Civil Rights Coalition Offers New Congress Action Plan for Closing the
Achievement Gap

February 12, 2009 · Print This Article <javascript:window.print()>

Less than 60 percent of African American, Latino, and American Indian and
Alaska Native students graduate from high school on time with a regular
diploma, compared to a national graduation rate of more than 70 percent of
all students, a crisis that threatens the nation's global competitiveness
and economic security. Many Asian Americans also face barriers in education
that are often overlooked as a result of inadequate data collection and
reporting by schools, school districts, and states. The Campaign for High
School Equity (CHSE), a coalition of national civil rights groups addressing
high school education quality and equality, hosted a congressional briefing
today to outline policy priorities for improving student outcomes, including
recommendations related to implementation of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act.

"Too many American high schools fail to provide a high-quality education to
the youth who should become our next generation of business and political
leaders," said Michael T.S. Wotorson executive director of CHSE. "While CHSE
is pleased that the House and Senate versions of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act include some relief for states to address public education,
much more needs to be done now to ensure that every student graduates
prepared for college and the 21st century workforce. The current stimulus
bill does not, for example, include funding for high schools, Title VII,
Title III, TRIO, GEAR UP, and other programs that directly support students
of color and English language learner (ELL) students."

At the briefing, CHSE members urged the federal government to hold high
schools accountable for student achievement and graduation and to give
schools the resources they need to adequately prepare students for success.
The leaders also called for comprehensive and consistent data systems to
report student progress, implementation of a variety of effective high
school models that support different learning styles, and strategies to
place highly-effective school leaders and teachers in high-need high
schools.

"In these increasingly challenging economic times it is more critical than
ever for us to address the obstacles that stand in the way of student
performance and to introduce solutions that will keep students of color on
the path to high school graduation," said Hilary O. Shelton, NAACP's vice
president for advocacy and director of the Washington Bureau. "We can no
longer ignore disparities in public education, denying students the
opportunity to make significant contributions in their communities and to
our nation's economy."

As students of color and ELLs continue to grow as a proportion of the total
student population, CHSE called for improving their educational outcomes to
be a national priority. Schools that serve a student body made up of more
than half minority students are more likely to be "dropout factories" —
schools where fewer than 60 percent of freshmen go on to graduate three
years later. Implementing federal accountability standards matched with
adequate resources and data that indicate which schools and students are
most in need will raise the bar in high schools nationwide.

"The potential for student success and achievement exists through structural
reform in public education," said Wotorson. "We need to hold our new
president and Congress accountable for delivering on promises of education
reform, funding, and policy at the federal level, and high schools must be
included in that dialogue."

-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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