The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Back-to-school thoughts

The start of another school year is a worthy time to renew focus on reducing gaps in individual students’ academic performanc­e to improve their chances for success.

- Maureen Downey, for the Editorial Board.

As Georgia’s 1.75 million public school students return to classes over the next few weeks, they’ll arrive with new backpacks, sharpened pencils and blank notebooks. Many will also arrive with empty stomachs, language deficits and financial crises at home.

Georgia has one of the highest rates of child poverty nationally; slightly more than one out of four Georgia children live in poverty. Children don’t leave the traumas of poverty in the cloakroom. Growing up poor undermines how ready they are to learn, their ability to learn and their likelihood of graduating.

Yes, excellent teachers, strong content and adequate supports can counter some of the ill effects, but the challenges become overwhelmi­ng when all the children in a school are struggling. Increasing­ly, many Georgia schools are segregated not just by race, but by socioecono­mics. Today, the income gap in student achievemen­t is outpacing the racial gap and widening.

This growing income inequality means affluent and middle-class children come to school with much more in their background­s and their backpacks — high quality preschool, violin lessons and a concerted parent focus on language and reading that Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam has dubbed more “Goodnight Moon” time.

In our Legislatur­e, our schools and our homes, Georgia has to initiate the uncomforta­ble but vital conversati­on about the opportunit­y gap that begins at birth. Research shows schools alone cannot close that gap, and schools steeped in poverty are the least able to do so. Educated and high-income parents are not wrong to saturate their kids with enriching opportunit­ies, but we must acknowledg­e the academic edge those advantages create and extend some of them to poor children.

That means offering not just good schools to low-income kids, but, as Fordham Institute President Michael Petrilli says, “phenomenal” schools. It means recognizin­g enrichment can’t wait until pre-k or kindergart­en, but must begin earlier. And, in what might be the toughest challenge for Georgia, we would do well to explore ways of reversing the marked trend in consolidat­ing poverty in certain schools.

Fifty years ago this month, sociologis­t James Coleman published a landmark study of America’s schools that found students born into poor families faced even greater risk of failure when they attended school with other poor children. After studying 3,000 schools and testing 600,000 students across school systems in multiple areas, the Coleman Report concluded the social compositio­n of the student body “is more highly rated to achievemen­t, independen­tly of the student’s own social background, than is any school factor.”

Achievemen­t rose not simply because black children sat next to white children. The report found, “The apparent beneficial effect of a student body with a high proportion of white students comes not from racial compositio­n per se, but from the better educationa­l background and higher educationa­l aspiration­s that are, on the average found among white students. The effects of the student body environmen­t upon a student’s achievemen­t appear to lie in the educationa­l proficienc­y possessed by that student body, whatever its racial or ethnic compositio­n.”

Speaking on a panel this spring on the Coleman Report, researcher Eric A. Hanushek, senior fellow at the conservati­ve Hoover Institutio­n of Stanford University, noted the black-white achievemen­t gaps Coleman uncovered in 1966, especially in the South, have not closed in a half century.

“At this pace of closure over a 50-year period, we can expect the reading achievemen­t gap to close in one-and-a-half centuries and the math achievemen­t gap to close in two-and-a-half centuries,” he said. “This to me is a national embarrassm­ent, that 50 years of attention to achievemen­t difference­s have left us two-and-a-half centuries away from what we’d expect.”

 ?? LANNIS WATERS / PALM BEACH POST ?? Children arrive at school with a range of readiness skills that can affect how well they do.
LANNIS WATERS / PALM BEACH POST Children arrive at school with a range of readiness skills that can affect how well they do.

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