David C. Berliner Regents’ Professor Emeritus Arizona State University Inequality and Schooling: Why the USA is Falling Behind in Education

2 America’s school problems are not rooted in bad teachers and ineffective administrators— It’s economics, stupid! *Vast inequalities in income in the US is our greatest school problem, and you simply cannot test your way out of that. Bush was wrong, Obama is wrong, Democrats are wrong, Republicans are wrong, and they are all are too stuck with their beliefs to see how wrong they really are. They would rather have someone to blame than look in the mirror and say “we are all to blame!” *Most politicians believe that teachers and administrators make the biggest difference in the lives of kids—and they do, while the child is in school. But all these wrongheaded people have not understood one simple fact that stands out and should make them see the fault in their logic: Kids are not in school for most of their lives. They are with family and in neighborhoods, many of which are toxic physically and psychologically.

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4 1150 hrs in school 4690 hrs in neighborhood and with family Hours awake per year? 16 x 365 = About 5840

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20 County Poverty rateBirth rate (per 1000 women aged 15–19) Marin County 5% 5 Tulare County (Caucasians) 18% 50 Tulare County (Hispanics) 40% 100

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25 Social Advantage PISA Index of social background Low Reading literacy High Finland Germany Canada This gap is in the order of 3 years of schooling. Steeper slope = less equitable results Source: OECD (2001) Knowledge and skills for life, Appendix B1, Table 8.1, p.308 Social background & reading literacy (PISA 2000) United States

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29 Conclusion Vast inequalities in income cause most of the problems we have in the US educational system. Now, A Quick Part 2 HOW DID WE FAIL TO SEE THIS? Switching from concerns with inputs to concerns about the outputs of our schools has driven America in the wrong direction. We have had the great switcheroo pulled on us.

30 Framing the Debate Terminology Counts “Frames are mental structures that shape the way we see the world.…When you hear a word, its frame is activated in your brain.” — Lakoff (2004)

31 Framing the Debate Framing the Debate Increasing Usage of Achievement Gap New York Times archives 1981 – 90 4 articles 1991 – 98 14 articles 1999 – 00 59 articles 2001 – 06 217 articles 2007 35 articles

32 Whatever Happened to… Equal Educational Opportunity New York Times archives 1981 – 90 86 articles 1991 – 98 66 articles 1999 – 00 4 articles 2001 – 06 12 articles 2007 3 articles

33 Framing School Reform New York Times, 1981 – 2006

34 Framing School Reform Los Angeles Times, 1981 – 2006

35 Framing School Reform Boston Globe, 1981 – 2006

36 Framing School Reform Chicago Tribune, 1981 – 2006

37 Framing School Reform Education Week, 1981 – 2006

38 Framing School Reform Washington Post, 1981 – 2006

39 Framing School Reform www.whitehouse.gov, 2001 – 2007 Achievement Gap 344 documents Equal Educational Opportunity 3 documents

40 Could one just as easily “frame” the Republican Party as the party of selfishness and greed?

41 Achievement Gap Frame vs. Equal Educational Opportunity Paradigm shift = political shift Focus on outputs – Short-term measurable results – Pressure applied to schools, kids Forget about inputs – Adequate, equitable resources – Professional development – Effective pedagogies – Opportunity to learn

42 How poverty affects achievement We all have heard of the occasional feral child, or about the child kept locked in a closet for some years. We learned from those cases that under extreme environmental conditions whatever genetic potential for language, height, or intellectual functioning a child had, that potential was unable to be expressed. The powerful and awful environment in which such children lived suppressed the expression of whatever genes that child had for complete mastery of language, for full height, for complete intellectual functioning, for competency in social relationships, and so forth. Lewontin (1982), an evolutionary biologist, discussed how two genetically identical seeds of corn, planted in very different plots of earth would grow to very different heights. In the plot with good soil, sufficient water, and sunshine, genetics accounts for almost all of the noticeable variation in the plants, while environment is much less of a factor in the variation that we see. On the other hand, when the soil, water, and sun, are not appropriate, genetics do not account for much of the noticeable variation among the lower-growing and often sickly plants that are our harvest. Genes do not have a chance to express themselves under poor environmental conditions. Lewontin’s example now has a human face. There is strong evidence that the influence of genes on intelligence is quite dependent on social class.

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