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In case you missed it..
April 18, 2008 | |
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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: “JEB BUSH’S REFORMS IMPROVED PUBLIC SCHOOLS”
“Jeb Bush’s Reforms Improved Public Schools” TOWNHALL By Dr. Matthew Ladner April 17, 2008 Is demography destiny? If so, say some experts, states with growing Hispanic populations seem doomed to fail, weighed down with ineffective school systems and abysmal test scores. One academic goes so far as to predict the Southwest will become the “ Tackling education reform in Florida is a tougher nut to crack than in Massachusetts or Children who do not learn to read in the early grades almost never recover academically, falling further and further behind with each passing grade. Reaching the middle school years, they literally cannot read their textbooks and often become academically frustrated and disruptive. Hopelessly behind, these children begin dropping out of school in large numbers in the eighth grade. Researchers, therefore, focus heavily on fourth grade reading scores as a bellweather for the effectiveness of schools. In 1998, a stunning 47 percent of Best of all, improvements among Hispanic and African American students helped to drive the overall results. Scores of The average Florida Hispanic student NAEP reading score (conducted in English mind you) is now higher than the overall scores of all students in Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Hawaii, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia. Hold on to your hats, because this list is likely to grow in coming years. Florida ’s free and reduced lunch eligible Hispanics outscore the average for all students in several of the above states, including In 2007, a family of four needed to earn $20,650 to be qualified for a free lunch, $38,203 for a reduced price lunch. Nationwide, approximately 80 percent of free or reduced lunch children qualify for a free lunch. Median family income in Likewise, If Florida can maintain the current momentum, Florida ’s reform record provides hope to a nation struggling to improve education and to close racial achievement gaps. Given the proper incentives, public schools can improve. Disadvantaged children can learn at levels previously thought reserved for the privileged. It now falls to current Governor Charlie Crist, who served as Florida Education Commissioner during the Jeb Bush administration, to keep these gains going. Demography need not become destiny, in the Southwest or elsewhere. Reform minded governors must realize that the education unions fought Jeb Bush every step of the way. The prize, an education reform legacy which is the envy of the nation, was well worth the fight.
Dr. Matthew Ladner is vice president of research for the Goldwater Institute and an expert on educational reform and school choice. Dr. Ladner holds a Ph.D. from the University of To view online, please visit http://www.townhall.com/columnists/DrMatthewLadner/2008/04/17/jeb_bushs_reforms_improved_public_schools?page=full&comments=true. For more information on how the Foundation for |
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[...] http://flvirtualfamilies.edublogs.org/2008/04/18/in-case-you-missed-it/Children who do not learn to read in the early grades almost never recover academically, falling further and further behind with each passing grade. Reaching the middle school years, they literally cannot read their textbooks and often … [...]
[...] ?By Dr. Matthew Ladner April 17, 2008 Is demography destiny? If so, say some experts, states withhttp://flvirtualfamilies.edublogs.org/2008/04/18/in-case-you-missed-it/Third-grade CSAPs stagnant Rocky Mountain NewsSeven out of 10 Colorado third-graders are reading at [...]