Kevin Welner, director of the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder, wrote the following:
Poverty and the Education Opportunity Gap: Will the SOTU Step Up?
Tuesday’s State of the Union address will apparently focus on issues of wealth inequality in the United States. The impact of poverty is extremely important for issues such as housing, nutrition, health and safety. Additionally, education researchers like me have been hollering from the rooftops, hoping policymakers and others will understand that poverty is the biggest impediment to children’s academic success. So this focus is long overdue and certainly welcome. Yet I worry that the President will slip from an accurate diagnosis to unproven and ineffectual treatments.
The diagnosis is straightforward. I expect that the President will have no trouble describing enormous and increasing wealth gaps. We learned from Oxfam last week that “the world’s 85 richest people own the same amount as the bottom half of the entire global population,” which is over 7 billion people.
In the US, the picture is just as shocking. In a 2013 UNICEF report on child poverty in 35 developed countries, the US came in 34th, second to last—between Bulgaria and Romania, two much poorer countries overall. Twenty-three percent (23%) of children in the US live in poverty.
According to analyses in an October 2013 report from the Southern Education Foundation, 48% of the nation’s 50 million public-school students were in low-income families (qualified for free or reduced-price meals). This level of child poverty implicates not just access to breakfast or lunch. These children face issues of:
- Housing security and housing (and thus school) transiency,
- Resources available at the local school,
- Resources available in the child’s home and community as well as the safety in that community,
- Access to enriching programs after school and over the summer (and within the school),
- Access to medical and dental care,
- The expectations that educators and others have for a child’s academic and employment future,
- The likelihood of the child being subjected to disproportionate discipline and being pushed into the school-to-prison pipeline, and
- The viability and affordability of attending college.
Many of the opportunity gaps of the sort described above arise from policies and practices within our schools. But many more—and arguably the most devastating—arise from opportunities denied to children in their lives outside of schools.
When the speeches are rolled out on Tuesday, watch out for evidence-free policy promises. President Obama, I fear, may continue to push for more test-based accountability policies like No Child Left Behind and may hold out the false hope of so-called high-achieving charter schools. The Republican response, I fear, will hold out the related false hope of vouchers, neo-vouchers, and other policies that shift public money from public to private schools. Neither charter schools nor voucher programs have been shown to make a meaningful dent in opportunity gaps or achievement gaps.
Poverty is the main cause of these gaps, and addressing poverty is the most sensible and practical approach for closing those gaps. Our nation will not escape its devastating educational inequality so long as we have massive wealth inequality. Yes, if we ever truly invested in the schools serving our children in poverty—invested in a way that provided tremendously enriched opportunities for those children, giving them equal overall opportunities with the nation’s more advantaged children—we might expect to see a meaningful reduction of intergenerational inequality. But that’s not what we do. Instead, we heap demands on those schools, deprive them of the resources they urgently need, and then declare them to be “failing schools” when they don’t perform miracles.
These nonsensical policies come with an astronomical economic cost and cost to our democracy. Economists Clive Belfield and Hank Levin conservatively estimate that the economic benefit of closing the opportunity gap by just one-third would result in $50 billion in fiscal savings and $200 billion in savings from a societal perspective (for example, by lowering rates of crime and incarceration). These figures are annual in the sense that, for instance, each year a group of students drops out and, over their lifetimes, that dropping out will collectively result in a fiscal burden of $50 billion. By point of comparison, Belfield and Levin note, total annual taxpayer spending on K-12 education, including national, state and local expenditures, is approximately $570 billion. (These analyses are from their chapter in Closing the Opportunity Gap.)
The President’s State of the Union Address and the Republican response will both, it seems, speak to the American people about wealth inequality. They will both, it seems, offer some policy proposals aimed—rhetorically, at least—at addressing this major impediment to the American Dream. To some extent, we may hear about wise, evidenced-based approaches like expanding access to high-quality preschool. But watch out for speeches that identify real problems but then offer nothing more than repackaged, failed policies.
Those who are not serious about addressing inequality will cynically try to figure out, “How do I repackage my existing policy agenda and sell it as a cure for inequality?” Instead, the serious question we should be asking is, “How do I design, pass, and implement a package of policies that have been shown to be effective at addressing wealth inequality and the damage caused by that inequality?”
The nation’s most vulnerable children deserve answers to that serious question. We should honestly consider policies like a guaranteed minimum income, increases in the minimum wage, and a tax structure that shifts the burden toward the extremely wealthy. The way to reduce wealth inequality is to do just that: reduce wealth inequality. Our public schools can help, but they cannot do it alone.
Great piece– Welner’s NEPC is a national treasure. NB: Kevin Welner will be on the Research and Advocacy panel at the Network for Public Education national conference in Austin Mar 1-2. http://bit.ly/1aXtMvH
Here is an interesting post on household wealth and PISA scores: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/23/pisa-wealth_n_4641669.html
Indeed. AND it was reported yesterday that even in China now something like 3 TRILLION dollars are hidden in tax havens. Nicholas Shaxon’s book: “Treasure Islands” discusses how the U. S. and Europe at least have a very similar problem. Politics in all its phases are undoing the strengths of our democratic form of government. When money is the bottom line rather than people’s welfare we have built a house of cards on sand. [Forgive the duplicate poor grammar but it does express my view.]
Yesterday on Bill Moyer’s program DeGrasse Tyson talked about the importance of creativity – he did not use that specific term – to sustain progress in all forms of thought. He did not rubber stamp the ideal of better grades, only better thought processes.
An example of wealth inequality in my child’s 5th grade classroom: The students who bring in their own technology get to use it everyday. This can be a smartphone, laptop, or tablet. The kids whose parents can’t afford to do this (or who don’t want to send in expensive devices with children) only have access to technology when the class “checks out” the 12 tablets at the school, which they must share. From my understanding, this is about once a month. So, when the teacher passes out a worksheet that kids must look up science definitions, the smartphone kids whip out their device and get done much quicker than the kids who look up definitions the old fashioned way, from the science book. In public schools, every kid should have equal access to technology. Kids should not be allowed to bring in devices if there are not enough for everyone to use equally.
I’d like to hope that most people want to do something about inequality and poverty in America but all we get is talk and no action. The system can not sustain itself being so skewed in favor of the wealthy few. Greed and unconcern for others will topple the system. The people in power know that things can be done to fix this, they just don’t have the will to do it. The 1% are the ones we elected and are in Congress. While they supposed to represent us, their interests are put first. Its like the bureaucracy and corporatist in education always claiming that they do things for the children when in reality, its the children who end up getting the shaft. In all this big mess, I want to stop and thank the teachers who, for the most part, are in it for the children, not the power or the money.
Obama has from the beginning of his career been a Trojan Horse for the Overclass, branding himself in the eyes of his eager-to-be-deluded followers as a progressive, while overseeing attacks on living standards, the public sector (which will further undermine living standards) and constitutional rights, with his race used to divert opposition from the Left wing of the Democratic Party.
It’s no random coincidence that Advertising Age Magazine gave him the Marketer of the Year Award in 2008.
“Neither charter schools nor voucher programs have been shown to make a meaningful dent in opportunity gaps or achievement gaps. . . . Poverty is the main cause of these gaps, and addressing poverty is the most sensible and practical approach for closing those gaps.”
Opportunity gaps are quite different from “achievement” gaps especially when the “achievement” gap is one that is supposedly measured by NAEP or any other standardized test score. Opportunity gaps are those most defined/correlated with the effects of poverty on student’s preK readiness abililities and then, therefore, on the teaching and learning process which is then correlated/considered to be the “achievement” gap,
Regardless of what is said, the fundamental purpose of the current system of education is to maintain the subclass. As long as we follow the slavery based policies developed by Thomas Jefferson who referred to it’s purpose as “raking a few geniuses from the rubbish” It is mathematically impossible to succeed.
Whenever a child is first, another must be last. And when the last start to catch up, we raise the bar to assure they never succeed and that the subclass is maintained.
Think about it. Being proficient is scoring within a range on a standardized paper and pencil test on the exact day the test is given. This doesn´t only happen on the big test, it happens in the classroom. When we have students ranging from the severist of the cognitively disabled to the book learned gifted, how could we ever have everyone at the same place at the same time? Not to mention the roadblocks that slow kids learning. But that’s what is expected.
And if they fail, they wait an entire year to repeat classes. When this happens 2 times, they feel too old to graduate and drop out only to have their children follow the same process. This was intentional back in the early post slavery days and it is carried out today. Everyone in lock step.
We give lip service to the rhetoric of “take kids from where they are” because we know that is the answer. But what if it were the reality? what if kids were able to move up the proficiency ladder when they were ready, assessed on a regular basis. And what if assessment was hands on demonstrating what kids can do rather than forever with pencil and paper in hand.
And what if failure was a learning experience with proficiency assessment available as they are ready rather than moving kids on if they fail a chapter test?
Today we fail kids so that their children will have un educated parents. And the cycle continues.. The only way to succeed in eliminating the subclass is for all to receive a good education, not just the elite who can pass paper and pencil tasks and memorize irrelevant drivel. We must abandon the slavery based system of education that, by design, keeps a people down. Ideas? http://www.wholechildreform.com
Empowering children begins with empowering parents. Educators must first not be afraid to truly partner with parents. Similar to a medical model we educate our patients, but then must honor their decisions. Until teachers and parents realize education is a joint effort no amount of money will improve outcomes.
The crisis in public education did not happen overnight. What once was a thriving institution; generally, graduating fully literate citizens ready and expected to be productive; fully able to participate in our democratic process has become an institution that has overshot the mark and now seems in many ways lost it’s way from providing education to it’s current role of parenting. Time once spent learning is now spent feeding, providing healthcare and disciplining.
Many factors have contributed to these social declines; some seemingly benign and altruistic have in their effort to make things “fair” instead relieved people of their very egos. Encouraging people to leave it to the experts takes a large amount our society out of the conversation entirely and renders them apathetic and ignorant.
Where once we were content to remove roadblocks to opportunity; where once we wanted to ensure each citizen the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness we now want to actually be the providers of that happiness and in the process we gave up liberty.
Straight out of Plato’s Republic, teachers and parents now find the ultimate result of this societal decline is we have all been taken out of the process and instead both are being “managed” by a very undemocratic oligarchy.
I would like to understand the context of your post. You stated that “What once was a thriving institution; generally, graduating fully literate citizens ready and expected to be productive; fully able to participate…..”.
What time period are you referring to with your characterization of education as a “thriving institution”?
Projecting the fraudulent pretence of “Concern” is the handiwork of perpetuating
the trinity “State” of Corporate/Warfare/Welfare. The “State” interventions of well
connected economic interests create structural economic problems and hardships.
To reduce civil “Strife”, welfare or public spending is metered out in proportion to the
percieved ability to contain or control the civil strife. Greater control (less freedom-
Patriot Act-NSA…) = LESS welfare or public spending. DUH…
POTUS has played the “Make me stop” card, to “Show” he cares. A cultural
apparatus spreading strategic stupor under the patina of Democracy. I can’t wait.
None of us is buying anymore. We recognize a windup toy when we see one.
Oh let’s get real, people. It’s about jobs. It’s about a declining economy. What has any of this to do with education? As soon as the economy started declining (in about 1979)– as soon as 3rd-world countries began to become ’emergent economies’– our hegemony began to give way. Did our leaders brainstorm to find ways to find a new position in the global economy? Not exactly. From 1980 on, our govt has done its best to undo every legal knot that separated the middle class from poverty, the idea being to return us to pre-Depression days, when inequality was the norm. We cannot hang onto public education if we keep voting to allow the big money-makers– the financial managers of globalism– a free ride.
This post speaks to me. I work in Durham, NC after having taught in Rochester, NY. I have always taught in Title 1 schools by choice because I believe that ALL students can learn and achieve.
After the increasing pressure in NC from administration due to test scores, I mentioned to the higher up in a meeting that we need to be mindful of the students that we are working with. Growth will not develop over night. There are a large amount of factors that CAN (not always) stem from poverty. Such factors may include behavioral problems or cognitive lags. I have watched my students learn and grown…however, between the Common Core and misaligned tests, my students have not been able to feel the satisfaction of such achievement. I expressed the one size fits all model of the standards and Learning Focused is not benefiting my students, and the pressure placed on myself and my students is not benefiting anyone. There are clearly larger issues that need to be addressed and understood….but this will not stop me from educating my students or believing that they can learn.
Administration responded by telling me they disagreed and had never heard of this before. I simply stated that this was basic human/child development of the brain and there was plenty of research to support it and that I feel we all need to be mindful of this in order to best serve our students. Needless to say, it was not taken well.
Today, in a staff meeting after school….I was called out for such “negative beliefs” and that administration only wants people here who believe that students can learn regardless of their “brain development” and “socioeconomic status.” Not only were my words and concerns for education taken entirely out of context, they were brought up in a condescending manner in a room filled of teachers and staff. Upon picking my jaw up off of the table, I proceeded to pick up my items and walk out of the meeting. All I know, is that in NY, expression of realistic and professional feelings would NEVER be disregarded or ridiculed. Maybe it’s the union factor, who knows. All I know, is that I am tired of being dismissed by the lack of education and respect in the state of NC. Considering the low pay & awful treatment, those of us still in the profession are here for a REASON…THE KIDS!
One important source of increased income inequality in the United States seems to be the increased tendency of folks to marry others with the same level of education. Here is a link to a recent NBER working paper: pareto.uab.es/nguner/ggksPandP-December2013.pdf
Worker productivity grew 80 percent between 1973 and 2011.
Real wages increased, in the same period, by only 4 percent.
In 1978, CEOs took home 26.5 times more than the average worker. That figure is now 206 times the pay of the average worker.
In 2009, 1 percent of U.S. households owned 35.6 percent of the nation’s private wealth. That’s more than the combined wealth of the bottom 90 percent.
In 2007, the typical white household had a net worth about 14 times as large as that of the typical African American or Hispanic household.
Between 1979 and 2009, the top 5 percent saw their real incomes increase 72.7 percent and the lowest-income fifth saw a DECREASE in real income of 7.4 percent.
In the 1947-79 period, in contrast, all income groups saw similar gains, and the lowest income group realized the largest gains.
The End of the Empire?
If you happened to live in Rome in the year 170, you could be forgiven for thinking that the empire was eternal. For almost two hundred years, across a vast region that stretched from the Scottish borderlands to the sands of Arabia, people had enjoyed the Pax Romana. The brutish banditry and lawlessness of previous times had become almost unknown. Trade and the arts flourished, and bellies were full. One couldn’t imagine that such a system, the like of which the world had never before seen, would fall apart practically overnight. Then, in 180, Marcus Aurelius died and was succeeded by his son, the weak, cruel, debauched, and possibly insane Commodus. It was the beginning of the end.
If I were writing a history of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire, I would begin with the story of a distressed Roman family farmer, in the second century AD, with no choice but to sell the land that had been in his family for centuries to one of the handful of wealthy landowners at the top of the latifundia system that developed in the first two centuries of the first millennium. (This system was the forerunner of the medieval system of large feudal estates worked by serfs and ruled by a baron.) Rome had been built by the strength of its legions of sturdy boys from small family farms who fought for the earth that their fathers (and mothers!) plowed. By the second century, that system of small family farms was gone. From one end of the empire to the other, the land was owned by a wealthy few, and the formerly free peasantry had been reduced to serfdom. Who could blame anyone for not wanting to take up arms to defend the system that oppressed them? By the time the latifundia system developed, Rome was already dead. It just didn’t know it yet. In this regard, it should be noted that income inequality in the United States, as measured by the Gini coefficient, now exceeds that in Turkey, India, and Russia; the parallel between what is happening here, now, and what happened in Rome, then, is alarming.
Here’s how a recent article in the Atlantic Monthly put it:
“The U.S. . . . with a Gini coefficient of 0.450, ranks near the extreme end of the inequality scale. Looking [at] other countries . . . with comparable income inequality, . . . it’s an unflattering list: Cameroon, Madagascar, Rwanda, Uganda, Ecuador. A number are currently embroiled in or just emerging from deeply destabilizing conflicts, some of them linked to income inequality: Mexico, Côte d’Ivoire, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Serbia.
“Perhaps most damning is China, significantly more equal than the U.S. with a Gini coefficient of 0.415, where the severe income gap has been a source of worsening political instability for almost 20 years. Leagues ahead of the U.S. on income inequality is India, Gini coefficient 0.368, where outrage over corruption and income inequality recently inspired a protest movement that shook the world’s largest democracy. (The data for India is from 2004, however; income inequality has likely worsened since then.) Russia, which has seen three popular revolutions in the last century against the caviar-shoveling oligarchs who still run everything, is also less unequal than the U.S., at 0.422 Gini.”
Even if Barry O had some miraculous conversion and actually decided to start to serve interests other than those of the wealthy few, he would find it impossible to get anything done given our Congress, which is composed of members of two rival gangs that spend their time wrangling over alternative proposals for using money stolen from taxpayers to make their favored oligarchs wealthier.
A group of baboons, btw, is called a troop, a flange, or a congress.
This last term is an unfair aspersion against baboons.
A new report by the United Nations Children’s Fund, on the well-being of children in 35 developed nations, turned up some alarming statistics about child poverty. More than one in five American children fall below a relative poverty line, which UNICEF defines as living in a household that earns less than half of the national median. The United States ranks 34th of the 35 countries surveyed, above only Romania and below virtually all of Europe plus Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan.
A 2012 study showed that 43 percent of African American children in the United States are living in families below the poverty threshold.
The first paragraph, above, comes from “How 35 countries compare on child poverty (the U.S. is ranked 34th),” by Max Fisher
Thanks Robert, for keeping facts about poverty at the forefront. Here in Louisiana, when I bring up poverty, I am accused of using poverty as an excuse. I am asked if I think poor children can’t learn. I am told that I should stop talking about poverty and focus on achievement, meaning test scores, of course. The conversation is quickly shut down by stating that school should only focus on the things we actually have control over. Since we can’t control the SES of our students, then we can’t bring that to the discussion. It is so frustrating that no one wants to even take the problems of poverty into consideration. The problem is, that test scores will never show what these high poverty children have to offer. Then we wonder why they fall further behind as they lose interest in the test and punish cycle. The tests rank and order our students and they fall in line. Eventually our perception becomes their reality. We have narrowed their curriculum and fail to offer them a wide, enriching curriculum. All the while reducing resources to our high poverty public schools in the name of reform. Until we are allowed to have the real conversations that focus on the roots of the poverty problem, we will continue to fail to meet the real needs of these children