SMRs and AMRs

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Black Education Tragedy

7/10/2013 12:01:00 AM - Walter E. Williams, Townhall

As if more evidence were needed about the tragedy of black education, Rachel Jeantel, a witness for the prosecution in the George Zimmerman murder trial, put a face on it for the nation to see. Some of that evidence unfolded when Zimmerman's defense attorney asked 19-year-old Jeantel to read a letter that she allegedly had written to Trayvon Martin's mother. She responded that she doesn't read cursive, and that's in addition to her poor grammar, syntax and communication skills.

Jeantel is a senior at Miami Norland Senior High School. How in the world did she manage to become a 12th-grader without being able to read cursive writing? That's a skill one would expect from a fourth-grader. Jeantel is by no means an exception at her school. Here are a few achievement scores from her school: Thirty-nine percent of the students score basic for reading, and 38 percent score below basic. In math, 37 percent score basic, and 50 percent score below basic. Below basic is the score when a student is unable to demonstrate even partial mastery of knowledge and skills fundamental for proficient work at his grade level. Basic indicates only partial mastery.

Few Americans, particularly black Americans, have any idea of the true magnitude of the black education tragedy. The education establishment might claim that it's not their fault. They're not responsible for the devastation caused by female-headed families, drugs, violence and the culture of dependency. But they are totally responsible for committing gross educational fraud. It's educators who graduated Jeantel from elementary and middle school and continued to pass her along in high school. It's educators who will, in June 2014, confer upon her a high-school diploma.

It's not just Florida's schools. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, nationally most black 12th-graders test either basic or below basic in reading, writing, math and science. Drs. Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom wrote in their 2004 book, "No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in Learning," "Blacks nearing the end of their high school education perform a little worse than white eighth-graders in both reading and U.S. history, and a lot worse in math and geography." Little has changed since the book's publication.

(More here.)

2 Comments:

Blogger Tom Koch said...

Praise the Lord! VV has included a voice of reason! Dr. Williams understands the issues facing education - wonderful piece. Now, if we could just read a bit from Dr. Sowell (Thomas), VV readers would start to understand that there are more perspectives on economics than the Keynesian school of ruin.

8:13 PM  
Blogger Patrick Dempsey said...

I'm sure if we move toward a more top-down education system where everything is dictated to school districts by un-elected bureaucrats in Washington - you know, those with the proper training to tell us how to educate our children, especially minority students - and then throw billions of tax dollars at the teachers unions, that will clean up these distrubing trends.

Then if it fails, we can read Paul Krugman regurgitated in VV clucking that 'see, it didn't work because we just didn't spend enough money'.

1:46 PM  

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