Education Is Worse Than We Thought
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Failing
Liberty 101
Last December,
I reported on Harvard University professor Stephan Thernstrom's
essay "Minorities
in College Good News, But...," on Minding the Campus,
a website sponsored by the New York-based Manhattan Institute. He
was commenting on the results of the most recent National Assessment
of Educational Progress, saying that the scores "mean that black
students aged 17 do not read with any greater facility than whites
who are four years younger and still in junior high. ... Exactly
the same glaring gaps appear in NAEP's tests of basic mathematics
skills." Thernstrom asked, "If we put a randomly-selected group
of 100 eighth-graders and another of 100 twelfth-graders in a typical
college, would we expect the first group to perform as well as the
second?" In other words, is it reasonable to expect a college freshman
of any race who has the equivalent of an eighth-grade education
to compete successfully with those having a 12th-grade education?
Maybe this
huge gap in black/white academic achievement was in the paternalistic
minds of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals justices who recently
struck down Michigan's ban on the use of race and sex as criteria
for college admissions. The court said that it burdens minorities
and violates the U.S. Constitution. Given the black education disaster,
racial preferences in college admissions will become a permanent
feature, because given the status quo, blacks as a group will never
make it into top colleges based upon academic merit.
The situation
is worse than we thought. U.S. News & World Report (7/7/2011)
came out with a story titled "Educators
Implicated in Atlanta Cheating Scandal," saying that "for 10
years, hundreds of Atlanta public school teachers and principals
changed answers on state tests in one of the largest cheating scandals
in U.S. history, according to a scathing 413-page investigative
report released Tuesday by Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal." The report
says that more than three-quarters of the 56 Atlanta schools investigated
cheated on the 2009 standardized National Assessment of Educational
Progress. Eighty-two teachers have confessed to erasing students'
answers. A total of 178 educators, including 38 principals, many
of whom are black, systematically fabricated test scores of struggling
black students to cover up academic failure. The governor's report
says that cheating orders came from the top and that widespread
cheating has occurred since at least 2001. So far, no Atlanta educator
has been criminally charged, even though some of the cheating was
brazen, such as teachers pointing to correct answers while students
were taking the tests, reading answers aloud during testing and
seating low-achieving students next to high-achieving students to
make cheating easier.
Teacher
and principal exam cheating is not restricted to Atlanta; it's widespread.
The Detroit Free Press and USA Today (3/8/2011) released
an investigative report that found higher-than-average erasure
rates on tests taken by students at 34 schools in and around Detroit
in 2008 and 2009. Overall, their report "found 304 schools where
experts say the gains on standardized tests in 2009-10 are so statistically
improbable, they merit further investigation. Besides Michigan,
the other states (where suspected cheating was found) were Ohio,
Arizona, Colorado, Florida and California." A Dallas Morning
News investigation
reported finding high rates of test erasures in Texas. Six teachers
and two principals were dismissed after cheating was uncovered.
In 2007, Baltimore's
George Washington Elementary School was named a Blue Ribbon School
after the number of students who passed state reading tests shot
from 32 percent to nearly 100 percent in just four years. Last year,
The Baltimore Sun reported
thousands of erasures on those tests. Susan Burgess, the school's
principal, had her professional license revoked after an investigation
by state and city school board officials.
Why is there
widespread cheating by America's educators? According to Diane Ravitch,
who is the research professor of education at New York University,
it's not teachers and principals who are to blame; it's the mandates
of the No Child Left Behind law, enacted during the George W. Bush
administration. In other words, the devil made them do it.
July
19, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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