Archives for category: Poverty

So many reformers tell us that charter schools will end poverty, or that we should “fix” the schools before we even attempt to “fix” poverty.

We have a lot of fixing to do, even without thousands more of those miracle charter schools staffed by TFA ingenues.

The latest figures from the U.S. Census show that poverty remains stuck at 15%, about 46.5 million Americans.

In the past half-century, the poverty rate had climbed to the 15 percent mark just three times: in 1982 and 1993 as well as the past three years starting in 2010.

But since 2007, the lowest-earning 20 percent of the U.S. population “fell much further” than the highest-earning 20 percent, Johnson said — more than 3 percent for the poorest families, and just 0.5 percent for the richest.

“What we’ve found is that there’s a great isolation of the poor in the sense that in the neighborhoods they’re not mixed in, and often the only people that they’re knowing and the other people that they’re going to school with are also poor,” said Clark Massey, president of A Simple House, which works with poor families often living in government-run housing projects or government-subsidized housing in Kansas City, Mo., and Washington.

In a telephone interview Monday from Kansas City with Catholic News Service, Massey said poor Americans are “not seeing examples of people working 9-to 5-jobs. They’re not seeing marriages that are working.” On the other half of the equation, “the greatest problem I see is that the wealthier upper or middle class, they’re distant from the poor. They’re in suburban neighborhoods,” he added. “There’s a great lack of information between the two, that they don’t know a lot about each other.”

Massey said, “There’s a huge segment of the population that’s homeless. We don’t think of them as homeless. They’re sleeping on couches.” He explained: “The government prioritizes moms with kids. Men tend to be homeless … and the moms are in the projects with their kids.” The men going from dwelling to dwelling to sleep on the couch is a phenomenon Massey called “couch surfing.”

It has been documented again and again that poverty is the best predictor of low test scores.

If we want to “fix” schools, it is imperative that we take action to reduce the poverty in which so many children and families live.

 

 

You might find it interesting to read a conversation I had with Sara Scribner, a teacher who writes for Salon.

It is not often that you see a juxtaposition between these two concepts: income inequality and school reform.

But I would like to argue here that they are related and they matter.

In a recent column, Paul Krugman reviews the evidence about income inequality.

The rich have grown dramatically richer, while the poor have gained nothing from the economic recovery.

Here are the basic facts, as he describes them:

The data in question have been compiled for the past decade by the economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez, who use I.R.S. numbers to estimate the concentration of income in America’s upper strata. According to their estimates, top income shares took a hit during the Great Recession, as things like capital gains and Wall Street bonuses temporarily dried up. But the rich have come roaring back, to such an extent that 95 percent of the gains from economic recovery since 2009 have gone to the famous 1 percent. In fact, more than 60 percent of the gains went to the top 0.1 percent, people with annual incomes of more than $1.9 million.

Basically, while the great majority of Americans are still living in a depressed economy, the rich have recovered just about all their losses and are powering ahead.

The people at the top–that is, the ones who think the current distribution of income is just fine and is the result of meritocracy–like to assure us that if we just test kids more often, raise standards higher, adopt the Common Core, fire more teachers, and open more charter schools, then we can heal the divisions in our society.

But of course this is nonsense. As Krugman points out, even college graduates are having a hard time in this economy, many burdened by college debt and unable to find jobs that pay what they expected and hoped for.

These numbers should (but probably won’t) finally kill claims that rising inequality is all about the highly educated doing better than those with less training. Only a small fraction of college graduates make it into the charmed circle of the 1 percent. Meanwhile, many, even most, highly educated young people are having a very rough time. They have their degrees, often acquired at the cost of heavy debts, but many remain unemployed or underemployed, while many more find that they are employed in jobs that make no use of their expensive educations. The college graduate serving lattes at Starbucks is a cliché, but he reflects a very real situation.

What’s driving these huge income gains at the top? There’s intense debate on that point, with some economists still claiming that incredibly high incomes reflect comparably incredible contributions to the economy. I guess I’d note that a large proportion of those superhigh incomes come from the financial industry, which is, as you may remember, the industry that taxpayers had to bail out after its looming collapse threatened to take down the whole economy.

In any case, however, whatever is causing the growing concentration of income at the top, the effect of that concentration is to undermine all the values that define America. Year by year, we’re diverging from our ideals. Inherited privilege is crowding out equality of opportunity; the power of money is crowding out effective democracy.

Another story in the New York Times showed just how stark the current income inequality is. It says:

The top 10 percent of earners took more than half of the country’s total income in 2012, the highest level recorded since the government began collecting the relevant data a century ago, according to an updated study by the prominent economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty.

The top 1 percent took more than one-fifth of the income earned by Americans, one of the highest levels on record since 1913, when the government instituted an income tax.

The figures underscore that even after the recession the country remains in a new Gilded Age, with income as concentrated as it was in the years that preceded the Depression of the 1930s, if not more so.

The wizards of the financial industry, who have benefited so handsomely in the past few years, are the biggest boosters of charter schools. That is supposedly the way to open the path to opportunity for the lucky few, and perhaps it will.

But wouldn’t it make more sense to change our tax structure, so that the gap between the haves and the have-nots was not so outrageous?

I recall reading a book a few years ago called The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger by Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson, which argued that societies that are more equal are happier, less violent, heathier, and better on almost every measure one can imagine.

I am not making a plea here for socialism or for onerous taxation, but for the kind of society I remember from my childhood, when the distribution of wealth was not as unequal as it is today. We had people who were rich, but they were not billionaires; they did not have private jets or own half a dozen houses or employ a fleet of servants.

Unless we do something in our political economy to bring up those who struggle for daily subsistence, this will not be a society of equality of opportunity, but one where inherited wealth determines one’s fate in life.

And no school reform will be strong enough to overcome those basic economic facts.

The Broader Bolder Approach released
a 100-page report in conjunction
with the American
Association of School Administrators lambasting the Obama
administration’s Race to the Top program. RTTT’s goals are
“impossible” and may even be damaging schools, the report said.
RTTT handed out $4.35 billion to 11 states to implement changes for
which there was no evidence, like test-based teacher evaluation.
Critics of the report said that it was too soon to make a judgment
but RTTT funding runs out in one year. “The 100-page report,
released Thursday, argues that policies should tackle the effects
of poverty while simultaneously making schools better. By not
targeting out-of-school factors like nutrition and parental income,
the report says, and by focusing on teacher evaluation systems that
often result in harsh consequences without much useful feedback,
Race to the Top goals are severely mismatched with its
policies.”

For another analysis of the report, see Valerie Strauss’s summation here.

This comment was posted in response to Richard Rothstein’s critique of Arne Duncan’s laissez faire approach to integration:

As a teacher in an extremely poverty-ridden neighborhood school in an urban district in CT and a parent who sent my children to an integrated school in Evanston, IL, (where white children were from generally affluent families and black/Hispanic children were from generally poor, single parent families), I feel qualified to weigh in on this debate.

My experience is this: if we want to raise children out of poverty, then we MUST not just talk about school reform, but we must develop policies that reform the culture of poverty that affect an entire family. The “Comer School” model does that and makes the school a community center where parents are welcomed for programs that deal with everything from pre-natal care to understanding how to apply for a job or get off drugs. The school becomes the wise, extended family that can actually change the trajectory of a dysfunctional family so that the same mistakes of drugs, gangs, prison, teen pregnancy, etc., etc. are not repeated generation after generation.

Aside from the kids who start out with very difficult personalities from abusive experiences (about 40%), I have seen time and again, students who come to me as happy 7th graders, and then inexplicably change into sullen, or angry kids who act out everyday, only to find out that they have witnessed some horrific event like a parent getting beaten by a boyfriend, or someone shot on the street. We have extremely limited social work resources, and no good Common Core lesson and testing, testing, testing, seem to ease their pain. (And since I had the audacity to try to reach them on a human level before I could teach them anything, I was put on probation and am in the process of being terminated because my test scores were not good enough!)

So, please, Arne Duncan and all the others, let’s shift some of the millions of dollars that are being spent on the “Emperor’s New Clothes” and figure out how to lift families out of poverty before we just blame the under performing teachers and schools as the root of the problem.

Richard Rothstein of the Economic Policy Institute was part
of a radio program that began with an interview of Secretary of
Education Duncan. Rothstein, who has written extensively about how
government policies created and preserved segregated neighborhoods,
was taken aback
by
what Duncan said. He called it “backsliding.”

Rothstein says that Duncan doesn’t understand why government must act
forcefully to promote integration.

He writes: “Integration is necessary for the success of black students, even if they never
have the opportunity to command white soldiers or hold jobs in
predominantly white enterprises. When African-American students
from impoverished families are concentrated together in racially
isolated schools, in racially isolated neighborhoods, exposed only
to other students who also come from low-income, crime-ridden
neighborhoods and from homes where parents have low educational
levels themselves, the obstacles to these students’ success are
most often overwhelming. In racially isolated schools with
concentrations of children from low-income families, students have
no models of higher academic achievement, teachers must pitch
instruction to a lower academic average, more time is spent on
discipline and less on instruction, and the curriculum is disrupted
by continual movement in and out of classrooms by children whose
housing is unstable.

“Social science research for a half century
has documented the benefits of racial integration for black student
achievement, with no corresponding harm to whites. When low income
black students attend integrated schools that are mostly populated
by middle class white students, achievement improves and the test
score gap narrows. By offering only a “diversity” rationale for
racial integration, Secretary Duncan indicated that he is either
unfamiliar with this research or chooses to ignore it.”

Dora Taylor, a teacher and blogger in Seattle, was teaching a class about the the history of architecture from Egypt to the Roman Empire when a light went on in her head.

She asked herself: Is there a connection between education and the war in Syria?

Why do we always have billions to go to war but when it comes to reducing child poverty, there is no money, we are flat broke?

This teacher left a powerful comment about how he
became
educated about real life by teaching. The myths
he had learned in
his youth fell away when confronted
by the children whose lives are
burdened by poverty.
Please tweet this comment. It should go viral.
Add your
voice. This reader said in a comment: “People harass me
for talking about poverty all the time. I come from a middle
class,
white family, and I was sheltered away from the
poor and needy. I
attended a middle class and upper
class private school just south
of Detroit. “After
teaching in public schools since the late 90’s
(and
having never walked in one until I began to teach), I now the
see the world I was sheltered from. It is a world of poverty.
“I
agree that people should be responsible, but when
the game is
rigged, even responsible people falter in
finding work. Once the
jobs are gone, families suffer,
and this seemingly “responsible
behavior” becomes a
smoke and mirrors argument. “Public schools
essentially
saved me from the closed mindedness that comes from
this conservative mindset. I understand now what we need. We
need
strong public services (including education),
strong labor unions,
and a government not run by
corporations. “Shame on my family for
raising me to
believe I was something special, and everybody else
was
not because they were not willing to work as hard as I was.
What a crock.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/07/18/1111575/-Two-Americas”

A group called the Campaign for High School Equity made
news the other day when it criticized Arne Duncan’s NCLB waivers
and complained that the waivers might reduce the amount of
high-stakes testing for poor and minority students. Mike Petrilli
at the conservative think tank Thomas B. Fordham Institute
challenged me to admit that the civil rights groups were leading
the charge to protect high-stakes testing. I accepted his
challenge. It didn’t make sense, on the face of it, that civil
rights groups would want more testing. Every standardized test in
the world reflects socioeconomic status, family education and
income. Testing measures advantage and disadvantage. Some kids defy
the odds, but the odds strongly predict that the have-not kids will
be at the bottom of the bell curve. They will be labeled as
failures. They may get help, they may not. But one thing is sure:
standardized testing is not a tool to advance civil rights. Testing
is not teaching. Low scores do not produce more resources or higher
achievement. More testing does not improve learning. It increase
rote learning, teaching to the test, narrowing the curriculum, and
sometimes, cheating. So who is this group and why does it want more
testing. First,
the article that Mike forwarded to me
. It says that the
waivers are allowing too many schools to avoid the consequences of
being low-performing. In other words, the Campaign for High School
Equity prefers the draconian consequences of No Child Left Behind
and the punitive labels attached to schools based on high-stakes
testing. Of course, their statement also makes it appear that Arne
Duncan is trying to water down punishments and high-stakes testing,
when nothing could be further from the truth. Who is part of the
Campaign for High School Equity? It includes the following groups:
National
Urban League
National
Council of La Raza
National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People
The
Leadership Conference Education Fund
Mexican
American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
League
of United Latin American Citizens
National
Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational
Fund
Alliance
for Excellent Education
National
Indian Education Association
Southeast
Asia Resource Action Center
Why are they in favor of
high-stakes testing, even though the evidence is overwhelming that
NCLB has failed the children they represent? I can’t say for sure,
but this I do know. The Campaign for High School Equity is funded
by the Gates Foundation. It received a grant of nearly $500,000.
Some if not all of its members have also received grants from Gates
to support the CHSE. The NAACP
received $1 million
from Gates to do so. LULAC
received $600,000
to support the CHSE. The Alliance
for Excellent Education received $2.6 million
“to promote
public will for effective high school reform.” The Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights Fund received
$375,000 from the Gates Foundation
to support CHSE. The
National
Association of Latino Appointed
and Elected Officials is
Gates-funded, though not for this specific program. The National
Indian Education Fund received
Gates funding
to participate in CHSE. The Southeast Asia
Resource
Action Center was funded by Gates
to participate in CHSE. The others are not Gates-funded.

When CHSE demands more high-stakes testing,
more labeling of schools as “failed,” more public school closings,
more sanctions, more punishments, they are not speaking for communities
of color. They are speaking for the Gates Foundation.

Whoever is actually speaking for minority communities and children of color is
advocating for more pre-school education, smaller class sizes,
equitable resources, more funding of special education, more
funding for children who are learning English, experienced
teachers, restoration of budget cuts, the hiring of social workers
and guidance counselors where they are needed, after-school
programs, and access to medical care for children and their
families.

Fred Smith, a testing expert who worked for years at the
New York City Board of Education, now advises Change the Stakes, an
anti-testing group. In
this article,
he analyzes the progress of nine schools in
New York state that bear the name of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
The schools are located in different cities and communities but
they bear two common features: they are racially segregated, and
their test scores are abysmal. Taken together, 91% of the
children enrolled in these schools are black (67%) or Hispanic
(24%); 13% are considered to be limited in English proficiency.
About 90% receive free (85%) or reduced-price (5%)
lunches.
At these schools, 2,883 students took
the statewide English Language Arts exams and 2,921 took the math
tests — providing 5,804 test scores. Most students were in grades 3
to 5…..
What of the 8- to 10-year-old
children whose educations, hopes, formative development and chances
for future success are bound up in these wonderfully named schools
where circumstance has placed them?
In 2009,
when the state exams were discredited for being ridiculously easy,
55% of the heirs to King’s legacy were found to be proficient in
reading, as were 71% in math. By last year, with the advent of
tougher “more rigorous” exams, the results had fallen to 24% and
31%.
The April results released this month
fulfilled the prophecy: 7% and 6% proficiency in reading and math
at the nine schools.
What a disgrace: 7% proficiency in
reading, and 6% proficiency in math. Perhaps Commissioner John King
can take over these schools and kick out the kids with low scores,
suspend those who don’t walk in a straight line, institute a
“no-excuses” culture of “high expectations.” Can we not do better
by the children in these schools and in all schools regardless of
what they are named? Must we treat them like little robots to
compel them to obey? Or can we not educate them with dignity and
purpose and prepare them to live fruitful lives?  
  Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/sad-measure-dr-king-dream-article-1.1438608#ixzz2dGw25m3P