Educational Equity, Politics & Policy in Texas
 
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    Sunday, March 29, 2009

    Cities Deal With a Surge in Shanty Towns

     

    This is so heartbreaking. -Patricia

    By Jesse McKinley | New York Times
    March 26, 2009

    FRESNO, Calif. - As the operations manager of a
    outreach center for the homeless here, Paul Stack is
    used to seeing people down on their luck. What he had
    never seen before was people living in tents and lean-
    tos on the railroad lot across from the center.

    "They just popped up about 18 months ago," Mr. Stack
    said. "One day it was empty. The next day, there were
    people living there."

    Like a dozen or so other cities across the nation,
    Fresno is dealing with an unhappy deja vu: the arrival
    of modern-day Hoovervilles, illegal encampments of
    homeless people that are reminiscent, on a far smaller
    scale, of Depression-era shantytowns. At his news
    conference on Tuesday night, President Obama was asked
    directly about the tent cities and responded by saying
    that it was "not acceptable for children and families
    to be without a roof over their heads in a country as
    wealthy as ours."

    While encampments and street living have always been a
    part of the landscape in big cities like Los Angeles
    and New York, these new tent cities have taken root -
    or grown from smaller enclaves of the homeless as more
    people lose jobs and housing - in such disparate places
    as Nashville, Olympia, Wash., and St. Petersburg, Fla.

    In Seattle, homeless residents in the city's 100-person
    encampment call it Nickelsville, an unflattering
    reference to the mayor, Greg Nickels. A tent city in
    Sacramento prompted Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to
    announce a plan Wednesday to shift the entire 125-
    person encampment to a nearby fairground. That came
    after a recent visit by "The Oprah Winfrey Show" set
    off such a news media stampede that some fed-up
    homeless people complained of overexposure and said
    they just wanted to be left alone.

    The problem in Fresno is different in that it is both
    chronic and largely outside the national limelight.
    Homelessness here has long been fed by the ups and
    downs in seasonal and subsistence jobs in agriculture,
    but now the recession has cast a wider net and drawn in
    hundreds of the newly homeless - from hitchhikers to
    truck drivers to electricians.

    "These are able-bodied folks that did day labor, at
    minimum wage or better, who were previously able to
    house themselves based on their income," said Michael
    Stoops, the executive director of the National
    Coalition for the Homeless, an advocacy group based in
    Washington.

    The surging number of homeless people in Fresno, a city
    of 500,000 people, has been a surprise. City officials
    say they have three major encampments near downtown and
    smaller settlements along two highways. All told, as
    many 2,000 people are homeless here, according to
    Gregory Barfield, the city's homeless prevention and
    policy manager, who said that drug use, prostitution
    and violence were all too common in the encampments.

    "That's all part of that underground economy," Mr.
    Barfield said. "It's what happens when a person is
    trying to survive."

    He said the city planned to begin "triage" on the
    encampments in the next several weeks, to determine how
    many people needed services and permanent housing.
    "We're treating it like any other disaster area," Mr.
    Barfield said.

    Mr. Barfield took over his newly created position in
    January, after the county and city adopted a 10-year
    plan to address homelessness. A class-action lawsuit
    brought on behalf of homeless people against the city
    and the California Department of Transportation led to
    a $2.35 million settlement in 2008, making money
    available to about 350 residents who had had their
    belongings discarded in sweeps by the city.

    The growing encampments led the city to place portable
    toilets and security guards near one area known as New
    Jack City, named after a dark and drug-filled 1991
    movie. But that just attracted more homeless people.

    "It was just kind of an invitation to move in," said
    Mr. Stack, the outreach center manager.

    On a recent afternoon, nobody seemed thrilled to be
    living in New Jack City, a filthy collection of rain-
    and wind-battered tents in a garbage-strewn lot.
    Several weary-looking residents sat on decaying sofas
    as a pair of pit bulls chained to a fence howled.

    Northwest of New Jack City sits a somewhat less grim
    encampment. It is sometimes called Taco Flats or Little
    Tijuana because of the large number of Latino
    residents, many of whom were drawn to Fresno on the
    promise of agricultural jobs, which have dried up in
    the face of the poor economy and a three-year drought.

    Guillermo Flores, 32, said he had looked for work in
    the fields and in fast food, but had found nothing. For
    the last eight months, he has collected cans, recycling
    them for $5 to $10 a day, and lived in a hand-built,
    three-room shack, a home that he takes pride in, with a
    door, clean sheets on his bed and a bowl full of fresh
    apples in his propane-powered kitchen area.

    "I just built it because I need it," said Mr. Flores,
    as he cooked a dinner of chili peppers, eggs and onions
    over a fire. "The only problem I have is the spiders."

    Dozens of homeless men and women here have found more
    organized shelter at the Village of Hope, a collection
    of 8-by-10-foot storage sheds built by the nonprofit
    group Poverello House and overseen by Mr. Stack.
    Planted in a former junkyard behind a chain-link fence,
    each unit contains two cots, sleeping bags and a solar-
    powered light.

    Doug Brown, a freelance electrical engineer, said he
    had discovered the Village of Hope while unemployed a
    few years back and had returned after losing his job in
    October. Mr. Stoops, of the homeless coalition,
    predicted that the population at such new Hoovervilles
    could grow as those without places to live slowly
    burned through their options and joined the ranks of
    the chronically homeless, many of whom are indigent as
    a result of illiteracy, alcoholism, mental illness and
    drug abuse.

    That mix is already evident in a walk around Taco
    Flats, where Sean Langer, 42, who lost a trucking job
    in December and could pass for a soccer dad, lives in
    his car in front of a sturdy shanty that is home to
    Barbara Smith, 41, a crack addict with a wild cackle
    for a laugh.

    "This is a one-bedroom house," said Ms. Smith, proudly
    taking a visitor through her home built with scrap wood
    and scavenged two-by-fours. "We got a roof, and it does
    not leak."

    During the day, the camp can seem peaceful. American
    flags fly over some shanties, and neighbors greet one
    another. Some feed pets, while others build fires and
    chat.

    Daniel Kent, a clean-shaven 27-year-old from Oregon,
    has been living in Taco Flats for three months after
    running out of money on a planned hitchhiking trip to
    Florida. He did manage to earn $35 a day holding up a
    going-out-of-business sign for Mervyn's until the
    department store actually went of out business.

    Mr. Kent planned to attend a job fair soon, but said he
    did not completely mind living outdoors.

    "We got veterans out here; we got people with heart,
    proud to be who they are," Mr. Kent said. "Regardless
    of living situations, it doesn't change the heart.
    There's some good people out here, really good people."

    But the danger after dark is real. Ms. Smith, who lost
    an eye after being shot in the face years ago, said she
    had seen two people killed in New Jack City, prompting
    her to move to Taco Flats and try to quit drugs. Her
    companion, Willie Mac, 53, a self-described youth
    minister, said he was "waiting on her to get herself
    right with the Lord."

    Ms. Smith said her dream was simple: "To get out of
    here, get off the street, have our own home."

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 3:13 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Saturday, March 28, 2009

    Texas Opens Classroom Door for Evolution Doubts

     

    Wall Street Journal

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123819751472561761.html

    MARCH 27, 2009, 11:12 P.M. ET

    By STEPHANIE SIMON



    The Texas Board of Education approved a science curriculum that opens the door for teachers and textbooks to raise doubts about evolution.

    Critics of evolution said they were thrilled with Friday's move. "Texas has sent a clear message that evolution should be taught as a scientific theory open to critical scrutiny, not as a sacred dogma that can't be questioned," said Dr. John West, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, a Seattle think tank that argues an intelligent designer created life.

    Kathy Miller, president of the pro-evolution Texas Freedom Network, said, "The board crafted a road map that creationists will use to pressure publishers into putting phony arguments attacking established science into textbooks." [Texas Freedom Network is a "sister" organization to Planned Parenthood and the Human Rights Campaign, the largest homosexual organization in the country. Cecile Richards (PP) and Samantha Smoot (HRC) are both past presidents of Texas Freedom Network, and these three organizations work in concert with one another. TFN, a far-left-leaning organization, has done everything in its power to thwart those who want to bring knowledge-based, academic, back-to-the-basics education into our Texas public schools. -- Donna Garner]

    Science standards in Texas resonate across the U.S., since it approves one set of books for the entire state. That makes Texas the nation's single largest market for high-school textbooks.

    In the past, publishers often have written texts to its curriculum and marketed them nationally rather than spend time and money reworking them for different states and districts.

    That influence has diminished, said Jay Diskey, executive director of the Association of American Publishers' school division, as districts and statewide boards of education have become more likely to scrutinize texts approved in other states. Desktop publishing also has made it easier for companies to amend textbooks to suit different markets.

    "It's not necessarily the case" that the Texas curriculum will pop up in other states, Mr. Diskey said. But within Texas, what the board says, goes. Several years ago, the board expressed concern that a description of the Ice Age occurring "millions of years ago" conflicted with biblical timelines. The publisher changed it to "in the distant past." Another publisher sought to satisfy the board by inserting a heading about "strengths and weaknesses of evolution" in a biology text, drawing condemnation from science organizations.

    The board will use the new standards to choose new textbooks in 2011.

    Friday's meeting started with a victory for backers of evolution. The board voted to remove a longstanding requirement that students analyze the "strengths and weaknesses" of the theory. Mainstream scientists resoundingly reject that language, saying there are no weak links in the theory of evolution, which has been corroborated by discoveries in fields ranging from genetics to geology.

    Through the afternoon, board members offered up a series of amendments and counter-amendments designed to shape presentations in biology classes across the state. The board voted down curriculum standards questioning the evolutionary principle that all life on Earth is descended from common ancestry.

    Yet the board approved standards that require students to analyze and evaluate the fossil record and the complexity of the cell. Social conservatives on the board, led by chairman Don McLeroy, have made clear they expect books to address those topics by raising questions about the validity of evolutionary theory.

    For instance, they want textbooks to suggest the theory of evolution is undercut by fossils that show some organisms -- such as ferns -- haven't changed much over millions of years. They also want texts to discuss the explosion of life forms during the Cambrian Era as inconsistent with the incremental march of evolution.

    Scientists respond that the fossil record clearly traces the roots of Cambrian Era creatures back as far as 100 million years.

    It isn't just evolution at issue: The board also approved an earth-science curriculum that challenges the widely accepted Big Bang Theory. Students are expected to learn that there are "differing theories" on the "origin and history of the universe."

    Board members also deleted a reference to the scientific consensus that the universe is nearly 14 billion years old. The board's chairman has said he believes God created the universe fewer than 10,000 years ago.

    Write to Stephanie Simon at stephanie.simon@wsj.com

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 4:35 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Friday, March 27, 2009

    Texas Senate OKs scaling back top 10 percent college admission rule

     

    By TERRENCE STUTZ / The Dallas Morning News
    Wednesday, March 25, 2009

    AUSTIN – Legislation that would revamp Texas’ top 10 percent law for college admission by limiting it to 60 percent of incoming freshmen was passed by the Senate today and sent to the House.

    The measure – pushed by University of Texas officials – represents the first change in the law since it was enacted a dozen years ago to provide a race-neutral admission policy for state colleges and universities.

    The bill, by Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, was approved 24-7.

    All those who opposed it were Democrats. They warned that the proposal could reverse the gains in minority enrollment at the University of Texas at Austin and other schools, including Texas A&M University and UT-Dallas.

    Shapiro rejected that claim, saying UT-Austin officials have assured lawmakers they will continue to boost minority enrollment. If that does not happen, she said, the Legislature can revisit the top 10 percent requirement.

    Under current law, public high school seniors in Texas who graduate in the top 10 percent of their class – based on grade point average – are guaranteed admission to any state college or university.

    UT-Austin is the school most affected so far. Last fall, 81 percent of its incoming freshmen were admitted under the top 10 percent rule.

    As the percentage continues to climb, UT officials say, many qualified students – including some with higher SAT scores – are being turned away.

    Under the Senate bill, once 60 percent of the freshman class is admitted under the rule, the remaining 40 percent would be admitted using several criteria, including test scores, leadership ability and extracurricular participation.

    Labels: ,

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 10:13 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    DREAM Act: The Time is Now!

     

    League of United Latin American Citizens


    DREAM Act: The Time is Now!

    ■ What is the DREAM Act?

    The Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act is bipartisan legislation that addresses the situation faced by young people who were brought to the United States years ago as undocumented immigrant children, and who have since grown up here, stayed in school, and kept out of trouble.

    ■ Why is the DREAM Act needed?

    Each year about 65,000 U.S.raised students who would qualify for the DREAM Act’s benefits graduate from high school. These include honor roll students, star athletes, talented artists, homecoming queens, and aspiring teachers, doctors, and U.S. soldiers. They are young people who have lived in the U.S. for most of their lives and desire only to call this country their home. Even though they were brought to the U.S. years ago as children, they face unique barriers to higher education, are unable to work legally in the U.S., and often live in constant fear of detection by immigration authorities. Our immigration law currently has no mechanism to consider the special equities and circumstances of such students. The DREAM Act would eliminate this flaw. It is un-American to indefinitely and irremediably punish them for decisions made by adults many years ago. By enacting the DREAM Act, Congress would legally recognize what is de facto true: these young people belong here. DREAM Act students should be allowed to get on with their lives. If Congress fails to act this year, another entire class of outstanding, law-abiding high school students will graduate without being able to plan for the future, and some will be removed from their homes to countries they barely know. This tragedy will cause America to lose a vital asset: an educated class of promising immigrant students who have demonstrated a commitment to hard work and a strong desire to be contributing members of our society.

    ■ What is the DREAM Act’s Current Status?

    Sen. Dick Durbin (IL) and Rep. Howard Berman (CA) plan to reintroduce the bill in THIS WEEK!

    ■ What can I do to support the DREAM Act right now?

    Talk to Prinicipals and Administrators in your schools and organizations

    Consider writing a letter of support for the Dream Act to your local newspaper or television station

    Reach out to two or three people in your circle of influence and educate them about the importance of the Dream Act to students in our schools today

    Sign the Dream Act petition at: http://www.dreamact2009.com/

    Call your Senator or House member and explain the importance of this legislation (Capitol Switchboard: 202-224-3121)

    Say tuned for additional information that LULAC National Office will provide as the Dream Act moves further in the U.S. Senate & U.S. House of Representatives!



    For more information contact Iris Chavez at LULAC National Office, 202-833-6130 x13 or ichavez@lulac.org


    To stop all email from LULAC, please reply via email with "unsubscribe" in the subject line.
    LULAC National Office, 2000 L Street, NW, Suite 610 Washington DC 20036, (202) 833-6130, (202) 833-6135 FAX

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 7:49 AM 1 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Monday, March 23, 2009

    Austin school board to vote on superintendent hire

     

    By Laura Heinauer
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Sunday, March 22, 2009

    Austin school district residents have shared their concerns about Meria Carstarphen, the sole finalist to be the next superintendent: She's young. Who knows how long she'll stay? And she hasn't worked in a Texas school district or one with demographics similar to Austin's.

    Carstarphen, currently schools chief in St. Paul, Minn., shared her concerns at a forum at Travis High School in South Austin recently. "There's a lot of energy about wanting schools to work. ... (But) for all the advocacy, it feels fractured," she said. "It feels like there are a lot of individual interests. It feels like we haven't really had a conversation about what's best for the whole community."

    Despite initial hesitations, many Austin education advocates say they are ready to work with Carstarphen. On Monday, the school board — which was unanimous in naming her the sole finalist last month — will take a final vote on her hiring and will have one last chance to hear residents out.

    In response to the criticism, Carstarphen, 39, has said that ambition has driven her to achieve at such a relatively young age and that her experience with English language learners and the redesigning of schools and systems to make them run more efficiently is an asset.

    She has said that she intends to stay as long as the board wants her and called Austin the kind of city "that no matter who you are, you can find your place."

    Her words have rung hollow for some in St. Paulwho say they are disappointed that Carstarphen stayed for less than three years, though few wanted to speak about it on the record. Since the announcement that her departure was probably imminent, at least two foundations have suspended discussions on partnerships with the St. Paul district.

    "Right now, the last thing St. Paul needs is another honeymoon with another new superintendent, national or local, telling us the answer is some particular curriculum or some particular method of teaching," Ted Kolderie, a senior associate of an education policy group in Minnesota, wrote in an opinion piece in the St. Paul Pioneer Press.

    In Austin, many seem smitten with the idea of change that a new leader could bring. During a recent community meeting, many people clapped and cheered after hearing Carstarphen's plans to streamline district administration and address achievement gaps among students.

    During the superintendent search process, numerous e-mails were sent to Austin board members urging them to select a Hispanic.

    However, several people who expressed concerns earlier — particularly those who were disappointed with a process that resulted in only one finalist — now say they would be ready to work with Carstarphen. The names of other candidates that the board considered were not confirmed by the district.

    "I think the (board's decision to have a closed process) made it harder on her," said Paul Saldaña, who owns a local public relations firm and is a past chairman of the Greater Austin Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. "It's no secret that we have a unique set of challenges, this being Austin. But I think at this point, everybody has come to the terms with her being the finalist and we're ready to move forward."

    One challenge that Carstarphen could face is how to deal with the state on school finance and accountability. If results of state achievement tests don't improve, Pearce Middle School and Reagan High School could be closed by the state — as Johnston High School was last year. Students started taking the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills in February; the district could get preliminary results in June.

    Carstarphen said she thinks the testing systems are "pretty heavy-handed here in Texas" but that she was relieved after a meeting with state education Commissioner Robert Scott.

    "He was very open, excited to hear my ideas," she said.

    Another challenge for Carstarphen could be the transition. She has said that she intends to start this spring. Outgoing Superintendent Pat Forgione has said that he would stay until June.

    Austin is looking for ways to cut costs while also looking for ways to spend federal stimulus money, an exercise that will have a major impact on the 2009-10 budget.

    Louis Malfaro, president of Education Austin, which represents about 4,000 Austin school employees, said he is eager to work with Carstarphen.

    "We think there is money and there is an uncapped reservoir of teacher knowledge and expertise that could really be used creatively to improve schools," Malfaro said.

    Tom Conlon, a St. Paul school board member, said Carstarphen isn't scared of making changes — whether it's closing schools or changing long-held practices.

    "If (Austin trustees) say, 'We want to reform, and we'll support her,' then I think the sky's the limit," Conlon said. "But if there's a lot of resistance, or the board says they want reform and then back off and leave her hanging out to dry, that's where there will be conflict."

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 8:06 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Lawmakers aim to scrap rule that schools must spend 65 percent on instruction

     

    Governor indicates he would accept change if goals can still be met.

    By Jason Embry | AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Tuesday, March 10, 2009

    Gov. Rick Perry's 4-year-old mandate that schools spend at least 65 percent of their money on classroom instruction is under fire from key lawmakers in Perry's own party.

    Perry, a Republican, indicated that he's open to scrapping the rule if the state can find a better way to measure school efficiency.

    "It was an arbitrary number, but it was a very good level," Perry said Monday. "Times change, and people that don't change generally get left behind."

    Asked what had changed, Perry said, "We'll let it work its way through the process, and you'll see all the pros and cons."

    The mandate has never been popular with school districts, and schools haven't suffered much of a penalty for not meeting it.

    Still, the 65 percent push has been one of Perry's signature education initiatives. In a 2006 campaign ad, he said, "We've accomplished a lot, but we still can do more. That's why we're directing schools to spend at least 65 percent of their money on classroom instruction."

    House Public Education Committee Chairman Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, filed legislation last week to erase the requirement. And though Perry defended the standard as the right thing to do at the time, he said he's working with Eissler to come up with "new ideas to make our schools even more efficient."

    Eissler said he filed House Bill 2262 because the standard has not been feasible for districts that vary in enrollment and geographic size.

    "There are better ways to measure instructional priorities," Eissler said. "Why don't we look at the school districts that are doing the best and see how they're spending the money?"

    Senate Education Committee Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, said she also wants to repeal Perry's order. "Many of the school districts cannot meet that mandate," Shapiro said. "There are so many other activities and so many other things that are not included in that 65 percent that it skews the numbers."

    Perry and his staff did not criticize the rule as strongly as Eissler and Shapiro. Allison Castle, a Perry spokeswoman, said he wants to scrap it only if it can be replaced with something that "maintains or strengthens the goals of the 65 percent rule."

    Perry used a 2005 executive order to put the rule in place after lawmakers failed in their regular session and two special sessions that year to change the state's school finance system. "Even though the Legislature did not act, I will," he said then.

    But state officials found "classroom instruction" a difficult term to define. In fact, schools have been required to meet two separate standards.

    One standard requires schools to spend 65 percent on instruction as defined by the National Center for Education Statistics. But that requirement has been phased in, starting with a 55 percent standard two years ago. This is the first year that schools are required to hit 65 percent under that definition.

    Two years ago, the most recent year for which the Texas Education Agency has data, none of the seven districts in Travis County spent at least 65 percent on instruction as defined by that standard.

    Schools also have been required over the past few years to spend 65 percent on instruction as defined by former Education Commissioner Shirley Neeley. Her definition allows schools to count spending on counselors, librarians and nurses.

    Each definition counts for three points in the school's 85-point financial rating system for school districts. In other words, there has been little penalty for not meeting the 65 percent threshold, provided that a district's overall finances are generally in order.

    Districts facing higher fuel and insurance costs have had to raise money to put into classroom instruction if they want to comply with the Perry mandate, said Jacqueline Lain of the Texas Association of School Boards. And that has caused some to raise their local tax rates because per-student state spending on education has remained relatively flat over the past few years, she said.

    "Our folks have felt like it's a hoop to jump through without meaning," Lain said.

    Eissler, calling the 65 percent rule a good start, said there might be a better way to look at instructional spending that takes a district's unique characteristics into account.

    "The governor is fine," Eissler said. "He just wants to see better efficiency and as many resources as possible going to the classroom, and so do I."

    Labels: ,

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 7:57 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Sunday, March 22, 2009

    Report: Parents of 100,000 U.S. citizens deported

     

    By SUZANNE GAMBOA Associated Press
    Feb. 13, 2009

    WASHINGTON — More than 100,000 parents whose children are U.S. citizens were deported over the decade that ended in 2007, a Department of Homeland Security’s investigation has found.

    The parents were removed from the country on immigration violations or because they had committed crimes. The removals of the 108,434 parents were among the approximately 2.2 million carried out by immigration officials between 1998 and 2007, Homeland Security Inspector General Richard Skinner said in a report made public Friday.

    Skinner warned the numbers were incomplete because Immigration and Customs Enforcement doesn’t fully document such cases. The agency also does not keep track of how many children each parent has. He recommended immigration officials start collecting more data on removed parents and their children.

    In response to the findings, ICE said it was looking into whether it can better track removals of immigrant parents citizens and the age of the immigrant’s parents. Its study is due in about two months.

    “I am saddened, but not surprised to learn that our government, in its harsh anti-immigrant stance, has split hundreds of thousands of families apart over the past decade,” said Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y.

    Serrano serves on the House Appropriations Committee’s panel that helps decide how much money is provided to the Homeland Security Department each year. He has filed a bill, the Child Citizen Protection Act, that would allow immigration judges to consider whether immigrants have children who are U.S. citizens when making deportation decisions.

    “If, in fact, some (children) were left behind here, then you have the sad tragedy of breaking up families,” Serrano said. “If they were taken back, I would argue the direct result of our actions is the deportation of our citizens. How do you deport a U.S. citizen?”

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Barbara Gonzales said the agency was reviewing the report and was unable to comment immediately.

    Children of immigrant families who are U.S. citizens have long created a dilemma for Congress as it has tried to control immigration. People born in the U.S. automatically become U.S. citizens. But American children cannot petition for their parents to become legal U.S. residents until they are at least 21.

    Immigration officials reported 319,382 deportations in 2007, compared to 174,813 in 1998. Skinner said the number of parents removed over that period generally increased, with 13,081 individual parents removed in 1998.

    Some of the parents were removed from the country more than once, so in the 10 years there were actually 180,466 removals of the 108,434 parents.

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 5:28 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    U.C. Drops SAT Subject Tests

     

    This is very much significant for Texas given that the state wants to begin using standardized end-of-course exams to determine college-readiness.

    -Patricia


    FairTest
    Issue: Mar 2009

    Effective with the class entering in the fall of 2012, the University of California system (U.C.) will no longer require applicants to submit scores from two College Board SAT Subject Tests. The new policy is part of a broad-reaching overhaul of U.C. admissions requirements designed to make more students eligible for a “comprehensive review” of their credentials (see Examiner, April 2008).

    Detailed research at U.C. determined that the Subject Test rule was excluding many otherwise qualified applicants but not helping predict undergraduate performance. U.C. President Mark Yudof called the exams “an unnecessary barrier” to access. Proponents of Subject Test elimination predict that the change will result in more ethnic and income diversity in entering classes without any loss of academic quality.

    The exams, previously labeled SAT II Tests and, before that, Achievement Tests, are all one-hour long and multiple-choice in format. They have been criticized as extremely narrow and susceptible to coaching. Former president of the National Academy of Sciences Bruce Alberts called the Biology version, “An extreme example of a test that forces the wrong kind of teaching.”

    The U.C. decision may have significant implications for the future of the SAT Subject Tests. For the high school class of 2008, more than 37% of all Subject Tests in the U.S. were administered to Californians (in contrast to just 13.5% of the basic SAT Reasoning Test). No more than several dozen admissions offices outside the U.C. system mandate Subject Test score submission. Loss of the key California market could threaten the financial viability of the exams, which currently cost students a $20 registration fee plus $9 for each test taken on the same day.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 10:59 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    School accountability proposal comes with risk

     



    The proposed changes to accountability noted in this editorial track and stratify youth based on high-stakes standardized testing. What's also of concern and not mentioned here is that "college-readiness" is based on reaching a "college ready" score on two standardized end-of-course exam in Algebra II and English III. These scores have yet to be determined, btw. It's no secret that this will impact the African American and Latino communities the most.

    The big question is who and what supports college-readiness being determined by a standardized test? Given the previous post "The High Cost of TAKS" we can see who benefits and it's not youth. Let's also not forget that recently the University of California system decided to move away from the use of the SAT II standardized test and use a more "comprehensive review" of applicants because (and I quote) "[the] Subject Test rule was excluding many otherwise qualified applicants but not helping predict undergraduate performance." The exams were also stated as being “an unnecessary barrier to access." See UC Drops Subject Tests

    Sounds like Texas is moving backwards at the expense of minority youth.

    -Patricia



    Editorial: School accountability proposal comes with risk
    Friday, March 13, 2009

    The way Texas measures and evaluates its public schools is like a big, gas-guzzling family car that doesn't fit in an age of smaller, more efficient hybrids. Launched in 1993 and retooled along the way, the state accountability test and ranking of schools no longer works as envisioned – not when barely 60 percent of Texas students graduate high school and only 35 percent go directly to college.

    That's why we appreciate what state Sen. Florence Shapiro and Rep. Rob Eissler are attempting to forge with their new accountability system. The proposal by the Republican leaders of the Legislature's education committees captures some of the latest trends in education, including measuring how much students grow in a subject during a school year. That's a change from assessing them on whether their students simply passed the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills test.

    That said, their proposal worries us in several ways:

    First, the plan's two-tier high school track risks putting too many young Texans on a low trajectory.

    Under their plan, ninth-graders would face a choice. They could get on track to graduate with a Texas Diploma, which would prepare them for college. Or they could choose the track toward a Standard Diploma, which would equip them with skills to land a good job after high school or perhaps attend community college or trade school. Either way, Shapiro and Eissler say, students would be "post-secondary" ready.

    But here's the risk: Texas easily could end up with a majority of its students on the Standard Diploma track, instead of the more demanding Texas Diploma track. Let's face it: We already struggle with getting enough kids ready for college. Only about 20 percent of Texas students graduate truly prepared for a university, and the vast majority of minority students are not among them.

    There's no doubt that equipping students with basic skills would make school more relevant to some of them, and most work has value. But the two-track option could shortchange the kid who wakes up when he's 35 and realizes, I didn't want to be a machinist all my life.

    It also opens up a risk for the state, which could end up with more electricians than engineers. Raymond Paredes, who heads Texas' higher education commission, is absolutely right: Texas will do great harm to its economy if it doesn't prepare enough kids for college.

    Which leads us to point two. Legislators better darn sure give incentives to schools to get more kids on the college ready track. And we mean a four-year college that leads them to either a master's degree or a job where they are good at innovation, creativity and problem solving.

    Our third concern is related. This college track needs to be as advertised. No handing students off to colleges knowing they'll need remedial classes to catch up. No phony substitute certificates. And no passing kids along in their early grades with a wink and a nod. We mean ready for college.

    Shapiro and Eissler envision this new system being among the best in America within 10 years. We certainly hope they're right, just as we hope it leads to more Texas students graduating, instead of dropping out.

    But we strongly urge legislators to create clear incentives for schools as early as the elementary grades to encourage students toward the college-ready track, one that truly prepares them for a four-year institution. Otherwise, we could shortchange them and, ultimately, the state's economy.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 10:30 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    The high cost of TAKS

     

    Some interesting insight. Wonder what the bill will be when the state begins implementing the end-of-course exams that will eventually equal 12 in number.

    -Patricia


    By Eric Dexheimer | Statesman Focal Point
    Thursday, March 19, 2009, 09:40 AM

    Texas students have their TAKS week and we have ours. On Tuesday, I wrote how some school districts were rewarding their students with extravagant prizes for passing the standardized tests, including expense-paid trips to Hawaii and days off from school. The high stakes pay-offs demonstrate once again how important the exams have become to administrators, whose very jobs can depend on the outcome.

    Another way to gauge how important standardized tests have become is dollars and cents. Not surprisingly, according to that measure, too, the assessments have become extremely important in recent years. Here are the numbers:

    The Texas Education Agency outsources the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills to NCS Pearson Inc., which helps develop the tests. In 2000, the agency signed Pearson to a five-year contract worth $47.45 million — about $9.5 million a year to administer tests to the state’s students.

    When that contract expired, TEA and Pearson inked a new five-year deal. This time, though, it was worth $160 million, which, at $32 million a year, represented nearly a fourfold increase.

    Since 2005, however, the contract has been modified several times. The result: This year alone the state will pay Pearson $88 million to test Texas children.

    Why the big jump? “The predominant reason is the increase in the number of assessments,” says Gloria Zyskowski, TEA’s deputy associate commissioner of student assessments. Thanks to the Legislature’s fondness for standardized testing, as well as the growing requirements from the federal No Child Left Behind laws, Texas students are being tested more and more.

    The original TAKS was implemented in 2003. Today, thanks largely to No Child Left Behind demands, the exam has multiplied to four different TAKS (“modified,” “alternative,” and “linguistically accommodated” versions, in addition to the standard exam). A new “End of Course” assessment is being added. During the 2002-03 school year, the TEA administered 60 separate standardized tests. This year, Zyskowski says, the number will be 138.

    Testing-related materials add more to the bill. In 2004, TEA signed a four-year, $17.7 million contract with Grow Network for study guides designed for high school students who don’t pass TAKS. A 2006 contract pays Pearson another $8.8 million through 2011 for summer remediation study guides.

    When added up, taxpayers will pay about $93 million this year to administer standardized tests to Texas students, Zyskowski says, or nearly ten times the cost of just nine years earlier.

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 10:24 AM 1 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Say What? Bias against languages other than English hurts students, says scholar

     

    Say What? Bias against languages other than English hurts students, says scholar


    We're going to have a pop quiz.

    You'll need to read the following Ukrainian phrases, pronounce them aloud correctly, then write each phrase in English. And to keep it interesting, pretend I'm giving you these instructions in Ukrainian.

    Govorit' povil'nishe?
    Ya ne rozumiyu.
    Zalyšte mene u spokoji!
    Chočeš zi mnoiu potanciuvaty?

    If you couldn't do this exercise, you obviously have a learning disability.


    Dr. Alba Ortiz, professor of special education and bilingual education.
    Photo: Christina Murrey

    "When students who have limited English language proficiency fall behind in school or score poorly on important tests, teachers may assume they have learning disabilities," says Dr. Alba Ortiz, professor of special education in The University of Texas at Austin's College of Education. "In reality, the students' performance may reflect that they're being assessed in a language they don't understand or speak. Young children, of six, seven or eight years of age, are being asked to do a difficult, if not impossible task—learn English and at the same time learn subject content in a language they don't yet know. That's something that would challenge an educated adult.

    "When educators and the general public don't understand the second language acquisition process, an unfortunate result is that English language learners often end up being placed in low ability groups, retained or referred to special education classes. Referrals are made because the students seem to have a learning disability when it's primarily a matter of their not understanding the teacher's language and the instructional materials. It would be like me sitting through seven hours a day of classes taught in Korean when I don't understand a word of Korean."

    The term "English language learners" (ELLs) refers to students whose English language skills are so limited that they need the support of special language programs, such as bilingual education or English as a second language classes. Currently, there are about five million English language learners in the U.S., and, in Texas, ELLs represent about 14 percent of the total student population.

    There are many reasons why English language learners face steep challenges in school—everything from public sentiment against teaching them in their native language to a failure to offer a sufficient amount of time to become proficient in English before language support is withdrawn. Referrals to special education programs represent yet one more obstacle to their academic achievement.



    According to Ortiz, an underlying reason that English language learners are referred to special education is that they share a number of characteristics with individuals who have learning disabilities, and many general education teachers aren't trained in how to recognize the differences between the two groups. Like someone with a learning disability, an English language learner being taught in English may demonstrate poor comprehension, distractibility and low academic performance. Although these traits in ELLs reflect their limited knowledge of English rather than a disability, distinguishing the two groups is a complex task for educators who lack expertise in the education of English language learners.

    It's only in the last 20 years or so that scholars have focused attention on what a learning disability "looks like" in an English language learner and what sets an ELL's knowledge-acquisition needs apart from those of someone with a disability.

    Ortiz, who has worked in bilingual education and special education for 30 years and is an award-winning national leader in these fields, is conducting more studies to develop research-based profiles of English language learners with language and learning disabilities, focusing on Spanish-speaking students. She and her colleagues in the Department of Special Education's multicultural special education program and the College of Education's Office of Bilingual Education also are creating professional development and technical assistance tools for teachers who work with English language learners who are struggling as they learn to read. The newly developed resources are designed to help educators determine if a student should be referred to special education because of suspected language or learning disabilities.



    "I dislike it when someone refers to the 'ills of bilingual education' because much of what English language learners need is, basically, the same as what all children require if they are to receive a good education. It's just that English language learners need instruction in their native language, along with a strong English as a second language program. Like all students, they need teachers who can assess their strengths and needs and differentiate instruction to address varying cultural backgrounds and languages.

    "Research shows that following a few basic principles can lay the foundation for a successful bilingual education program. Student academic achievement improves when there is a focus on the prevention of failure as well as early intervention for learners who are struggling. You also must have school staff and administrators who understand that native language instruction is essential for achieving high levels of English proficiency. Solid skills in one's first language are necessary for a strong grasp of a second language, and the goal is for students to become fully proficient in English. An obvious benefit to society is that effective bilingual education programs also produce students who are bilingual and bi-literate. That should be a goal for all students."

    Ortiz also stresses that it's important to remember that "bilingual education" is not synonymous with English-language instruction for Spanish speakers. The languages involved in any bilingual education program are determined by geographic location and demographics. Around the country one can find bilingual education in French-English, Portugese-English, Mandarin-English and dozens of other languages.



    "A little known fact is that the first bilingual schools in the U.S. were for German, French and Scandinavian immigrants," Ortiz adds.

    Although some states have taken a quantum leap back in the design of their bilingual and ESL programs—California currently requires a year of English-only immersion—Ortiz points to the success many schools have had with dual language programs. These programs have shown great promise in promoting academic and linguistic achievement as well as the development of bi-literacy. The approach validates and supports full development of a child's native language and the second language being learned.

    According to Ortiz, another approach, called Response to Intervention (RTI), works well with English language learners who are struggling academically. With RTI, three overarching principles guide instruction: 1) the school environment must be conducive to the academic success of all students; 2) the school must provide an effective core curriculum and teachers must use instructional strategies known to be effective with English language learners; and 3) continuous progress checks must be in place to track student progress and allow for proper intervention sooner rather than later.

    With RTI, schools can quickly identify students at risk for poor learning outcomes because the correct assessments occur and general education teachers know how to identify struggling learners. Teachers monitor student progress carefully, evaluating often. Data is collected and teachers are able to provide evidence-based interventions and adjust the intensity and nature of those interventions to match a student's individual needs.


    "There is a fundamental misunderstanding in this country about bilingual education and a fairly significant bias against languages other than English." —Dr. Alba Ortiz
    Photo: Marsha Miller
    "There is a fundamental misunderstanding in this country about bilingual education," says Ortiz, "and a fairly significant bias against languages other than English. This gets in the way of people understanding what a student who is learning a new language needs. If we had a referendum and asked everyone if we should guarantee that all Spanish-speaking children from Mexico have access to bilingual and ESL classes, you'd probably get a resounding 'no.' If we changed the question a bit and asked if it's a good thing for all students to be bilingual when they graduate, then the answer would be 'yes.'

    "It's a contradiction—being bilingual is seen as a mark of intelligence unless you acquire it naturally from your parents as opposed to learning it in foreign language classes. According to some, English language learners can't seem to learn a second language fast enough or effortlessly enough. They forget how many of us take foreign language courses for several years and never actually learn to speak it."

    Things do seem to be moving in the general direction of improvement, though. Leading the pack in higher education, The University of Texas at Austin's College of Education now requires that all education students graduate with English as a Second Language certification as well as their initial teacher certification. The College of Education also has taken an aggressive approach to building a curriculum and adding faculty to prepare future teachers for linguistically and culturally diverse classrooms.

    "I just returned from a trip to Europe," says Ortiz, "and the philosophy there toward this topic is so much more progressive—in Norway, for example, children take classes in Norwegian and English from day one. Every student emerges bilingual. Wouldn't it be wonderful—economically beneficial, if nothing else—if people saw bilingual education as necessary preparation for success in a global economy?"

    Share this story:

    By Kay Randall
    College of Education

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 9:18 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Friday, March 20, 2009

    Most Valley schools receive state accreditation

     

    I find it interesting that this article is using the accreditation labels from H.B. 3/ S.B. 3, which are different than those currently in statute. This just five days after the HB 3 was made public.

    -Patricia


    Jennifer L. Berghom | The Monitor
    March 10, 2009

    AUSTIN — Almost all 42 public school districts throughout the Rio Grande Valley and Webb, Zapata and Jim Hogg counties are performing to state standards with no problems.

    The Texas Education Agency released its state accreditation statuses for the 2008-2009 school year Tuesday, which rates how well school districts are performing academically as well as financially. This is the second year the agency has compiled the list and the first year it included charter schools.

    Ratings are: accredited, accredited-warned, accredited-probation and not accredited-revoked.

    Rio Hondo school district is accredited-warned because it received substandard ratings two years in a row from the state's Financial Integrity Rating System, which measures how well school districts handle the public's money.

    Edcouch-Elsa school district's status is pending because of the state's ongoing investigation of the school system's finances.

    The Texas Education Agency assigned a conservator to review Edcouch-Elsa's financial situation after it was discovered the district had been hiring more employees than necessary and was more than $10 million in debt.

    Both districts were accredited last year, according to the agency.

    Districts that fail to meet standards will no longer be recognized as public school districts, meaning charter schools could be closed and traditional public school districts could be consolidated under neighboring school systems, according to the agency.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 10:07 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    State urged to ease school accountability rules

     

    This article is correct in that high-stakes testing has been de-emphasized in elementary and middle school grades but it has been heightened at the high school level. Not only do the new end-of-course exams account for 15% of the course final grade which now means that standardized tests will impact student GPA.

    In addition, the high stakes attached to the Algebra II and English III exams are also extreme. Under this new system students must pass each of these two tests at a certain score (to be numerically determined by the commissioner) to receive a "college-readiness" or "post-secondary readiness" label on their diploma. So two exams that were never created to determine college readiness will be used to track and label students.

    -Patricia



    By APRIL CASTRO | Houston Chronicle
    March 17, 2009

    AUSTIN — Lawmakers are being urged to be more lenient on public schools that get failing grades when a single student group, including ethnic minorities and children from poor families, underperforms on standardized tests.

    The complaints about how public schools are graded were aired Tuesday as lawmakers considered sweeping school accountability legislation.

    The proposal would de-emphasize the much-criticized Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, though standardized tests would still be an indicator of performance.

    “We think one of the great problems with the current system is the single trip wire problem,” said former Lt. Gov. Bill Ratliff, who helped devise the existing accountability measures during his tenure in the Legislature.

    “We don’t advocate letting school districts get by with letting any one school group fail. But for an entire school district, an entire campus to get marked down simply by one group ... I don’t see that that meets the fairness doctrine.”

    Under the current system, every school and district in the state is graded based on annual TAKS scores and dropout rates among each student group. State ratings are anxiously awaited by superintendents, teachers and parents because they are the chief measure of how well schools are educating their students.

    But educators and parents have increasingly voiced dissatisfaction with the grading system that was first implemented in 1994.

    Sen. Florence Shapiro, chairwoman of the Senate Education Committee, said continuing to hold schools accountable for each group is one of her biggest concerns about the accountability overhaul.

    “I hope and I pray that we do not fall back on that,” Shapiro said. “Disaggregating has been the highlight of what we do. I expect that this will be a robust element in our discussions.”

    The pending proposal, which is still being crafted and will likely change, also aims to prepare students for success after high school, whether in college or the work force.

    Annual school performance ratings would be based on three years of test scores rather than the most recent year.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 12:33 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    Data on the Undocumented

     

    http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/03/17/undocumented

    Data on the Undocumented
    March 17, 2009
    Just over half (53.6 percent) of colleges knowingly admit undocumented immigrant students to degree or diploma programs under certain circumstances, while 46.4 percent do not.

    Public two-year colleges are the most likely to knowingly admit students residing in the United States illegally, with 69.9 percent indicating that they do so, whereas just 40.7 percent of private nonprofit colleges say the same.

    Those are among the many findings of a new survey from the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, to which 613 of the association's roughly 2,000 member institutions responded. (Of the 613, 260 filled out the survey completely, while most, 353, completed it partially. For instance, only 384, or 62.6 percent of all respondents, answered the inquiry on knowingly admitting undocumented students.)

    The data fill a void where anecdotes -- and deep passions -- have lived. While the issue has flared periodically (most notably, of late, at the North Carolina community colleges), little is known on a national level about institutional policies on admitting and enrolling illegal immigrants.

    “There are a number of pure or philosophical positions out there with regard to undocumented students, but very little by way of actual information from a campus administrative perspective,” said Barmak Nassirian, AACRAO’s associate executive director. “In general, there is sort of a false image in people’s heads when the topic is discussed -- of a group of people with ‘undocumented’ tattooed on their foreheads walking around the campus. And that’s not so.”

    Of the findings, he said, “The vast majority of institutions” -- 96.9 percent -- "do actually inquire about citizenship/legal residency status in the form of a question.”

    “But then, once you solicit the answer, how you act on the answers that you receive very clearly separates institutions from each other. ... In practice, the numbers are all over the map when it comes to who they verify, how they verify, etc.”

    On verification, just 19.6 percent said they verify the immigration status of all applicants, 30.6 percent verify applicants for financial aid, and 18.7 percent verify only those applicants seeking in-state tuition. Another 23.3 percent said they don't verify applicants' status, and 7.7 percent said "other."

    Nassirian points out that very few institutions -- just 5.1 percent -- rely on national e-verification systems, like SAVE or E-Verify. "The rest do it in-house on the basis of document reviews," Nassirian said.

    When asked, "What happens if you find out or have reason to believe students who claimed otherwise are undocumented?" the answers vary: Of 409 institutions that responded to this question, 23 percent said students are not allowed to enroll, 11.2 percent said that, if already enrolled, they’re asked to withdraw, 12 percent said they’re allowed to enroll without conditions, 7.8 percent said they are permitted to enroll under certain conditions, 23 percent said they’re charged higher tuition and 20.5 percent said other.

    Of those colleges that knowingly admit undocumented students under certain circumstances, what are some of those circumstances? A total of 27.5 percent require graduation from an in-state high school or GED, 18.8 percent require attendance at an in-state high school, 15.3 percent require an affidavit, statement or certification of the student's intention to resolve his or her immigration status, and 9.7 percent require proof of length of residence. Nearly 29 percent said other.

    A 1982 U.S. Supreme Court case, Plyler v. Doe, affirms the right of illegal immigrants to K-12 education, but does not extend to higher education. Undocumented students are ineligible for federal financial aid, and how states handle their admission and enrollment in public colleges varies -- with some now barring admission of undocumented students and others pursuing the opposite tack by making lower resident tuition rates available for illegal immigrants residing in their states. As for private colleges, their policies also vary, and typically aren’t advertised.

    One exception is Vassar College, which, after entertaining a proposal last fall, has made explicit its policy on undocumented student admissions. On its admissions Web site, the college states, “Vassar College will give admission applications submitted by undocumented students the same consideration given to any other applications it might receive. Undocumented students who are admitted to Vassar will be offered financial assistance based on demonstrated need following the same procedures Vassar uses to grant aid to accepted international students.”

    “We wanted to clarify for students and for families and for counselors and for others what our policies were so that they wouldn’t have to guess,” explained David Borus, the dean of admission and financial aid. “As a matter of fact, at least as far as we can see from this year’s applicant pool, it has not resulted in a deluge of applications from undocumented students, but rather more of a trickle. There have been a few students who have contacted us and been given this policy and gone ahead and applied but not a great many. And I think that’s likely to be the case in the future.”

    As for what other colleges are doing, “It’s not the kind of thing that colleges generally are discussing in forums, or online,” Borus said. “It’s an internal, sort of functional policy that we all have dozens of for various constituencies and various procedures. So I don’t think it’s startling that it’s not something that’s being discussed a great deal."

    — Elizabeth Redden

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:53 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    The Black Admissions Edge -- for Immigrants

     

    Very interesting study.
    Angela


    March 17, 2009
    > The election of Barack Obama -- African American because of his African father, distinguishing him from how the phrase is commonly used -- has brought unprecedented attention to the diversity of backgrounds of those covered by the term. Within higher education, one of the more sensitive issues in discussion of admissions and affirmative action in recent years has been the relative success of immigrant black Americans compared to black people who have been in the United States for generations.
    > A new study has found that among high school graduates, "immigrant blacks" -- defined as those who immigrated to the United States or their children -- are significantly more likely than other black Americans to attend selective colleges. In fact, immigrant black Americans are more likely than white students to attend such colleges.
    > The research -- published in the journal Sociology of Education (abstract available here) -- is the second major study in two years to try to define the "advantage" of some black applicants to top college. In 2007, a team of researchers published a study in The American Journal of Education finding that while only about 13 percent of black people aged 18 or 19 in the United States are first- or second-generation immigrants, they made up 27 percent of black students at the selective colleges studied.
    > The new study focuses on the entire population of high school graduates to see where they go to college, comparing immigrant black people, "native-born blacks" (the authors' terms for others), and white students. The authors are two assistant professors of sociology -- Pamela R. Bennett of Johns Hopkins University and Amy Lutz of Syracuse University.
    > They begin their study by noting that previous research has documented that a smaller proportion of black high school graduates than white high school graduates enroll in college. But when students of similar socioeconomic status are compared, the black high school graduates are more likely than their white counterparts to enroll. Given the debate about the immigrant factor in analyzing black enrollments, the authors set out to determine "whether this net black advantage is very African American."
    > Using data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988, Bennett and Lutz found that among high school graduates, 75.1 percent of immigrant blacks enrolled in college, a slightly higher percentage than that of whites (72.5 percent) and substantially larger than for native blacks (60.2 percent).
    > In terms of the college destinations of those who enrolled in college, the rates for immigrant blacks compared to other black students were similar for two-year colleges and non-selective four-year colleges that are not historically black. The biggest gap was at selective colleges, which enroll only 2.4 percent of native black high school graduates but 9.2 percent of immigrant blacks (and 7.3 percent of whites). Native black students are more likely than immigrants to enroll at historically black colleges. But the authors noted that historically black colleges are clearly appealing to some percentage of the black immigrant population, even though those students wouldn't have the same multi-generation ties to the colleges that are found among many African Americans.
    > Destinations of High School Graduates Who Enrolled in College
    > Type of College
    > Native-born blacks
    > Immigrant blacks
    > Whites
    > Community college
    > 41.9%
    > 41.8%
    > 38.7%
    > Historically black college
    > 25.5%
    > 18.9%
    > 0.1%
    > Non-selective, non historically black four-year colleges
    > 30.2%
    > 30.0%
    > 54.0%
    > Selective colleges
    > 2.4%
    > 9.2%
    > 7.3%
    > The authors of the new study note that there are key differences in the demographics of the black Americans whose families are new to the United States and those who aren't. Immigrant black students are more likely than other black students to grow up In two-parent families and to attend private schools -- both characteristics that, across all sorts of groups, tend to indicate a greater likelihood of attending a selective college.
    > While their study found success for non-immigrant black students in enrolling in some kinds of colleges, the authors note that the sector -- selective colleges -- in which this is less likely is also the sector most likely to lead to many kinds of high wage careers. More examination of the issue is needed, the authors write, to combat "continued socioeconomic inequality."
    > That scholarly phrasing may not do justice to the tensions raised by such issues. In 2003, at a reunion of black alumni of Harvard University, Lani Guinier, a law professor, was quoted by The Boston Globe as raising the question of whether black students who are "voluntary immigrants" should be the beneficiaries of affirmative action.
    > "If you look around Harvard College today, how many young people will you find who grew up in urban environments and went to public high schools and public junior high schools?" she said. "I don't think, in the name of affirmative action, we should be admitting people because they look like us, but then they don't identify with us."

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:51 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Texas Senate, House panels take up bills to improve student testing

     

    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By TERRENCE STUTZ / The Dallas Morning News
    tstutz@dallasnews.com

    AUSTIN – Texas high school students would have to pass at least eight out of 12 end-of-course exams to get a diploma, and elementary school students would no longer have to pass the state achievement test in certain grades to be promoted under school improvement legislation taken up Tuesday by House and Senate committees.

    The 120-page bill would take the pressure off elementary and middle schools to focus on preparation for the TAKS test by allowing school districts to devise their own promotion standards – using TAKS results, course grades and teacher recommendations. No longer would students in grades 3, 5 and 8 have to pass the test to be promoted.

    But high-stakes testing would continue in high school, where students would have to pass at least two of the three end-of-course exams now being developed in each of four core subject areas – English, math, science and social studies. Students not meeting the requirement would not receive a diploma.

    Currently, students must pass the TAKS exit-level exam and complete required course credits to earn a diploma.

    "This new system looks beyond a single test and looks at multiple indicators of student achievement," said House Public Education Committee Chairman Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, referring to the changes in elementary and middle schools. "It will reduce the pressure on school districts because students' promotions will be based on multiple measures."

    Senate Education Committee Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, said that after years of the state setting promotion standards for schools, it is time to give that responsibility to local school officials.

    "We believe we need to give back to local school districts the ability to decide how to do this," she said.

    The twin measures by Shapiro and Eissler, based on meetings around the state last year, also would eliminate the current performance ratings for schools and campuses – such as "academically acceptable" and "unacceptable." Schools would still be evaluated annually based on students' test scores, dropout rates and financial integrity – but they would receive one of three ratings from good to bad: accredited, accredited-warned and accredited-probation. Schools doing poorly for multiple years would lose their accreditation – and state funding.

    Shapiro pointed out another major difference in the proposed accountability system – schools and districts would be rated based on achievement growth and a rolling three-year average for test scores, rather than on a single year of testing.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:26 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    The Immigrant Factor

     

    Inside Higher Ed
    February 1, 2007

    At a reunion of black alumni of Harvard University in 2003, Lani Guinier set off a discussion on a sensitive subject: whether black immigrants are the beneficiaries, perhaps undeserving, of affirmative action.

    Guinier, a Harvard law professor, was quoted in The Boston Globe at the time as saying that most minority students at elite colleges were "voluntary immigrants," not descended from slaves. "If you look around Harvard College today, how many young people will you find who grew up in urban environments and went to public high schools and public junior high schools?" she said. "I don't think, in the name of affirmative action, we should be admitting people because they look like us, but then they don't identify with us."

    The comments sparked much discussion among educators nationally about whether Guinier's observations were accurate and -- if so -- what they said about affirmative action. When The New York Times explored the issue the next year, it noted that a major study of students at elite colleges was finding that a disproportionate number of black students were from immigrant families.

    That study was released Wednesday with its publication in the American Journal of Education (available to the journal's subscribers here), and it seems likely to inspire more discussion of the issues Guinier raised.

    The study -- by sociologists at Princeton University and the University of Pennsylvania -- used the National Longitudinal Survey of Freshmen to look at the black students enrolled at 28 selective colleges and universities. Of all black people aged 18 or 19 in the United States, about 13 percent are first- or second-generation immigrants, but they made up 27 percent of black students at the selective colleges studied. The proportions of immigrants were higher at the private colleges in the survey than at publics, and were highest among the most competitive colleges in the group, hitting 41 percent of the black students in the Ivy League.

    Percentage of Immigrants Among Black Students in Selective Colleges Studied
    Category Within Group Studied Percentage
    Public 23.1%
    Private 28.8%
    10 Most Selective 35.6%
    10 Least Selective 23.8%
    Ivy League 40.6%

    In many respects (including their academic performance once enrolled), the black students who are immigrants did not differ from those who are African Americans. But the demographic analysis did note a number of areas where the immigrant students are statistically different:

    * Parental roles: Immigrant students were more likely to be raised by two parents (56.9 percent to 51.4 percent) and were more likely to have a father present (61.2 percent to 55.6 percent).

    * Fathers' education: While the educational attainment of students' mothers wasn't notably different, immigrants' fathers were much more educated, as is consistent with immigrant populations generally. Among black students, 70 percent of immigrants' fathers were college graduates, compared to 55.2 percent of other black students. And 43.6 percent of the immigrant students' fathers had advanced degrees, compared to 25.3 percent of native black students.

    * Religion: The immigrant students were more than twice as likely as the other black students to be Roman Catholic (30.2 percent to 13.1 percent) and less likely to be Protestant. (Levels of religious observance, however, were quite similar, and minimal.)

    * Schooling: The immigrant black students were more likely to have attended private schools (41.7 percent compared to 27.3 percent for other black students) and less likely to have been exposed to violence in schools (55.3 percent to 63.1 percent).

    * Academics: The immigrant students had slightly higher grade-point averages and took slightly more Advanced Placement courses, but they had a statistically significant advantage on SAT average (1250 to 1193).

    The study also provides information on where the immigrant students are coming from. By world region, the Caribbean is the leader, with 43.1 percent of the black immigrants at selective colleges, followed by Africa with 28.6 percent, and Latin America with 7.4 percent. By country, the leaders are Jamaica (20.5 percent) and Nigeria (17.3 percent), both countries that the study's authors note are "former British colonies where the educated classes speak English." They are followed by Haiti, Trinidad and Ghana, with Haiti being the only country where English is not widely spoken.

    The study's authors -- Douglas S. Massey, Margarita Mooney and Kimberly C. Torres of Princeton University, and Camille Z. Charles of the University of Pennsylvania -- write that they believe the most significant factor in understanding the success of black immigrant students may be their fathers' higher educational attainment, which in turn is likely to result in the students being enrolled in better (frequently private) schools and less likely to be exposed to violence. But the authors note repeatedly that this study -- while providing more demographic data than has previously been available -- leaves many questions unanswered.

    The authors also acknowledge the way this subject relates to the evolving debates over the purpose of affirmative action. They quote President Johnson's 1965 speech that set out his rationale for affirmative action: "You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, 'you are free to compete with all the others,' and still justly believe that you have been completely fair."

    They note that Asian and Hispanic students began to benefit from affirmative action as "the moral justification for affirmative action shifted subtly from restitution for a legacy of racism to the representation of diversity for its own sake." As this shift took place, they note, many of the Asian and Hispanic students enrolling in competitive colleges were immigrants, but immigrants made up very large shares of the Asian and Hispanic populations in the United States over all. "Whereas the presence of second-generation Latinos and Asians on college campuses to a large extent reflected the demographic composition of their respective populations, black immigrants were over-represented relative to their share in the African-American population."

    Anyone hoping that the new study will answer the question of whether black immigrant students "deserve" to benefit from affirmative action will be disappointed. Write the authors: "Ultimately, the data we have presented cannot answer the question of whether the children of black immigrants are worthy beneficiaries of affirmative action, for the answer rests largely on a moral judgment about whether the policy is a form of restitution for past racial injustice or a mechanism to ensure that selective schools continue to reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of a nation that is being transformed by immigration."

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 7:07 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Tuesday, March 17, 2009

    Does accountability system offer path to a career or a track to nowhere?

     

    By Kate Alexander | Tuesday, March 17, 2009, 06:18 PM

    The proposed overhaul of Texas’ school accountability system sought to give students different paths that lead to graduation as a way to keep school relevant to all kids and reduce dropouts.

    But to some people, those paths are seen as tracks that would direct kids - particularly low-income, minority kids, they say - away from college, according to committee testimony Tuesday.

    The identical accountability bills introduced by the education committee leaders in both chambers, Rep. Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, and Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, set the goal of “post-secondary readiness,” meaning that high school graduates will be ready for college or a high-skill job.

    Students can get different endorsements on their diploma based on the curriculum path they take.

    The concern is that the workforce readiness endorsement could be perceived as inferior to the college readiness endorsement. And that label could stick with a student long after high school.

    State Rep. Harold Dutton Jr., D-Houston, said this system “stamps this path on a student’s forehead” and “places more students at risk of not having a future.”

    But Eissler said the objective was not to track students but to give them the freedom to take courses relevant to their interests and will keep them coming back for more.

    Since most jobs will require some college, the workforce-readiness path should be just as rigorous as the college-readiness option, he added.

    “I think this is a college enhancement program, not a college limitation program,” Eissler said.

    Both the House Public Education Committee and the Senate Education Committee took testimony on the expansive bill Tuesday but did not act. The committee leaders said they would come back with a new version of the bill soon based on comments from the public.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:33 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    John Young: Stamped as 'college material'?

     

    John Young | Waco Tribune
    Tuesday, March 17, 2009

    In NBC’s series “Friday Night Lights,” a pampered high schooler goes into a senioritis death spiral. Why? She’s suddenly realized that with her middle-of-the-pack grades, the two Texas-college color schemes of her dreams — burnt orange and maroon — are out of the question.

    It’s hard to sympathize. Every student in this state with an eye on college knows, or should, about the rule that has guaranteed admission to the top 10 percent of high school graduating classes.

    It’s a rule lawmakers are poised to dramatically alter this week, partially because an underbuilt college system has placed too much of a premium on two primo universities.

    But something else is happening in the statehouse this week about college admissions, and it has nothing to do with percentiles.

    It has to do with — ah, man, you guessed it — standardized testing.

    Doesn’t everything come down to that? And isn’t that wrong?

    Whether they would be tacitly or directly influenced, college admissions are among the less-discussed subtexts of ambitious legislation to revamp Texas’ school accountability system.

    Two measures, House Bill 3 and Senate Bill 3, portend major, and in many cases very welcome, changes. Among the good:

    * De-emphasizing the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills in promoting students. Under the new approach, TAKS scores would supplement other, broader criteria.

    * Judging schools on a “growth model” tracking improvement, rather than today’s “gotcha” approach that doesn’t acknowledge different starting points based on economic advantages and disadvantages.

    * Better aligning what colleges require and what high schools produce.

    All of that is good, unless we get into a mode of standardizing what “college material” is. That would be bad. There’s evidence in this well-meaning legislation that it would result in exactly that, to the detriment of some promising students.

    At issue is the use of high school end-of-course exams to certify a student as “college-ready.”

    Pass the end-of-course exam for advanced English and Algebra II, and that’s your prize under an “advanced high school program,” according to the legislation. The bill also calls on the state to develop such exams for social studies and science. They would be used to give a state-certified endorsement of college readiness, as well.

    Those who didn’t take advanced English or Algebra II, or who couldn’t pass the end-of-course exam in either, could still graduate but with the “alternate performance standard,” meaning “postsecondary-ready” (candidates for community college or technical schools). What critics say it really means is these students would be “remediation-ready” — aka, “not worthy.”

    Wait a minute. What about the young man who can master the complexities of a circuit board but who is knock-kneed putting his words in prose? What about the young lady who is the next great novelist but who crumples into a heap in the face of algebraic equations?

    I’ll guarantee that I had an “advanced high school program,” but one that was loaded toward English and journalism my senior year, with no math. Would that have made me not “college-ready”?

    Some minority advocacy groups fear an “apartheid” system, with the top-10 rule in jeopardy and end-of-course exams assuming such weight. They warn that the Algebra II end-of-course test itself could marginalize staggering numbers of Hispanic and African-American students, making them think they aren’t college material.

    It is true that Texas colleges spend too much time and resources on remediation for students who need help in math or English. But let’s acknowledge that it’s a pretty good investment if it results in the first college graduate in a family’s history.

    It’s one thing not to reinforce the privileges of the pampered when we want students ready for college. It’s another to admit that for some, no matter how worthy, college is the last place they ever thought they’d be. We should think bigger for them.

    John Young’s column appears Thursday, Sunday and occasionally Tuesday. E-mail: jyoung@wacotrib.com.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:14 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Bills would bolster technical education

     

    By Kate Alexander | AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Thursday, March 05, 2009

    Texas high school students who aren't headed to college need better opportunities to prepare for jobs even before they graduate, legislators said this week as they introduced two bills to bolster career and technical education.

    Led by Senate Education Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, the lawmakers said they hope the renewed push for such education will both prepare a better crop of workers for Texas employers and propel more students to a high school diploma.

    One bill aims to encourage high schools to offer coursework aligned with specific career opportunities so a student could graduate with both a high school diploma and technical certification. Under the bill, the state would pay for the certification.

    Shapiro, a Plano Republican, said the career and technology courses will not be the vocational classes of yesterday. Such courses will be kept "a part of and not apart from our academic program," she said.

    Students would still be required to take four years of math and science, as college-bound students are, but they would have more relevant course options, such as engineering mathematics, said Republican Rep. Rob Eissler of The Woodlands, the bill's House sponsor and chairman of the Public Education Committee.

    Schools that develop top-notch career and technology programs would have the opportunity to earn accolades under a new statewide accountability bill by Shapiro and Eissler that is to be unveiled today.

    The second bill provides grants to foster career and technology programs at community colleges.

    Cost estimates for implementing both bills were not available Wednesday.

    The renewed focus on career and technology education is coming at a critical juncture, business groups say.

    Luke Bellsnyder, executive director of the Texas Association of Manufacturers, said his members are the consumers of what Texas schools produce.

    Up to 40 percent of workers in Texas manufacturing jobs will be eligible for retirement in the next five years, but Texas is not producing the skilled young workers to replace them, Bellsnyder said.

    "We're just not seeing the product we need to compete globally and compete with our neighboring states," Bellsnyder said.

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    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:10 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Sunday, March 15, 2009

    Study: Physically fit Texas students more likely to do well on achievement tests

     

    Study: Physically fit Texas students more likely to do well on achievement tests
    12:04 PM CDT on Tuesday, March 10, 2009

    By TERRENCE STUTZ / The Dallas Morning News
    tstutz@dallasnews.com

    AUSTIN – Texas students who are physically fit are more likely to do well on achievement tests and less likely to have discipline problems, according to a study released Monday by the Texas Education Agency.

    Based on annual physical fitness assessments of more than 2.4 million students in the public schools, the study found that increased exercise helps the brain function more efficiently and enhances the ability to learn. Students who were physically fit also had better school attendance.

    “Texas is the first state to require an annual physical fitness assessment of public school students,” state Education Commissioner Robert Scott said in a statement. “Today’s research results show that improving our children’s physical fitness can have positive results not only for the children, but also for the schools as well.”

    Among those present as the study was unveiled were Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound, who is sponsoring legislation this year to increase physical education requirements for Texas students in middle school.

    Nelson, who authored the 2007 measure that required annual fitness assessments, said there is more work to do to combat obesity and get children in shape, including more time in P.E. Her bill would require two additional semesters of P.E. in middle school, where students already have to take four semesters.

    But groups representing fine arts teachers are lining up against the legislation, contending it would further erode students’ ability to take art, music and other fine arts classes.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 9:32 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Gentrification Sweeps Through East Austin

     

    This is a really good account of gentrification issues in East Austin. This is a local and national story for lots of inner-city communities. -Angela

    Gentrification Sweeps Through East Austin
    Eduardo Gonzalez
    Photo Gallery - Gentrification Sweeps Through Austin


    Photo by Andrew Rogers
    A sign on East Martin Luther King Jr Blvd is one of many examples of discontent over development throughout East Austin.

    Rebecca Turrubiarte moved 23 years ago to Riverview Street, a neighborhood located near the south side of Lady Bird Lake. She remembers the area fondly as a safe and friendly place with mainly Latino and African American families. She bought the property for $13,000.

    It was a safe neighborhood," said Turrubiarte, "I used to go bicycling ten miles a day; the kids went to the lake on bicycle and went kittling."

    Today it's getting a make-over by developers who muscle in with high-price condos.

    One is Urban Space, developers known for their "eco-friendly, 5-star green buildings," according to their website which shows 26 individuals working to transform Austin's downtown and east side.

    "We call Riverview a modern luxury road on the east side because of its proximity to the Lady Bird Lake," said William Steakley, an Urban Space realtor. They offer an eco-friendly 1,050 square-feet, 2-bedroom, and 1- bathroom condo at 2008 Riverview Street for $299,000.

    A predictable conflict between developers who built using environmentalist goals and residents squared off east of I-35.

    According to Steakley, Riverview's proximity to the Lady Bird Lake "is mainly the driver for that [high prices]." Nonetheless, although Longhorn Dam created the Lady Bird Lake in 1960, property values held relatively steady until 2003. Then five years before the construction of these condos, Turrubiarte's property taxes increased. Until 2003 she paid less than $707.88 in property taxes and now she pays $1,056.33.

    "We get offers through the mail, mainly from realtors saying: ‘if you are interested in selling [your house] give us a call,'" said Turrubiarte, "They offer $40,000-$50,000, but we know the house is not worth that much."

    However, the Travis County Tax Assessor appraises Turrubiarte's property at $59,606.00.

    "Gentrification happens all over the world. There are a lot of variables, and it is going to happen," said Steakley, "It is important to maintain the culture of the existent population, but... the financial limitation of the existent population and... taxation...is what causes gentrification."

    Gentrification, a term coined early in the 20th Century, refers to development driven by builders who move into low cost neighborhoods and build units at prices that long-time residents cannot afford, but that assure high profits for developers.

    Bo McCarver, vice-president of the Austin Neighborhood Council, questions the ecologist claims of some developers. He said "They may put a solar panel on it and claim (it) is a real ecological house. This is called ‘green-washing.' They are affluent people, they are not evil, but their house is upscale from all the others around them. So all the lots go up by the appraised value and that's why taxes go up." People who cannot pay their property taxes in these areas see themselves forced to move to a cheaper location. For many long-time residents of East Austin this displacement forces them miles away.

    This rising tax pattern doesn't just happen near the lake. Manuel del Rio Morales, who works as a gardener and owns a property on Meador Street, north of east Austin, faces a similar problem. Over the past five years, Morales' property taxes increased from $107.01 to $1,145.34

    "I receive letters and phone calls all the time from companies who want to buy my property," Morales said, "Last time they offered me $29,000 for it but I don't want to sell it."

    Travis County appraises Morales' land at $52,570.

    A lack of information of possible options for senior citizens may contribute to their despair. For example, Texas offers an adjustable property tax cap to help prevent those 65 and older from losing homes because of tax increases.

    Reverse mortgages, an option which allows senior homeowners to use equity as a cash resource might also be explored.

    Susana Almanza is co-director of People Organized in Defense of Earth and her Resources (PODER), a community-based non-profit organization that advocates for affordable housing. She said that for people who do sell their houses "$30,000 dollars seem like a million dollars, so when they sold [their houses]... [They] thought they could buy another house. Then they realized there were no other houses they could buy with that amount of money so they get split from where they used to live."

    Displacement, especially for low-income elderly, causes more problems than simply a change of address. They lose community ties of mutual help knotted by years of trust and friendship. It creates feelings of insecurity. They can no longer go to familiar spots for a meal out or entertainment.

    A recent study published in the American Journal of Public Health by the Stanford University School of Medicine, indicated that low-income women who lived in neighborhoods that gentrified around them had a 70% higher risk of death than those who continued to live in their established neighborhoods. The data spanned 17 years, and involved more than 8,000 people and four communities.

    This unleashed development also moved into south east Austin. Marta Martinez moved 14 years ago to Pine Place. She bought her property for $50,000. "I receive letters and phone calls from companies that want to buy my house all the time," said Martinez, "This is our home, the place where my kids were raised and I do not want to sell it."

    Even though her neighborhood meets occasionally to discuss how to deal with the problems residents face, Martinez says she cannot attend. "Because of my job, I can't go to these meetings."

    McCarver, who is retired, goes from six to seven meetings about housing and social issues in East Austin per week. He rarely sees any East Austin residents there. "The people who are there are the developers, who are paid during the day and they can go on their own time," said McCarver "And frequently meetings are held at times when a lot of people can't go."

    "Money talks and small businesses don't generate as much money as the big ones," said McCarver, "It might not even be intentional [but] all the pressure is to redevelop to push the low income people out of town."

    Neighborhood advocates call for realistic affordable housing. Many complain that definitions of "affordable" entail formulas too algebraic for most people to understand.

    An example of the distance between developers and residents became evident at a recent evening meeting. The city of Austin hired A. Nelessen Associates, Inc., a design firm from New Jersey, to create the plan to "shape the future of East Riverside Corridor." They designed a 37-page online survey. Launched by the Neighborhood Planning and Zoning Department on September 19, 2008, it sought to gather the residents' opinions.

    Available in English and Spanish for one month, it addressed no social, educational or health issues. It did not ask if any of the redevelopment plans put residents at risk of losing their homes or if they knew of options to help them keep their home.

    Members of the East Austin Neighborhood Council objected to the survey on several grounds. The on-line survey approach assumes easy internet access by all residents, but low-income areas are often caught in the digital divide.

    Few of these residents own computers and subscribe to cable Internet. Maintaining a telephone line for the required time to complete the survey is not easy. Nor can one use a computer at the public library for as long as it would take.

    Many of the residents of East Austin work long hours of physical labor, others work two jobs so the survey design does not take the reality of the residents into consideration. These problems may help explain why of the 43,000 residents, only 800 responded.

    Another reason might be that no section of the survey addresses the aspects of "gentrification,"which is of most concern to long-time, low-income residents.

    Said Morales when she heard the survey's length: "37 pages? I have two jobs and no computer. I don't have time to go to a (public) computer to fill all that out."

    Nevertheless, the Neighborhood Planning and Zoning Department organized a public meeting at Baty Elementary on November 18 to announce the results. Anton Nelessen, a Harvard graduate and director of the firm, discussed the responses for almost three-hours. But not all attendees were happy.

    Brady Brantford, a property owner on East Riverside, tried to ask questions about the economic impact three times during the presentation but Nelessen refused to let her speak. "Frustrating," was how Brantford described the meeting.

    The promised question-and-answer period did not materialize. Instead the meeting ended abruptly.

    "I didn't feel comfortable, it's a great idea, but they didn't answer my question about how much is this going to cost," Brantford said.

    This was the first public meeting that Ramiro Martinez, an East Riverside resident for 11 years, attended. "I felt confused at the meeting, and I just hope they [the developers] are telling the truth." Like others, they worry about being pushed out.



    Photo by Andrew Rogers
    The property tax of Manuel del Rio Morales and his family increased over 1000% over the past 5 years.
    "Gentrification is good," said Nelessen, "you need a balanced community of 20% low and moderate [income] against 80% other. If that tips, studies say communities go to hell. Whoever is here who is poor, let's say 100 people; we should bring 500 more [high income] people to balance them. But we need those [poor] people, (because) who is going to do your dishes, or cut your grass or water your plants?"

    After doing yard work for more than 30 years, Morales simply wants to enjoy the rest of his life there. "I don't know who is moving to my neighborhood," said Morales, "but I just want to live in peace with my family and have good neighbors."

    Photo Gallery


    © 2008 InCite l School of Journalism, University of Texas at Austin; 1 University Station; Austin, Texas 78712-0113 l Phone: 512.471.1979

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 9:05 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Hispanic enrollment rising in US schools, colleges

     

    Hispanic enrollment rising in US schools, colleges

    The Associated Press
    Thursday, March 5, 2009
    WASHINGTON: Roughly one-fourth of the children in U.S. kindergartens, preschools generally for children 3 to 6 years old, are Hispanic, evidence of an accelerating trend that now will see minority children become the majority by 2023.

    Census data released Thursday also show that Hispanics make up about one-fifth of all K-12 pupils, those in kindergarten through 12th grade. Schools in most U.S. states have 12 grades. Hispanics' growth and changes in the youth population are certain to influence political debate for years about jobs, immigration and education.

    The ethnic shifts in school enrollment are most evident in the American West. States such as Arizona, California and Nevada are seeing an influx of Hispanics due to both immigration and higher birth rates than other ethnic groups.

    Minority students in that region exceed non-Hispanic whites at the pre-college grade levels, with about 37 percent of the students Hispanic. Hispanics comprise 54 percent of students in New Mexico, 47 percent in California, 44 percent in Texas and 40 percent in Arizona.

    In 2007, more than 40 percent of all students in K-12 were minorities — Hispanics, blacks, Asian-Americans and others. That is double the percentage of three decades ago.

    In colleges, Hispanics constitute 12 percent of full-time undergraduate and graduate students, 2 percent more than in 2006. Still, that is short of Hispanics' 15 percent representation in the total U.S. population.

    "The future of our education system depends on how we can advance Hispanics through the ranks," said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "In many cases it's going to be a challenge, because they are the children of immigrants, and their English is not as strong. Many have parents without a high school or college education."

    Minorities are projected to become the majority of the overall U.S. population by 2042. For minority children, that shift is seen coming in 2023, seven years earlier than was estimated as recently as 2004. The accelerated timetable is due to immigration among Hispanics and Asians, and declining birth rates among non-Hispanic whites.

    Hispanics account for more than 23 percent of kindergartners in private and public schools, according to 2007 data. That is more than triple Hispanics' percentage in the 1970s, the height of white baby boom enrollment in elementary and high school.

    More Hispanic kindergartners in 2007 were U.S.-born than foreign-born, assuring them of citizenship that will make them eligible to vote by 2020.

    The changing demographics offer opportunity and political risks for Barack Obama, the nation's first African-American president, and emerging Republicans such as 37-year-old Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, the first Indian-American elected to statewide office.

    Obama, who took two-thirds of the Hispanic vote, is channeling billions of federal dollars to improve schools, reduce the dropout rate and make college more affordable by increasing the maximum Pell Grant, a federal subsidy for low-income students, to $5,550.

    Yet his administration has been sketchy when it comes to improving classroom performance and overhauling the former Bush administration's No Child Left Behind Act. It sets goals for schools that are supposed to have every student reading and doing math at grade level by 2014.

    The education law has major implications for both black and Hispanic students, including those who speak English as a second language, because they tend to lag behind whites in reading and math scores.

    Obama has been largely quiet on immigration reform, which could pave the way for citizenship for nearly 12 million illegal immigrants.

    Richard Fry, a senior researcher at the Pew Hispanic Center, said Hispanic growth cannot be ignored in policy debates for too long. While in recent elections Hispanics have cast only 6 percent of the total ballots, "Latinos' electoral power and participation levels clearly are going to grow," Fry said.

    Other findings from the data:

    _About 58 percent of children enrolled in grades K-12 are non-Hispanic whites, a group that represents 66 percent of the U.S. population. After Hispanics, blacks were the second-largest minority group enrolled in K-12 (15 percent), followed by Asians (4 percent).

    _Fifty-three percent of Hispanic 4-year-olds were enrolled in nursery school, compared with 43 percent in 1997 and 21 percent in 1987.

    The census data were based on the Current Population Survey. Data on U.S. regions and states came from the 2007 American Community Survey, the government's annual survey of about 3 million households.

    ___

    AP Education Writer Libby Quaid contributed to this report.

    ___

    On the Net:

    Census Bureau: http://www.census.gov


    Copyright © 2009 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 8:59 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Maryland Tackles Ways to Tap Into 'Heritage' Languages

     

    Good quote: ": "The foreign-language strategy of schools is oriented toward a handful of European languages that are in declining use around the world, instead of being focused on the real diversity of languages in the world and of heritage people in the United States."

    Angela


    Published Online: March 10, 2009
    Published in Print: March 11, 2009
    Maryland Tackles Ways to Tap Into 'Heritage' Languages
    Dual-Language Classes, Teacher Certification are Areas Under Pursuit
    By Mary Ann Zehr


    While other states have enacted policies to discourage students from building on their native-language skills, Maryland has completed an audit of the opportunities the state has to leverage the "heritage language" skills of its residents.
    Heritage speakers have been exposed to or speak a language other than English at home.
    The Task Force for the Preservation of Heritage Language Skills, which was established by the Maryland General Assembly last year, presented a report to Gov. Martin O’Malley and the legislature Feb. 26 with recommendations for how the state can better support the use of native languages other than English. Lawmakers in Maryland are predominantly Democratic.
    Maryland is "uniquely positioned to take a leadership role" in supporting heritage speakers to meet the foreign-language needs of business and government, in part because bilingual speakers in the state are very well educated, says the report. Maryland ranked third of 50 states and the District of Columbia in its share of foreign-born people with at least a bachelor’s degree in 2006, says the report.
    "We know these folks are important to us, and we don’t want these language skills to go away—and without intervention, they will," said Catherine W. Ingold, the director of the National Foreign Language Center, a research institute at the University of Maryland, and the chairwoman of the 20-member task force.
    No Extra Money
    She said she was impressed by the statements of various Maryland agencies and sectors on the value of heritage languages. "I've been following the issue of heritage languages in the United States since the late 1990s,” Ms. Ingold said. “Often you encounter a brick wall of: 'We don’t care what they spoke before, we just need them to speak English now.' "
    Joy Kreeft Peyton, the vice president of the Washington-based Center for Applied Linguistics, said she doesn’t know of any other state legislature that has set up a task force to examine the resources that heritage speakers could offer. "The bottom line is [Maryland has] switched the focus from immigrants as a problem to people with high-level skills, high levels of education, and speaking languages other than English. It’s a different focus that is very powerful."
    The report calls on the Maryland education department to carry out four of the task force's seven recommendations: increase the number of dual-language programs from two to at least 10; expand teacher-certification opportunities for heritage speakers; enhance collections in schools and public libraries of children's books in heritage languages; and better support schools in providing high school credit by exam for students who speak languages other than English at home.
    Colleen Seremet, the assistant state superintendent for instruction, said the department doesn’t expect to receive any additional state funds to carry out the recommendations, but she believes many can be done without extra money. Susan Spinnato, a specialist in world languages for the education department, has been assigned to coordinate the implementation.
    Ms. Spinnato said the department has tried to make it easier for native Italian and Chinese speakers to earn credit for their proficiency so they don't have to get an undergraduate degree in those languages to become teachers in Maryland. She wants to set up practical ways for speakers of other languages to become teachers as well.
    While Maryland permits schools to provide foreign-language credit to high school students by having them take an exam, Ms. Spinnato said she isn’t aware of any districts that are doing so. She’s convening a group to find out what language exams are available from test-developers, and hopes to have an approved list of exams to provide to districts by next year.
    Two districts—Montgomery and Prince George’s counties—have dual-language programs in which students who are dominant in English and those who are dominant in Spanish learn both languages together. Ms. Spinnato said the department will be promoting such programs as a cost-effective way to teach heritage languages.
    One of the most amazing findings of the audit, said state Sen. Jim Rosapepe, a Democrat who sponsored the legislation to set up the task force, is that two-thirds of heritage speakers in Maryland speak languages other than Spanish.
    Heritage-language schools, said Mr. Rosapepe, "are the driving force on this. The school systems are behind the curve." He added: "The foreign-language strategy of schools is oriented toward a handful of European languages that are in declining use around the world, instead of being focused on the real diversity of languages in the world and of heritage people in the United States."
    Vol. 28, Issue 24, Page 23

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 1:57 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Where Education and Assimilation Collide

     

    March 15, 2009
    Where Education and Assimilation Collide
    By GINGER THOMPSON

    WOODBRIDGE, Va. — Walking the halls of Cecil D. Hylton High School outside Washington, it is hard to detect any trace of the divisions that once seemed fixtures in American society.

    Two girls, a Muslim in a headscarf and a strawberry blonde in tight jeans, stroll arm in arm. A Hispanic boy wearing a Barack Obama T-shirt gives a high-five to a black student with glasses and an Afro. The lanky homecoming queen, part Filipino and part Honduran, runs past on her way to band practice. The student body president, a son of Laotian refugees, hangs fliers about a bake sale. [Read rest of story here].

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:54 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Monday, March 09, 2009

    LEGISLATURE '09 EDUCATION

     

    Thursday, March 5, 2009
    By TERRENCE STUTZ / The Dallas Morning News

    AUSTIN – Advocates for more technology in the classroom – and fewer textbooks – are stepping up their arguments for change this year, trying to convince Texas lawmakers that the future of electronic textbooks is now.

    The technology push is getting a boost from a special House committee that warned about the consequences if Texas is stuck in the past when it comes to classroom materials. Among the reasons: the higher cost of printed books, the expense of transporting and storing them, and the fact that they can be outdated before students get them.

    "Our current system just seems outdated in an economy where you can put much of this content out digitally without all those costs," said Rep. Dan Branch, the Dallas Republican who led the committee. He is preparing to file legislation that gives school districts more leverage to purchase electronic textbooks. The goal is to enable local school officials to speed up their shift to e-books through downloads to student laptops, access to online servers or use of computer disks.

    'Slow evolution'

    Textbook publishers say that while they offer digital versions of many of their products, the expense of computers makes books a better option for some districts.

    "You can't put digital content into schools unless there are computers and laptops there to read it. That's the key – and it's happening in some districts but not in others," said Jay Diskey of the Association of American Publishers. "It's a slow evolution, and in a state like Texas, where there is a large enrollment, it is a very expensive proposition."

    While there is not a great deal of research on how well students do with electronic books, one recent study from Great Britain found that young students using e-books scored higher in both group and individual tests than those using print books. A pilot program in Texas – providing laptops to all students in selected schools in two dozen districts – also has been getting positive results.

    Irving is the only school district in the Dallas area participating in the Technology Immersion Pilot. The district is known as a technology leader in North Texas, having provided all its high school students with laptops for several years.

    Alice Owen, executive director of technology for the district, said there is no doubt that the emphasis on technology has paid off with improved student achievement and performance on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills.

    "Laptops have certainly been a major factor in our test score improvements," she said.

    While many textbooks are available in digital format to be accessed on computers, Owen said there are still a large number of books – particularly at the elementary school level – that aren't available in electronic form.

    "It makes more sense for publishers to offer their books electronically, so they can correct errors and update information every year – as opposed to printed textbooks, which are unchanged for several years," she said. "There is also so much more opportunity to enhance textbook experience."

    Diskey said publishers have been moving into the digital age as quickly as other industries, and most of them offer digital as well as traditional textbooks to school districts in Texas.

    One area of dispute is whether funds used for textbook purchases in the past should be used in the future to buy computers and hardware – an idea strongly opposed by publishers and the State Board of Education.

    Branch said lawmakers should be open to the idea of a combined state allotment for technology and textbooks, but he maintained that "most of the funding has to be focused on content, including software."

    House Public Education Committee Chairman Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, supports the technology push, although he cautions that some school districts are still more comfortable – financially and educationally – with regular textbooks.

    "Hopefully, we will evolve into an all-technology content delivery, but we're not there yet," he said. "It is tough to break some traditions in our schools, but we do have many districts that are ahead of the curve on technology."

    Eissler, who served on the select committee with Branch, said there appear to be obvious savings by shifting away from textbooks to technology – one of the reasons he sees "big changes" coming to the textbook market.

    For example, a joint venture of five higher education textbook publishers – called CourseSmart – is selling e-textbooks nationwide for prices that are on average half that of equivalent printed copies. While e-textbooks can be viewed on a laptop, another option is the Kindle reader, which allows readers to load books just as songs are loaded on an iPod.

    Readiness question

    Senate Education Committee Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, wants to be careful about how quickly the state spurs school districts to move into the digital age.

    "Not everyone is ready to do 21st-century technology," she said. "Some districts are very capable of going online, while others still have a difficult time.

    "I don't want to see us throw one out and replace it with the other but instead combine them and give districts the flexibility to decide when they want to use textbooks and when they would rather use technology."

    Branch said he intends to give districts plenty of leeway in bringing more technology into schools.

    "In certain grades, such as reading for first-graders, a textbook may be exactly the right tool. But in a computer graphics class in high school, the best tool is probably not a textbook," he said.

    "The point is, we need to be looking for more efficient ways to get course content to students in a way that is most appealing to them."

    Labels: ,

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 7:36 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Lawmakers propose overhaul of school accountability system

     

    By Kate Alexander
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Friday, March 06, 2009

    The high-stakes standardized tests that have induced fear and dread among Texas students in recent years would lose some of their bite in an overhaul of the state's school accountability system unveiled Thursday.

    Testing would still be used to measure student achievement in the system, proposed by the leaders of the education committees in the Legislature. And passing end-of-course exams would be required for graduation.

    But standardized test scores in the lower grades would no longer determine whether a student moves to the next grade — or whether a school stays open.

    "An accountability system shouldn't be a gotcha. We are not looking for ways to trip up schools," said House Public Education Committee Chairman Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands. "We're looking for ways to drive student achievement and help schools get better."

    Under the plan proposed by Eissler and Senate Education Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, the key measure of student achievement will be "growth," or showing that students are progressing toward the grade-level standard, even if they are below it. That progress could be examined over a three-year period.

    The "dirty little secret" of the current accountability system is that low-performing students are a liability for schools, said Julian Vasquez Heilig, a University of Texas education professor. But the promise of the growth model, he says, is that schools can be rewarded for helping students close the gap between where they are and where they need to be.

    "The potential is there for low-performing high schools to sparkle," Vasquez Heilig said.

    At the former Johnston High School in Austin, for example, student test scores improved dramatically last year after years of dismal results. But the progress was not enough to meet the state standards, and the school closed last year under the state's harshest accountability sanction. It is unclear whether Johnston could have stayed open if the growth model were in place at that time.

    The reprieve might not be enough to save two other Austin schools Pearce Middle School in East Austin and Reagan High School in Northeast Austin that are facing possible closure because they have been repeatedly rated academically unacceptable under the current accountability system.

    The new system, if approved by the Legislature, would not go into effect until 2011. The existing rules would stay in place until that time.

    Teacher groups said Thursday that they were still poring over the lengthy bill, but they lamented the continued emphasis on testing.

    "This bill does little to fix the key flaw in the current accountability system: the extreme emphasis placed on standardized test scores as the measure of progress for students and schools," Linda Bridges, president of the Texas office of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a statement.

    "Under this proposal our teachers and students would receive no relief from the severe loss of real instructional time caused by excessive practice testing, test preparation, and benchmark testing tied to the standardized state exams."

    There will be plenty of opportunity to change the proposal. Alternative language was already being drafted Thursday for the filed bill.

    Texas has been at the forefront of public school accountability since the early 1990s. Gov. George W. Bush used much of the state's system as a model for the federal No Child Left Behind Act he championed as president.

    Thursday's proposed revamp of the state's accountability system does away with some of the hallmarks of the Bush-era education reform, including lifting restrictions on social promotion.

    State law now requires children in the third, fifth and eighth grades to pass the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills to move on to the next grade, though that restriction can be, and has been, circumvented.

    The new proposal drops the state rules and gives local school districts the discretion to develop rules and procedures for promoting students.

    Sandy Kress, a pioneer of school accountability, said this new approach is not a repudiation of the past policies but an evolution.

    "It is dealing with some of the issues that have arisen and making the accountability system work better, work smarter," said Kress, who helped shepherd No Child Left Behind and served on a committee that recommended the proposed changes.

    "The accountability system may get tougher because of this," Kress said. "It may get more honest about whether students are on the path to reaching the real goal, not just passing a test."

    That "real goal," the bill's authors say, is preparing Texas students either for college or a skilled job.

    Today's system has created an "illusion of progress" by setting minimum passing standards that have no connection to what Texas graduates need to know to succeed in college or the work force, Shapiro said.

    In the graduating class of 2007, 43 percent of graduates who followed at least the state's recommended high school program were not college-ready in one subject or more, according to a report by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

    Shapiro and Eissler said the aim is to develop a less-rigid system that gives students more options and rewards schools for more things than test performance, such as high-quality programs for fine arts or career and technology education. The well-known school rankings, ranging from "exemplary" to "unacceptable," would be eliminated.

    "A Texas high school diploma doesn't mean as much to employers as it did in years past," said Drew Scheberle of the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce. The focus on college- and workplace-readiness in the proposal should better prepare Texas graduates for high-skilled jobs in the future and help Austin to recruit those jobs, Scheberle said.

    Labels: ,

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 7:32 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Sunday, March 08, 2009

    Legislation proposes overhauling Texas top 10 percent law

     

    Catie Beck | Austin 8 News
    3/4/2009

    The University of Texas at Austin is a top choice for many high school seniors but some state lawmakers say it's not a likely choice for prospective students at all if they don't graduate in the top 10 percent of their class.

    "If you aren't in the top ten percent of your class than you have no chance or little chance of going to the University of Texas," Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, said.

    Sen. Shapiro wants to improve chances for students by capping the number of top 10 percent admissions to 50 percent of an incoming freshman class.

    "Many of them have other gifts other than being in the top 10 percent." Rep. Rob Eisler, R-The Woodlands, said.

    This fall the University of Texas had over 80 percent of its freshman class from the top 10 percent of their high school graduating class. Students have mixed reviews about it overall.

    "I'd say it's a good idea. Even though people may be mad at first it will be better in the long run," UT freshman Meghan Lindsey said.

    Others who were admitted because of the rule say that changing it now would disappoint many hard working students.

    "To be in the top 10 percent and to be performing well and to be told the rule had changed � that would bring stress that you don't need," UT sophomore Dean Pham said.

    Shapiro said by 2011 the University of Texas could be getting 100 percent of its students through the 10 percent rule. She said not only is Texas losing talented students of other varieties but the university is also losing Texas students all together.

    "They're going other places because they can't get in to Texas," Shapiro said.

    UT President William Powers supports the reform bill. He considers the current situation a "crisis on our campus." Minority groups like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) say getting rid of the top 10 percent rule would discourage minorities from attending college.

    More information:

    The top 10 percent law was adopted in 1997 after a federal appeals court ruling and a subsequent state attorney general's opinion effectively ended affirmative action practices in Texas. It was argued that the new law would bring about diversity without including race or ethnicity as a factor in admissions process.

    Two 2003 U.S. Supreme Court rulings ruled in favor of a holistic review of student applicants, considering race and ethnicity permitted by the law to the full extent. The UT President says if the state decides to adopt the rulings of Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger the university can better diversify the student body.

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:28 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    A 21st-century caution

     

    Very interesting piece. May have relevance here in Texas as we begin seeing the goals of various public education reforms being presented. The issue of 21st century skills in the Texas context also seem to be void of biliteracy skills.

    -Patricia


    February 24, 2009
    Boston Globe

    STATE education commissioner Mitchell Chester says he is surprised at the sharp criticism of a task force proposal to introduce "21st-century skills" - such as media literacy, critical thinking, and working in groups - into local classrooms. But he shouldn't be shocked. The 21st-century skills movement could return Massachusetts to an era of low academic standards.

    In November, a task force made its case why "straight academic content is no longer enough" to ensure student success in college and the workplace. The authors urged state education officials to introduce 21st-century skills into teacher training and curriculum guides. Since then, state education officials have elaborated little on what that might mean in practice. But critics, including the nonprofit Pioneer Institute, have made a powerful case that the plan could set back education reform efforts in Massachusetts by advancing a set of soft, vague skills at the expense of academic content.

    Before the Education Reform Act of 1993, Massachusetts classrooms were adrift, without solid curriculum frameworks or a comprehensive statewide test to assess student progress and diagnose deficiencies in knowledge. After great efforts to implement standards-based education and create a graduation requirement test, Massachusetts students routinely outperform their national counterparts and perform on a par with the best international students, including those in Japan and Singapore. The first duty of the state Board of Education, which is scheduled to hear an update tomorrow on 21st-century skills, should be to protect these hard-won gains.

    Ten years ago, students in Connecticut outperformed their Massachusetts counterparts on a national reading assessment test. But after education policy makers there shifted focus from an emphasis on content knowledge to the "how to" methods favored by the 21st-century skills movement, test scores plummeted. Acknowledging the error, Connecticut educators are reintroducing methods favored in Massachusetts.

    In fact, there is strong evidence that emphasis on basic skills leads to success at reasoning and problem-solving. Fourth-graders here ranked second worldwide in science and tied for third in math last year on the sophisticated Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study exam.

    Given such success, the burden should be on 21st-century skills proponents to prove that their methods offer a better way to prepare students for college and the workplace. So far, they haven't done that. And while they say 21st-century skills will only complement the state's current efforts, it's not clear that the approach can be implemented without de-emphasizing academic content.

    Teachers and parents across the state just don't know enough about 21st-century skills. The unnerving part is that the proponents don't seem to know much more.

    Labels:

    posted by Patricia Lopez at 9:13 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    NYTIMES BOOK REVIEW Why the Poor Stay Poor

     

    NYTIMES BOOK REVIEW
    Why the Poor Stay Poor


    MORE THAN JUST RACE
    By RICHARD THOMPSON FORD
    Published: March 6, 2009

    Review of
    Being Black and Poor in the Inner City
    By William Julius Wilson
    190 pp. W. W. Norton & Company. $24.95



    When the nation’s first black president took the oath of office,
    surrounded by the grandeur of the National Mall, it was easy to forget
    that one of the country’s most isolated and impoverished black ghettos
    was a few short blocks away. The poverty, violence and hopelessness in
    America’s inner cities have become increasingly dire in the four
    decades since the height of the civil rights movement. But as Barack
    Obama’s victory suggests, racial prejudice is less severe today than
    ever before. Why haven’t the problems of the ghettos improved along
    with race relations generally?

    Conservatives have a ready answer. Racism is not the problem; instead,
    a pervasive culture of instant gratification, violence and loose
    morals ­ think gangsta rap ­ keeps poor blacks from enjoying the
    American dream, not white racists. Liberals have a more charitable,
    but unfortunately more obscure, rejoinder. Poor blacks today suffer
    from covert racism, unconscious racism, institutional racism,
    environmental racism and a host of other theoretically abstruse
    “racisms” that don’t involve cross-burning white supremacists or crude
    Archie Bunker-style bigots ­ and may not even involve racial animus or
    discrimination. Each side has little patience for the claims of the
    other. Conservatives reject the idea of structural and institutional
    racism as an intellectual’s way of playing the race card. Liberals
    attack any emphasis on the dysfunctional culture of the poor as
    “blaming the victim.”

    In “More Than Just Race,” the Harvard sociologist William Julius
    Wilson recaps his own important research over the past 20 years as
    well as some of the best urban sociology of his peers to make a
    convincing case that both institutional and systemic impediments and
    cultural deficiencies keep poor blacks from escaping poverty and the ghetto.

    The systemic impediments include both the legacy of racism and
    dramatic economic changes that have fallen with disproportionate
    severity on poor blacks. State-enforced racial discrimination created
    the ghetto: in the early 20th century local governments separated the
    races into segregated neighborhoods by force of law, and later, whites
    used private agreements and violent intimidation to keep blacks out of
    white neighborhoods. Worst, and most surprising of all, the federal
    government played a major role in encouraging the racism of private
    actors and state governments. Until the 1960s, federal housing
    agencies engaged in racial red­lining, refusing to guarantee mortgages
    in inner-city neighborhoods; private lenders quickly followed suit.

    Meanwhile, economic and demographic changes that had nothing to do
    with race aggravated the problems of the ghetto. Encouraged by
    recently built highways and inexpensive real estate, middle-class
    residents and industry left the inner city to relocate to roomier and
    less costly digs in the suburbs during the ’60s and ’70s. Those jobs
    that remained available to urban blacks further dwindled as companies
    replaced well-paid and unionized American workers with automation and
    cheaper overseas labor. The new economy produced most of its jobs at
    the two poles of the wage scale: high-paying jobs for the well
    educated and acculturated (lawyers, bankers, management consultants)
    and low-paying jobs for those with little education or skills (fast
    food, telemarketing, janitorial services).

    And, as Wilson argued in an earlier book, “The Declining Significance
    of Race,”the success of the civil rights movement inadvertently made
    things worse for the most disadvantaged. After federal law prohibited
    housing discrimination, successful blacks began to leave the inner
    city for many of the same reasons whites did: in search of better
    schools, less crime, lower taxes and a leafier landscape. This left
    the least well off behind in ghettos that were both more socially
    isolated and more economically depressed than ever.

    Today many ghetto residents have almost no contact with mainstream
    American society or the normal job market. As a result, they have
    developed distinctive and often dysfunctional social norms. The work
    ethic, investment in the future and deferred gratification make no
    sense in an environment in which legitimate employment at a living
    wage is impossible to find and crime is an everyday hazard (and
    temptation). Men, unable to support their families, abandon them;
    women become resigned to single motherhood; children suffer from
    broken homes and from the bad examples set by both peers and adults.
    And this dysfunctional behavior reinforces negative racial
    stereotypes, making it all the harder for poor blacks to find decent jobs.

    Wilson criticizes the liberals and black power activists who attacked
    as racist Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s prescient report “The Negro
    Family: The Case for National Action” (1965). According to Wilson, the
    vitriolic condemnation of the Moynihan Report effectively closed off a
    serious academic focus on the culture of poverty for decades, robbing
    policy makers of a complete and nuanced account of the causes of
    ghetto poverty. But he argues that the legacy of racism and ­changes
    in the economy matter more than the dysfunctional culture of the
    ghetto. And he rejects the argument that the black poor are
    responsible for their predicament, insisting that an aggressive public
    policy response is necessary to break the cycle of poverty.

    “More Than Just Race” is somewhat ponderous and academic in style; too
    often the book details an important and fascinating question only to
    end inconclusively, with a call for “further research.” But this is
    more than made up for by its considerable substantive virtues: it is
    straightforward, accessible and sensible, free of the ideological cant
    and posturing that often mar even serious academic studies of racial issues.

    At heart, Wilson is a Great Society liberal, so it’s easy to
    understand why conservatives might resist his analysis. But his
    suggestion that racism is less to blame for black poverty than are
    race-neutral changes in the labor market and his attempt to
    rehabilitate the study of the culture of poverty have made him a
    controversial figure in liberal academic and civil rights circles. As
    Wilson notes, some on the left reject any cultural explanation of
    black poverty ­ even one as sympathetic as that in the Moynihan Report
    or Wilson’s own ­ as blaming the victim. And the accusation of racism
    turns heads and grabs headlines, whereas Wilson’s complex and
    multifaceted investigation requires a book-length exposition.

    Moreover, racism, unlike a complicated web of economic, demographic
    and cultural forces, triggers a legal response: instead of persuading
    recalcitrant legislators and voters to support policy reform, liberals
    can simply insist that the black poor, as victims of race
    discrimination, have a right to redress that courts must enforce,
    regardless of popular opposition. But the law’s arm is not long enough
    to reach bigotry that occurred in the past, nor can it get a grip on
    the economic and demographic changes that have hollowed out America’s
    inner cities. The urban poor need remedies that judges cannot order:
    public and private investment to create jobs that pay a living wage,
    training to help them learn new skills and understand the job market,
    and most of all a chance to move into racially and economically
    integrated neighborhoods where there are better opportunities and
    healthier cultural norms. Wilson’s levelheaded, thorough and
    unemotional analysis should help such badly needed policies prevail in
    the court of public opinion.

    Wilson says the legacy of racism and changes in the economy matter
    more than the culture of the ghetto.

    Richard Thompson Ford is a professor of law at Stanford University.
    His book “The Race Card: How Bluffing About Bias Makes Race Relations
    Worse” is being published in paperback this month.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 11:38 AM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Friday, March 06, 2009

    Lawmakers propose overhaul of school accountability system

     

    TEXAS LEGISLATURE
    Lawmakers propose overhaul of school accountability system

    By Kate Alexander
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

    Friday, March 06, 2009

    The high-stakes standardized tests that have induced fear and dread among Texas students in recent years would lose some of their bite in an overhaul of the state's school accountability system unveiled Thursday.

    Testing would still be used to measure student achievement in the system, proposed by the leaders of the education committees in the Legislature. And passing end-of-course exams would be required for graduation.

    But standardized test scores in the lower grades would no longer determine whether a student moves to the next grade — or whether a school stays open.

    "An accountability system shouldn't be a gotcha. We are not looking for ways to trip up schools," said House Public Education Committee Chairman Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands. "We're looking for ways to drive student achievement and help schools get better."

    Under the plan proposed by Eissler and Senate Education Chairwoman Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, the key measure of student achievement will be "growth," or showing that students are progressing toward the grade-level standard, even if they are below it. That progress could be examined over a three-year period.

    The "dirty little secret" of the current accountability system is that low-performing students are a liability for schools, said Julian Vasquez Heilig, a University of Texas education professor. But the promise of the growth model, he says, is that schools can be rewarded for helping students close the gap between where they are and where they need to be.

    "The potential is there for low-performing high schools to sparkle," Vasquez Heilig said.

    At the former Johnston High School in Austin, for example, student test scores improved dramatically last year after years of dismal results. But the progress was not enough to meet the state standards, and the school closed last year under the state's harshest accountability sanction. It is unclear whether Johnston could have stayed open if the growth model were in place at that time.

    The reprieve might not be enough to save two other Austin schools Pearce Middle School in East Austin and Reagan High School in Northeast Austin that are facing possible closure because they have been repeatedly rated academically unacceptable under the current accountability system.

    The new system, if approved by the Legislature, would not go into effect until 2011. The existing rules would stay in place until that time.

    Teacher groups said Thursday that they were still poring over the lengthy bill, but they lamented the continued emphasis on testing.

    "This bill does little to fix the key flaw in the current accountability system: the extreme emphasis placed on standardized test scores as the measure of progress for students and schools," Linda Bridges, president of the Texas office of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a statement.

    "Under this proposal our teachers and students would receive no relief from the severe loss of real instructional time caused by excessive practice testing, test preparation, and benchmark testing tied to the standardized state exams."

    There will be plenty of opportunity to change the proposal. Alternative language was already being drafted Thursday for the filed bill.

    Texas has been at the forefront of public school accountability since the early 1990s. Gov. George W. Bush used much of the state's system as a model for the federal No Child Left Behind Act he championed as president.

    Thursday's proposed revamp of the state's accountability system does away with some of the hallmarks of the Bush-era education reform, including lifting restrictions on social promotion.

    State law now requires children in the third, fifth and eighth grades to pass the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills to move on to the next grade, though that restriction can be, and has been, circumvented.

    The new proposal drops the state rules and gives local school districts the discretion to develop rules and procedures for promoting students.

    Sandy Kress, a pioneer of school accountability, said this new approach is not a repudiation of the past policies but an evolution.

    "It is dealing with some of the issues that have arisen and making the accountability system work better, work smarter," said Kress, who helped shepherd No Child Left Behind and served on a committee that recommended the proposed changes.

    "The accountability system may get tougher because of this," Kress said. "It may get more honest about whether students are on the path to reaching the real goal, not just passing a test."

    That "real goal," the bill's authors say, is preparing Texas students either for college or a skilled job.

    Today's system has created an "illusion of progress" by setting minimum passing standards that have no connection to what Texas graduates need to know to succeed in college or the work force, Shapiro said.

    In the graduating class of 2007, 43 percent of graduates who followed at least the state's recommended high school program were not college-ready in one subject or more, according to a report by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

    Shapiro and Eissler said the aim is to develop a less-rigid system that gives students more options and rewards schools for more things than test performance, such as high-quality programs for fine arts or career and technology education. The well-known school rankings, ranging from "exemplary" to "unacceptable," would be eliminated.

    "A Texas high school diploma doesn't mean as much to employers as it did in years past," said Drew Scheberle of the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce. The focus on college- and workplace-readiness in the proposal should better prepare Texas graduates for high-skilled jobs in the future and help Austin to recruit those jobs, Scheberle said.

    kalexander@statesman.com; 445-3618

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 3:42 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Thursday, March 05, 2009

    Shapleigh speaks at pro-immigration conference

     

    10:51 AM Thu, Feb 26, 2009
    Marcus Funk E-mail News tips

    Immigration activists and Democratic lawmakers gathered this morning to promote "practical immigration policy." They said that immigrants, both documented and undocumented, provide great assets to the Texas economy, and that restricting or persecuting them would be a mistake.

    They said a number of bills under review right now - including efforts grant immigration enforcement duties to local law enforcement, and proposals to restrict non-citizen access to public universities - are unhelpful and, occasionally, mean spirited.

    "Every single person in this room stands for strong, safe communities. And we believe that the border is a place where we need to differentiate and talk about safety one way, and immigration another way," said Sen. Eliot Shapleigh, D-El Paso (pictured above). "We will beat these mean-spirited bills, and we will keep Texas the friendly, welcoming place it has always been."

    Lawmakers and lobbyists did not name names or highlight individual bills, and organizers with the Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition said they were currently speaking in general terms. But specific initiatives were behind each of their talking points.

    - First was an effort to grant identical drivers licenses to citizens and non-citizens, which is encapsulated in HB1619, a bill by Rep. Jessica Farrar, D-Houston. DPS currently requires non-citizens to use different licenses, which lobbyists say can generate racial profiling.

    - Opposing efforts to restrict non-citizen access to public universities, which relates to HB418 by Rep. Betty Brown, R-Terrell, HB50 by Rep. Debbie Riddle, R-Houston and HB255, by Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler.

    - Opposing efforts to increase local law enforcement authority over immigration law, which speakers said was a federal responsibility. That relates to Riddle's HB49, and a few other proposals.

    - Opposing efforts to regulate or penalize employers for not verifying employee's citizenship, or for knowingly hiring undocumented workers. Those have ties to Riddle's HB48, Berman's HB266 and HB658, by Rep. Jim Jackson, R-Carrollton.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 11:11 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    “Meeting the Challenge: Promising Practices for Reducing the Dropout Rate in Massachusetts Schools and Districts”

     

    Published Online: March 3, 2009
    Published in Print: March 4, 2009

    “Meeting the Challenge: Promising Practices for Reducing the Dropout Rate in Massachusetts Schools and Districts”


    An examination of Massachusetts high schools that have lowered their dropout rates shows that they used key strategies that helped make a difference.

    For a report issued last month, the Cambridge, Mass.-based Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy examined 11 high schools in nine districts.

    A frequently cited strategy employed by high schools in the study was using data to identify students who were deemed to be at risk of dropping out and designing interventions to help them, such as credit recovery, or extra academic or social support.

    Also cited by many schools as helpful were building strong connections between school and college or careers, providing strong alternatives to traditional high schools, and forging strong collaboration among faculty members and with community partners.

    By Catherine Gewertz
    Vol. 28, Issue 23, Pages 4-5

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:35 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    UT president warns of consequences to automatic-admission law

     

    HIGHER EDUCATION

    UT president warns of consequences to automatic-admission law

    Freshman summer class, out-of-state students and eventually athletics are at risk, Powers says.

    By Ralph K.M. Haurwitz
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Thursday, March 05, 2009

    The University of Texas might be forced to cancel its entering summer class this year, stop accepting students from other states and countries, and eventually abolish athletics — including football — if the state's automatic-admission law is not scaled back by the state Legislature, the school's president warned Wednesday.

    "I'm trying not to let that happen," UT President William Powers Jr. said of such steps. "We're not at that point. But we're at the point of triage in making those kinds of decisions."

    Powers made the comments after testifying before the Texas Senate Higher Education Committee, which voted 4-1 to approve a measure limiting a state law that guarantees a student graduating in the top 10 percent of a Texas high school admission to any public university in the state.

    Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, the author of the proposed legislation, said it simply isn't fair to decide admission on the basis of a single factor. Her measure would allow a university to limit the number of students admitted under the top 10 percent law to half of its admissions from Texas.

    With UT's support, the proposal now goes to the full Senate, which approved similar legislation two years ago. That attempt later failed in the House.

    The flagship campus in Austin is increasingly the school of choice for students in the top 10 percent. Eighty-one percent of UT's freshmen from Texas enrolled under the law this academic year, and Powers said he expected that figure to rise to 86 percent for the entering class this fall.

    Under Shapiro's plan, UT would admit students ranking in the top 1 percent, the top 2 percent and so forth until half of the slots were filled. The remaining slots would be filled through what she called a "holistic" examination of the pool of applicants, taking into account leadership, musical and artistic talent, race, ethnicity and other factors.

    Without some change to the law, UT will be forced to reject all Texas high school graduates who are not in the top 10 percent by 2013, according to a report by the university. By 2015, the report said, there will be no room in the freshman class for students from other states or countries.

    "It has become a crisis for us," Powers said. "We're simply out of space."

    Asked about athletics, he said such programs, including football, might also have to be eliminated eventually. Most football players do not rank in the top 10 percent.

    University officials thought they had a good chance at scaling back the law two years ago, but the House crushed those hopes at the 11th hour of the legislative session.

    The top 10 percent law was enacted by the Legislature in 1997 in an effort to boost minority enrollment after a federal court ruling effectively halted the use of affirmative action in admissions. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2003, in a case involving the University of Michigan, that race and ethnicity could be considered, and UT subsequently began doing so.

    Enrollment of Hispanics and blacks has not risen significantly since 1997, but many minority lawmakers nevertheless like the law's clear, merit-based guarantee of access for students at every high school in the state — including some with a high proportion of minority students.

    Shapiro's plan would apply to all 35 public universities in the state, but no other schools have complained that they can not accommodate the top ten percent students who want to attend.

    The Texas NAACP called for no changes to the law.

    The law might need to be tweaked, perhaps by capping the number of students who could enroll from each high school, said Luis Figueroa, legislative staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

    "A 50 percent cap is not a tweak," Figueroa said. "It's a wholesale retreat from the top 10 percent plan."

    rhaurwitz@statesman.com; 445-3604

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:35 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Study: Texas sets bar low for students on TAKS

     

    EDUCATION
    Study: Texas sets bar low for students on TAKS
    Scores needed to pass state achievement test lower than many other states.
    By Molly Bloom
    AMERICAN STATESMAN STAFF

    Thursday, February 19, 2009

    The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 was meant to instill accountability in schools, to ensure that students — no matter what their race, ethnicity or family income level — "achieve proficiency" in reading and math by 2014.

    But by leaving it up to each state to define proficiency, the law gives the false impression of creating a national accountability system, according to a report being released today.

    Texas' implementation of the federal school accountability system is one of the most lenient in the country, report researchers from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, and the Kingsbury Center at the Northwest Evaluation Association, an Oregon research center.

    The results, from an analysis of test scores and other information from 18 elementary schools nationwide, are similar to those reported in other studies. Research by the National Center for Education Statistics found that in 2003, Mississippi was the only state with an easier fourth-grade reading standard than Texas, assuming all states test the same skills.

    If schools that receive certain federal funds have students in third grade and up who fail to achieve proficiency in reading and math by 2014 or make progress toward meeting that goal, they can be subject to sanctions that include having to pay to have students tutored or transferred to other schools.

    States send the U.S. Department of Education their own plans to reach that 2014 goal, establish their own interim targets, create their own tests and determine how many questions students must get right to pass. States make their own rules about how many students in particular groups a school has to have for the school be held accountable for the group's test scores.

    That means that a school given a stamp of approval under the federal system in one state could be deemed a failure in another.

    In Texas, the federal goals are based on passing rates on the reading and math sections of the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, as well as graduation, attendance and test participation rates. The federal system is separate from Texas' system that rates schools as unacceptable, acceptable, recognized or exemplary.

    Today's report also found that Texas requires the number of students in racial, ethnic, linguistic and economic groups to be relatively large in order for a school to be held accountable for test scores in those groups. Schools are held accountable for a group's performance only if those students number more than 200, or number at least 50 and make up at least 10 percent of a campus's enrollment.

    The Fordham and Kingsbury researchers wrote that Texas' TAKS passing score is relatively low compared to other states'. The researchers did not evaluate a new policy under which Texas schools can count students who are projected to pass the TAKS in subsequent years as having passed in the current year for federal accountability purposes.

    Requiring students to answer more questions correctly could help improve academic achievement, but only if Texas also improves teacher preparation, professional development and curricula, University of Texas education researcher Ed Fuller said.

    "Most people would probably agree that our proficiency standards are too low," Fuller said. "But if you just set standards high and don't do anything else ... you'll have a disaster on your hands."

    Passing scores are only one part of the picture, said study researcher John Cronin.

    "Just fiddling with one of the factors in the situation doesn't solve the problem," he said. "You have to deal with the whole system."

    mbloom@statesman.com; 445-3620

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:22 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Latinos have opportunity to transform U.S. society

     

    Latinos have opportunity to transform U.S. society
    By NICOLAS KANELLOS
    Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
    March 3, 2009, 8:22PM

    Former San Antonio mayor and HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros recently surprised the Washington audience at the launch for a new book he edited, Latinos and the Nation’s Future, by declaring that the country’s first Hispanic president “has already been born.”

    Of course, surprise is unjustified. The inauguration of the first black President was a tangible reminder for the entire country, and the rest of the world, of what demographers have long known: The face of America is changing. And the majority of that change comes from Latinos.

    Just look at U.S. Census projections based on Latinos already in this country and it becomes clear that it’s time to accept the premise of inevitable and monumental Latino population growth. What exactly this means for the future of the country is still uncertain. But here’s one guarantee: The United States’ ballooning Latino growth will have significant implications for practically all segments of social and economic life in the United States.

    Mainstream dialogue about Latino population growth has been dominated for years by debates over immigration, much of it very nasty, and completely focused on negative potential. But consider this — given the falling birth rate and rising population of retired workers in the United States, continued immigration is actually what fuels the country’s economic engine and allows it to grow and expand. And let’s not forget that it’s young Latinos entering the workforce as the economy heals who will pay the Social Security benefits of our aging population as they head into retirement.
    It’s time to engage in a productive national dialogue about what this Latino growth means for the country, and how it will inevitably shape the American Dream of the future.

    Here are my predictions:

    While English will remain the “official” language of the United States, Spanish will become the “unofficial” second national language. After all, at universities, Spanish departments are already separating themselves from foreign language divisions in recognition that Spanish has always been an important language in this country, and has an expanded role in the future.

    As for the media — and this holds true for other corporate sectors as well — economic growth will require accessing Hispanic markets. Just look at Univision if you need proof of the economic potential of marketing to the Latino population: The current programming originating in Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela, and the Spanish-speaking United States, and distributed from Los Angeles and Miami, is unrivaled by any of the English-language networks. If you are not a native Spanish speaker you may never have heard of Univision’s show Sábado Gigante, but it actually dwarfs shows like David Letterman in audience size.

    Latinos will also forge new paths in the work force. As long as U.S. Hispanics remain disproportionately working class, they will ascend to the leadership of movements for worker’s rights and unions, as well as reform of immigration policy. Despite the high number of uneducated Hispanic immigrants and natives, their children already make up the fastest growing segment of college enrollments, in spite of unusually high dropout rates. Their children are already on the first rungs of the ladder to leadership in industry, entertainment, communications and education. Soon, they will also become part of a rupture of the glass ceilings in these fields.

    The growing economic integration of the Americas will lead to cultural integration as well: The history, culture and civilization of Hispanics will increasingly be seen as part of the national American culture, one shared by all. Of course, the rise of Hispanics into the middle class will not be accomplished through the traditional path of leaving the “old country” culture behind in order to become “Americans,” purified through a melting-pot process. In fact, the opposite will be true; a bilingual-bicultural citizenry capable of navigating cultural differences at many levels will emerge. Dual citizenship will be more common and university systems will expand across borders to prepare graduates capable of operating in this new culture.

    Over time, American racism will no longer limit the access of Hispanics to American opportunities, for their sheer numbers will transform politics and policy, once the population reaches voting age. But more important than demographics and voting power, Hispanic culture has always fostered a dynamic of racial and cultural blending. The Latino influence will further accelerate interracial and interethnic marriage, and along with it the tendency to identify with the rest of the countries and cultures of the Americas rather than solely with Europe.

    Latinos have the potential to create a new society in the Western Hemisphere that goes beyond national boundaries or cultures. This society will be the inspiration for a New American Dream.
    Kanellos is the director of Arte Público Press of the University of Houston, and contributor to the new book Latinos and the Nation’s Future.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 10:11 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    US Census Bureau News reports that the percentage of Latino college students has increased through 2007

     

    Nota: The latest press release from the US Census Bureau News reports that the percentage of Latino college students has increased through 2007. The report containing the info, School Enrollment in the United States: 2007, is the source of the information. To quote the first paragraph from the press release:

    "Hispanic students comprised 12 percent of full-time college students (both undergraduate and graduate students) in 2007, up from 10 percent in 2006, according to U.S. Census Bureau tables released today. Hispanics comprise 15 percent of the nation's total population."

    The effect of the relatively increasing number of Latino college students is not only being felt here in Texas but is a nationwide process. I've only glanced the actual tables reporting the data, the trend, but it's available for those interested in viewing it in greater detail. The educational data for Latinos and all other population groups may be accessed at this link:



    URL: <http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/.html>.


    _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/




    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2009


    Robert Bernstein
    CB09-36
    Public Information Office
    Detailed tables
    301-763-3030/763-3762 (fax)
    e-mail:

    Hispanics Become More Prevalent on College Campuses

    Hispanic students comprised 12 percent of full-time college students
    (both undergraduate and graduate students) in 2007, up from 10 percent in
    2006, according to U.S. Census Bureau tables released today. Hispanics
    comprise 15 percent of the nation's total population.

    School Enrollment in the United States: 2007 contains eight detailed
    tables based on statistics collected in the October School Enrollment
    Supplement to the Current Population Survey. The national-level data are
    shown by characteristics such as age, sex, race, Hispanic origin, family
    income, type of college, employment status and vocational course
    enrollment.

    Women continue their majority status, comprising 55 percent of
    undergraduates and 60 percent of graduate students.

    Other highlights:

    -- In 2007, 53 percent of Hispanic 4-year-olds were enrolled in
    nursery school, up from 43 percent in 1997 and 21 percent in 1987.

    -- In 2007, 27 percent of the population 3 or older were enrolled
    in classes -- from nursery school to graduate studies.

    -- More than half (59 percent) of all 4-year-olds and 39 percent
    of 3-year-olds were enrolled in nursery school.

    -- Students in grades one through 12 made up 64 percent of people
    3 and older enrolled in school.

    -- Students 35 or older comprised 15 percent of people enrolled in
    college. They made up 7 percent of the full-time college
    students and 36 percent of those attending part time.

    -X-

    Statistics from sample surveys are subject to sampling and nonsampling
    error. For more information on the source of the data and accuracy of the
    estimates, standard errors and confidence intervals, go to
    <http://www.census.gov/apsd/techdoc/cps/cpsmar07.pdf >.

    _____________________________________________________________________________________
    Editor’s note: The information can be accessed at
    <http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/school.html >.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 8:17 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Hispanics one-fifth of K-12 students

     

    Hispanics one-fifth of K-12 students

    By Hope Yen, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON — Roughly one-fourth of the nation's kindergartners are Hispanic, evidence of an accelerating trend that now will see minority children become the majority by 2023.
    Census data released Thursday also showed that Hispanics make up about one-fifth of all K-12 students. Hispanics' growth and changes in the youth population are certain to influence political debate, from jobs and immigration to the No Child Left Behind education, for years.

    The ethnic shifts in school enrollment are most evident in the West. States such as Arizona, California and Nevada are seeing an influx of Hispanics due to immigration and higher birth rates.

    Minority students in that region exceed non-Hispanic whites at the pre-college grade levels, with about 37% of the students Hispanic. Hispanics make up 54% of the students in New Mexico, 47% in California, 44% in Texas and 40% in Arizona.

    In 2007, more than 40% of all students in K-12 were minorities — Hispanics, blacks, Asian-Americans and others. That's double the percentage of three decades ago.

    In colleges, Hispanics made up 12% of full-time undergraduate and graduate students, 2% more than in 2006. Still, that is short of Hispanics' 15% representation in the total U.S. population.

    "The future of our education system depends on how we can advance Hispanics through the ranks," said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "In many cases it's going to be a challenge, because they are the children of immigrants, and their English is not as strong. Many have parents without a high school or college education."

    Minorities are projected to become the majority of the overall U.S. population by 2042. For minority kids, that shift is seen coming in 2023, seven years earlier than the previous estimate, from 2004. The accelerated timetable is due to immigration among Hispanics and Asians, and declining birth rates among non-Hispanic whites.

    Hispanics account for more than 23% of kindergartners in private and public schools, according to 2007 data. That is more than triple Hispanics' percentage in the 1970s, the height of white baby boom enrollment in elementary and high school.

    More Hispanic kindergartners in 2007 were U.S.-born than foreign-born, assuring them of citizenship that will make them eligible to vote by 2020.

    The changing demographics offer opportunity and political risks for Barack Obama, the nation's first African-American president, and emerging Republicans such as 37-year-old Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, the first Indian-American elected to statewide office.

    Obama, who took two-thirds of the Hispanic vote, is channeling billions of federal dollars to improve schools, reduce the dropout rate and make college more affordable by increasing the maximum Pell Grant for low-income students to $5,550.

    Yet his administration has been sketchy when it comes to improving classroom performance and overhauling the No Child Left Behind Act. It sets goals for schools so every student can read and do math on grade level by 2014.

    The education law has major implications for both black and Hispanic students, including those who speak English as a second language, because they tend to lag whites in reading and math scores.

    Obama has been largely quiet on immigration reform, which could pave the way for citizenship for nearly 12 million illegal immigrants. Last week, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said she was not notified when federal agents conducted an immigration raid in Bellingham, Wash.

    Richard Fry, a senior researcher at the Pew Hispanic Center, said Hispanic growth cannot be ignored in policy debates for too long. While in recent elections Hispanics have only cast 6% of the total ballots, "Latinos' electoral power and participation levels clearly are going to grow," he said.

    Other findings from the data:

    • About 58% of children enrolled in grades K-12 are non-Hispanic whites, a group that represents 66% of the U.S. population. After Hispanics, blacks were the second-largest minority group enrolled in K-12 (15 percent), followed by Asians (4 percent).

    • Fifty-three percent of Hispanic 4-year-olds were enrolled in nursery school, compared with 43% in 1997 and 21% in 1987.

    The census data was based on the Current Population Survey. Data on U.S. regions and states came from the 2007 American Community Survey, the government's annual survey of about 3 million households.

    Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 7:45 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    Wednesday, March 04, 2009

    Another crack at top 10 percent law

     

    By Jason Embry | Wednesday, March 4, 2009, 07:02 AM

    Bill on university admissions gets first hearing this year … Tax cut yields future deficit, just as predicted … Michael Dukakis (yes, that one) works the Legislature

    House is in at 10 a.m. Senate is in at 11.

    Happy 59th birthday to Gov. Rick Perry.

    Austin weather from News 8 Austin’s Maureen McCann: Some morning clouds, otherwise partly sunny and warm. High of 82.

    The day ahead
    The Senate Higher Education Committee will meet at 8 a.m. in E1.012. At some point in the day, the committee will hear Senate Bill 175, which is Sen. Florence Shapiro’s effort to limit the number of students admitted under the rule saying students who finish in the top 10 percent of their high school classes are guaranteed admission to any state university. A similar proposal made it out of the Senate in 2007 but died in the House.

    Students who benefit from the top 10 percent rule have crowded admissions at the University of Texas. According to Statesman higher-ed guru Ralph Haurwitz, UT officials say that by 2013 they will have to reject all Texas students who are not in the Top 10 percent of their class. UT President Bill Powers and UT System Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa are expected to testify in favor of Shapiro’s legislation, which would cap at 50 percent the share of a freshman class that could be admitted under the law.

    Such a cap is popular in suburban areas such as Shapiro’s hometown of Plano, where parents say students who are plenty capable of succeeding at UT and want to go there, but did not finish in the top 10 percent in high school, must go out of state or to a private school.

    Shapiro’s got a busy day in front of her. At 1:30 p.m. she will hold a press conference to announce the filing of two bills intending to strengthen career and technology programs (read: programs in high schools and colleges for students who won’t get four-year degrees from universities).

    The Senate Transportation Committee will meet at 8 a.m. in E1.016. Among the bills that will be heard is SB 220, a proposal by Sen. Robert Nichols that would prohibit the Texas Department of Transportation from turning a free highway or highway lane into a toll road or tolled lane. The committee will also look at SB 384, which is Chairman John Carona’s effort to stop TxDOT from using its marketing and advertising dollars to influence public opinion about the use of toll roads.

    Click here to check out other Senate committee agendas.

    Click here for today’s House committee meetings.

    Gov. Rick Perry will speak at about 7:30 a.m. at a Capitol rally for the Texas Motion Picture Alliance.

    The Texas Council on Family Violence will deliver postcards to lawmakers’ offices urging full funding of violence services.

    Tuesday highlights
    A rather interesting discussion broke out in the House chamber about the state’s budget situation and how federal stimulus dollars might fit in.

    House leaders said the Legislative Budget Board is projecting an $8 billion “structural deficit” in the budget that lawmakers will have to write in the 2011 session, due in large part to the fact that in 2006 the state cut way more in property taxes than it raised in business and other taxes. This shouldn’t be too much of a surprise to anyone who was looking at the numbers at the time — Perry promised a multibillion-dollar net tax cut, and even though it hasn’t felt that way to many homeowners, that’s what Texas got. Also in 2006, lawmakers increased education spending by a couple billion dollars, which added to the cost of the property-tax cut.

    But back to this session. There was this key exchange Tuesday between Warren Chisum, the Appropriations Committee chairman in 2007, and Jim Pitts, the Appropriations chairman this year, about how the stimulus dollars would fit into the appropriations bill:

    Chisum: “You’re going to have some in the supplemental (appropriations) bill?”

    Pitts: “That is correct.”

    Chisum: “And you’re going to have some in the general appropriations bill?”

    Pitts: “That is correct.”

    Chisum: “Are we going to know if we’re entering into some of kind of long-term deal as created by this stimulus package, that we may have to fund in the out years, when the stimulus package has virtually evaporated?”

    Pitts: “The intent of Appropriations is to use the stimulus package (for) one-time only items.”

    Chisum: “And how are you going to make that one-time only?”

    Pitts: “Well, we will do maintenance projects to highways that are specifically one-time only.”

    Chisum: “But not all of it goes to highways, right?”

    Pitts: “No.”

    Chisum: “You’re going to have a lot of health and human services.”

    Pitts: “It’s going to be in every article (of the bill).”

    Chisum: “You’re going to have a program that increases services out there to the citizens, and yet if the stimulus package runs out, we’re going to cut those back, right?”

    Pitts: “That is correct. It is our intention to not expand any programs.”

    Pitts sounded an awful lot like Gov. Rick Perry in his answers, and Perry has taken a lot of heat for saying the stimulus money shouldn’t be used to extend programs, so it will be interesting to see where this goes.

    Elsewhere Tuesday, officials with the Dallas Fed said Texas could lose 300,000 jobs this year and unemployment could jump to 8 percent. That’s worse than others have projected, the Dallas Morning News reports.

    Former Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis walked the halls of the Capitol on Tuesday to talk to lawmakers about drug- and alcohol-treatment programs, according to the Statesman’s Mike Ward.

    Tweet of the Day: “Texas Attorney General Abbott office hands down a positive opinion on my bill proposal on illegal immigrants. Check Facebook.” — Sen. Dan Patrick.

    In the news
    “Even though the Texas Youth Commission’s incarcerated population has dropped by almost half in two years, the annual cost of locking up juvenile offenders in Texas has climbed to almost $99,000 per inmate — a 66 percent jump since 2006.” Austin American-Statesman

    “Democratic lawmakers asked Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday to accept unemployment money in the federal stimulus package even though that would mean expanding the program, which he opposes.” Associated Press

    “What some Democrats haven’t figured out yet is that (Tom) Schieffer brings two potential gifts for the state party: He can raise enough cash to discourage Democratic challengers, keeping the party’s March primary positive while Republican Gov. Rick Perry swaps mud with challenger U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison; And he can bring business moderates, particularly those who support public schools, back to the Democratic side.” Bud Kennedy

    “I’m worried. We’ve just elected a talented young president with many good instincts about how to propel our country forward, extend health care to more people, make our tax code fairer and launch a green industrial revolution. But do you know what I fear? I fear that his whole first term could be eaten by Citigroup, A.I.G., Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, and the whole housing/subprime credit bubble we inflated these past 20 years.” Thomas Friedman

    “In the early days of any administration, reporters reach out to the men and women who might become their sources over the next four years — then slather them with glowing profiles suitable for framing in their mothers’ bedrooms.” Politico

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 2:19 PM 2 comments Links to this post

     

     

    Texas spends $99k a year to lock up each troubled youth, figures show

     

    Texas spends $99k a year to lock up each troubled youth, figures show
    Lawmakers vow to cut costs at Texas Youth Commission.

    By Mike Ward
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

    Wednesday, March 04, 2009

    Even though the Texas Youth Commission's incarcerated population has dropped by almost half in two years, the annual cost of locking up juvenile offenders in Texas has climbed to almost $99,000 per inmate — a 66 percent jump since 2006.

    With a tight state budget and a tough economy, legislative leaders say that is too costly, and they are moving to cut spending at the commission.

    It is the latest controversy for an agency that has weathered several in the past two years, including a sexual-abuse and cover-up scandal and the revelation that it paid a contractor for hundreds of empty beds.

    "It's ridiculous," said state Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, chairman of the Senate Criminal Justice Committee and an author of the 2007 reforms that were prompted by the abuse scandal. "They've got twice as many correctional officers as they need. ... They've got a big, expensive central office staff they don't need. ... And they're just trying to protect their turf and bureaucracy."

    Commission officials say they have cut staff and are working with lawmakers.

    "I have done a lot of tightening and have reconfigured what kind of facilities we're operating," Youth Commission Executive Commissioner Cherie Townsend said Tuesday. "I don't know how much more can be reduced ... unless we decide to deliver the services differently."

    The cost increases were contained in a report by the Legislative Budget Board that tracked the incarceration costs in both the juvenile and adult corrections systems in Texas.

    In its budget requestfor the upcoming two-year period, the Youth Commission sought funding for more than 4,000 employees while estimating that its lockups would hold about 2,300 offenders. As part of its reforms, the Legislature mandated a staffing ratio of one guard for every 12 incarcerated youths.

    In February 2008, the agency had about 4,100 employees and about 2,400 incarcerated youths. At some lockups, that meant there were about twice the number of employees as youths, according to Youth Commission figures. In 2007, the agency had about 4,600 employees and about 4,100 incarcerated youths.

    "The increases in the TYC costs per day in fiscal years 2007 and 2008 are primarily a result of population decreases associated with the implementation" of the reforms, a Legislative Budget Board report states, noting that the multimillion-dollar costs of new video-surveillance cameras and other gear were not included.

    In contrast to the Youth Commission costs, the report says Texas taxpayers spent $17,337 for each adult offender in 2008, a 12 percent increase from 2006.

    Youth Commission spokesman Jim Hurley said the agency is working to reduce its spending without adversely affecting programs and operations that are focused primarily on rehabilitation, rather than incarceration, as many adult corrections programs are.

    "The cost of juvenile programs is generally higher than adults," he said.

    Townsend has assured legislative budget-writing committees in recent weeks that she is working to "right-size" the agency with layoffs and reassignments, at the Austin headquarters and at lockups across Texas.

    On Feb. 20, Townsend eliminated 260 jobs and reduced the population from 96 to 48 youths at the West Texas State School, where the sex abuse scandal that triggered the reforms started. By eliminating 720 positions since she was hired in October, Townsend said she has saved $25 million a year.

    The Youth Commission budget dropped from $314.9 million in 2008 to $237 million in 2009, according to Legislative Budget Board figures. Whitmire and others say it could be reduced further.

    "I think we could better deliver a lot of the services, a lot of the programs for these youth, in the communities and not at TYC units," Whitmire said.

    The agency's initial budget request was $249.1 million for 2010 and $253.8 million for 2011. But ata recent meeting, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, told Townsend to return with a pared-down version. She said she is in the process of complying.

    Although legislative leaders have yet to see the new figures, Senate budget writers are expected to begin discussing their own reductions, perhaps as soon as today — including discussions about possibly closing two additional lockups.

    mward@statesman.com; 445-1712

    posted by Dr. Angela Valenzuela at 2:18 PM 0 comments Links to this post

     

     
    This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, race, class, and gender issues with additional focus at the national level. This blog reflects the work and contributions of both University of Texas Professor Angela Valenzuela and UT Education, Policy and Planning graduate student, Patricia Lopez.
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