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U.S. Department of Education (ED) ident's and Secretary's Priorities http://www.ed.gov/inits.htm THE Text only EDUCATION U.S. Departmentant EDUCATION LATTO STATES C SAMPLE Search Topics A-Z FAQs Directories Picks of the Month Contact Us President's & Secretary' Priorities President's & Secretary's Priorities Funding Opportunities Major New Initiatives for Fiscal Year 2000 Student Financial Assistance Research & 1. All students will read independently and well by the end of 3rd grade. Statistics 2. All students will master challenging mathematics, including the foundations of algebra and New & gcometry, by the end of 8th grade. Events 3. By 18 years of age, all students will be prepared for and able to afford college. Programs & 4. All states and schools will have challenging and clear standards of achievement and Services accountability for all children, and effective strategies for reaching those standards. 5. There will be a talented, dedicated and well-prepared teacher in every classroom. Publications & Products 6. Every classroom will be connected to the Internet by the year 2000 and all students will be technologically literate. ED Offices & 7. Every school will be strong, safe, drug-free and disciplined. Budget Year 2000 (Computers) ED Job Secretary Riley and senior Department officials developed seven priorities (see Openings Working Document and the Strategic Plan) for the Department, based on the "Call to Action" issued by the President in his State of the Union Address (February 4, 1997). Other Sites These seven priorities are as follows All students will read independently and well by the end of 3rd grade. America Reads Challenge Reading Excellence Program The Reading Summit Class Size Reduction and Teacher Quality Initiative America Goes Back to School: Get Involved! Voluntary National Tests Family Involvement All students will master challenging mathematics, including the foundations of algebra and geometry, by the end of 8th grade. Visit the America Counts website, where you will find information such as speeches, fact sheets, publications, reports and the Third International Math and Science Study (TIMSS). By 18 years of age, all students will be prepared for and able to afford college. America's HOPE Scholarship Direct Loan Program Department of Education's Office of Postsecondary Education Project EASI Think College-- Learn for a Lifetime All states and schools will have challenging and clear standards of achievement 1 of 2 1/25/2000 4:01 PM U.S. Department of Education (ED) ident's and Secretary's Priorities http://www.cd.gov/inits.html and accountability for all children, and effective strategies for reaching those standards. Voluntary National Tests Goals 2000 School-to-Work Improving America's Schools Act of 1994 -- Elementary and Secondary Education Act Comprehensive School Reform Demonstration Program There will be a talented, dedicated and well-prepared teacher in every classroom. The Teacher Quality Website offers information for policymakers and educators on a range of issues -- recruiting and preparing teachers, providing professional development opportunities, and raising teaching standards. It includes classroom resources, research, and information for individuals interested in becoming a teacher. Every classroom will be connected to the Internet by the year 2000 and all students will be technologically literate. U.S. Department of Education Technology Initiatives The Mid-continent Regional Educational Laboratory (McREL) North Central Regional Educational Laboratory Regional Technology in Education Consortia (R*TEC) Every school will be strong, safe, drug-free and disciplined. School Construction and Design Safe & Drug Free Schools Program US Charter Schools Flexibility and Waivers Improving America's Schools Act of 1994 -- Elementary and Secondary Education Act The Partnership for Family Involvement in Education supports the seven priorities through family and community involvement in children's learning. As members of the Partnership, thousands of family-school partners, employers, community organizations, and religious groups work together to help all children learn to high academic standards. EDHOME This page last modified -- January 6, 2000 (mhm) 2 of 2 1/25/2000 4:01 PM FY2000 Major New Education Initiatives http://www.ed.gov/ints/FY2000/index.html OF EDUCATION FY2000 Major Initiatives and Funding Opportunities UNTED MERCA Summary of Department's 2000 Initiatives and Funding Opportunities Class Size Reduction Special Education Grants to States Program 21st Century Community Learning Centers Reading Excellence Safe and Drug Free Schools -- Middle School Coordinators Comprehensive School Reform Demonstration Charter Schools Advanced Placement Initiative Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers to Use Technology Bilingual Professional Development GEAR UP Learning Anytime, Anywhere Partnerships New American High Schools 2000 New Initiatives and Funding Opportunities Small Schools Elementary School Counseling and Demonstration Program Safe and Drug Free Schools -- Alternative Strategies Adult Education/English Literacy Civics Education Grants Class Size Reduction Helps school districts hire 100,000 $1.2 billion in FY1999, $1.3 billion in FY2000 teachers over 7 years to reduce class (a $100 million increase) sizes in grades 1-3 to a nationwide average of 18. Special Education Grants to States A formula grant program to assist the Program 50 States and territories in meeting 4.31 billion in FY1999, $4.99 billion in the excess costs of providing special FY2000 education and related services to our (a $679 million increase) nation's 6.25 million children with disabilities. 21st Century Community Learning Funds school-community Centers partnerships to keep schools open $200 million in FY1999, $453.7 million in after-school and summers as safe FY2000 havens for enhanced learning. (a $253.7 million increase) Reading Excellence Helps children learn to read well and $260 million in FY1999, $260 million in independently by the end of the third FY2000 grade through reading instruction (no increase) based on scientifically based reading research, professional development, family literacy, and extended learning activities. Safe and Drug Free Enables Middle Schools to hire Schools-Middle School alcohol, drug and violence prevention Coordinators coordinators. I of 4 1/25/2000 4:01 PM FY2000 Major New Education Initiatives http://www.ed.gov/inits/FY2000/index.html $35 million in FY1999, $50 million in FY2000 (a $15 million increase) Comprehensive School Reform Helps raise student achievement by Demonstration assisting public schools across the $145 million in FY1999, $220 million in country to implement effective, FY2000 comprehensive school reforms that (a $75 million increase) are based on reliable research and effective practices, and include an emphasis on basic academics and parental involvement. Public Charter Schools Helps charter schools meet start-up $100 million in FY1999, $145 million in costs associated with creating their FY2000 new public schools, such as (a $45 million increase) developing curriculum, purchasing equipment, or providing professional development for teachers. Advanced Placement Incentive Enables States to reimburse part or Program all of the cost of test fees for eligible $4 million in FY1999, $15 million in FY2000 low-income individuals. (an $11 million increase) Teacher Quality Enhancement Funds State, Partnership, and Grants Teacher Recruitment projects that $75 million in FY1999, $98 million in FY2000 support systemic change in state (a $23 million increase) teacher licensure policies and practices; projects to promote comprehensive and lasting change to teacher preparation programs; and the recruitment and preparation of excellent teachers for America's classrooms. Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers to A national teacher preparation reform Use Technology (PT3) initiative to ensure that all future $75 million in FY1999, $75 million in FY2000 teachers are technology-proficient (no increase) educators who are well prepared to teach 21st Century students. Bilingual Professional Three competitive grant programs to Development meet the need for fully certified $50 million in FY1999, $75 million in FY2000 bilingual and ESL teachers and other (a $25 million increase) educational personnel, and to insure well-prepared personnel to provide services to limited English proficient students. GEAR UP A long-range early college $120 million in FY1999, $200 million in preparation and awareness program FY2000 that gives low-income students and (an $80 million increase) their families pathways to college by partnering middle and high schools with colleges and community 2 of 4 1/25/2000 4:01 PM FY2000 Major New Education Initiatives http://www.ed.gov/inits/FY2000/index.htm organizations or through State-administered programs. Learning Anytime Anywhere Supports postsecondary partnerships Partnerships among colleges, businesses, and $10 million in FY1999, $15 million in FY2000 other organizations to promote (a $5 million increase) technology-mediated distance education that is not limited by time or place. New American High Schools Showcases and supports outstanding (NAHS) high schools that have committed to $4.05 million in FY1999, $4 million in extensive reform efforts, raised FY2000 academic standards for all students, (no increase) and achieved excellent results. New Initiatives Small Schools Initiative Helps LEAs plan, develop and $45 million in FY2000 implement smaller learning communities (goal of not more than 600 students in a learning community) for students in large high schools (defined as 1,000 students or more) to create a more personalized high school experience for students and improve student achievement. Elementary School Counseling and Provides grants to establish or Demonstration expand counseling programs in $20 million in FY2000 elementary schools. Safe and Drug Free Helps school districts identify Schools-Alternative Strategies effective procedures, policies, and $10 million in FY2000 programs that serve to discipline students without suspending or expelling them. Adult Education/English Literacy Helps states and communities Civics Education Grants provide limited English proficient $7 million in FY2000 (LEP) adults with expanded access to high quality English literacy (EL) programs linked to civics and life skills instruction, including understanding and navigating the U.S. government system, the public education system, the workplace, and other key institutions in American life. -###- 3 of 4 1/25/2000 4:01 PM THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Vice President For Immediate Release Contact: Wednesday, January 12, 2000 (202) 456-7035 VICE PRESIDENT GORE ANNOUNCES NEW INVESTMENT TO CREATE SMALLER, SAFER AND MORE SUCCESSFUL HIGH SCHOOLS Washington, D.C. - Vice President Gore today unveiled a $120 million initiative to create smaller, safer and better high schools. The Administration's Small, Safe and Successful High Schools initiative -- which will be included in the Administration's budget for Fiscal Year 2001 -- exemplifies the Vice President's commitment to reforming the American high school, and ensuring a world-class education for all of America's students. "The idea is simple: small schools give kids a big boost," said Vice President Gore. "Smaller schools mean more personal attention to the varied needs of all our children, helping both those who are struggling and those who are excelling to achieve their full potential." The program would offer competitive grants to local school districts to create smaller schools or break up larger schools by funding innovative strategies such as autonomous schools- within-schools, career academics, restructured school days, and other innovations that allow schools to ensure that every student receives personal attention and academic support. Funds to create smaller schools could be used for planning and implementation costs, including costs to reorganize schools, train teachers, renovate facilities, and provide extended learning time and support services for students. In addition to creating smaller, better high schools, the grants would help schools create a clear focus on student success: innovative, engaging and challenging curriculum integrated around a coherent focus; teachers working together to meet the needs of their students; strong leadership; the involvement of families and community; and technology to enhance achievement. Research confirms what parents intuitively believe: that smaller schools are safer and more productive because students feel less alienated, more nurtured and more connected to caring adults, and teachers feel that they have more opportunity to get to know and support their students. Smaller schools also have better attendance records, lower dropout rates and fewer discipline problems. Research also shows that small schools can offer a strong core curriculum and, in most cases, a level of academically advanced courses comparable to large schools. Recent incidents of school violence, like the tragedy in Littleton, Colorado, are causing serious alarm among parents and students who are unsure what has caused such tremendous alienation and aggression in some of our teenagers. In addition to the need for more parental involvement and stricter discipline policies, many educators are pointing to a systemic problem - - the model of the American high school. In response to these concerns, Representative David Obey (D-WI) included $45 million in the Fiscal Year 2000 budget to create smaller high schools. The new Administration initiative announced today will build on Rep. Obey's down-payment and will help our children make the most of their education. "Tragic incidents of school violence make it clear that many of our teenagers need more attention than larger high schools can give them," added the Vice President. "We must help working families struggling to give their children attention and direction, by ensuring that our public high schools offer connections to caring adults as well as high academic standards." Since the end of World War II, the number of schools nationwide has declined seventy percent, while average enrollment has grown 500 percent, or fivefold. There are more than 12,400 three and four year high schools in the United States. More than seventy percent of students in these schools attend a school with more than 1,000 students, and enrollments of 2,000 and 3,000 are common. "As our economy changes, so must our schools. It's time for the large, factory-like high schools of the 20th century to make way for the smaller, more flexible and innovative institutions that will mark the 21st century," Gore said. PRESIDENT CLINTON'S COMMITMENT TO INVEST IN SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION AND MODERNIZATION January 5, 2000 "Today too many of our schools are so old they 're falling apart, or so over-crowded students are learning in trailers. Last fall, Congress missed the opportunity to change that. This year, with 53 million children in our schools, Congress must not miss that opportunity again." " -- President Clinton, State of the Union Address, 1999 PRESIDENT CLINTON'S FY2001 BUDGET DEMONSTATES A STRONG COMMITMENT TO INVESTING IN SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION AND MODERNIZATION. THE FY2001 BUDGET: RENEWS THE PRESIDENT'S STRONG COMMITMENT TO HIS SCHOOL MODERNIZATION TAX CREDIT BOND PROPOSAL The President's School Modernization Bond proposal provides $24.8 billion in tax credit bonds over two years to modernize up to 6,000 schools. This proposal has an estimated cost of $3.7 billion over five years, and is fully paid for in his budget. Within this program, $2.4 billion is reserved for Qualified Zone Academy Bonds. INCLUDES A NEW $1.3 BILLION SCHOOL URGENT/EMERGENCY RENOVATION LOAN AND GRANT PROPOSAL This $1.3 billion program could support nearly $7 billion of (approximately 8,300) renovation projects in high-poverty, high-need school districts with little or no capacity to fund urgent repairs over the next 5 years. Both loans and grants would be made available, with the smaller grant program directed toward the neediest districts. NATIONALLY, THERE IS AN URGENT NEED FOR SCHOOL MODERNIZATION One-Third of All Schools Need Extensive Repairs. One third of all public schools - about 25,000 schools - need extensive repair or replacement. School Facilities: The Condition of America's Schools, GAO Report Number HEHS-95-61, 1995-6. Average School is 42 Years Old. The average public school in America is 42 years old, and school buildings begin rapid deterioration after 40 years. How Old are America's Schools, NCES, 1999. $112 Billion Needed Just for Repairs. $112 billion is needed just to repair the existing schools across the nation. School Facilities: The Condition of America Schools, GAO Report Number HEHS-95-61, 1995-6. School Enrollment Higher than Ever. A record 52.7 million children are enrolled in elementary and secondary school today, and this number will climb to 54.3 million by 2008. 2,400 new public schools 1 will be needed by 2003 to accommodate rising enrollments. The Baby Boom Echo: No End in Sight, Department of Education, 1999. SCHOOL MODERNIZATION TAX CREDIT BOND PROPOSAL This new type of bond - a tax credit bond - would provide interest-free financing to help state and local governments pay for school construction and renovation to help address issues of aging facilities and overcrowding. Instead of paying the interest and principal on school construction bonds, the issuer would only be responsible for repaying the principal. The federal government would provide tax credits to the bondholders in lieu of interest payments. The Administration's proposal would support nearly $25 billion in bonds over the next two years to help states and districts build and modernize up to 6,000 public schools. President Clinton's proposal has an estimated cost of $3.7 billion over five years, and is fully paid for in his budget. SCHOOL RENOVATION LOAN AND GRANT PROGRAM The School Renovation program would provide interest free federal loans and grants to needy school districts to fund urgent renovations - approximately 8,300 renovation projects would receive funding over 5 years. The loan program would be targeted to those districts unable to finance the interest cost associated with facilities renovation. The smaller direct grant program would provide direct funding to the needy school districts unable to finance the capital expenditures associated with school renovation. Renovations funded through loans and grants could include repairs to roofs, climate control systems, or plumbing. Loans and grants could also fund school modernization to improve technology capability, if no other source of funds is available. 2 U.S. Department of Education (ED) -- Funding http://www.ed.gov/funding.html THE OF Text only U.S. Department EDUCATION DEPARTMENT AREA Search Topics A-Z FAQs Directories Picks of the Month Contact Us President's & Secretary's Priorities Funding Opportunities Funding Opportunities If you're interested in applying for a grant or contract, here's information you'll need to Student know. Financial Assistance Research & Discretionary Grant Application Packages -- lists grant competitions that are Statistics currently open and provides links to downloadable application packages, forms, and other information you'll need to apply. News & Events Federal Register documents -- includes notices inviting applications for grant Programs & competitions, as well as funding priorities, selection criteria, regulations, and Services relevant workshops and meetings. Publications & Products FY 2000 Forecast of Funding Opportunities under ED Discretionary Grant ED Offices & Programs -- lists the dates, estimated number of awards, and funding amounts Budget for virtually all the Department's direct grant and fellowship competitions for new awards. Year'2000 (Computers) What Should I Know About ED Grants -- offers a non-technical summary of ED Job ED's discretionary grants process (application, review, award, administration, Openings grant closeout, and audit) and the laws and regulations that govern the process. Other Sites Guide to ED Programs -- provides a concise description of each of about 175 programs that ED administers, identifies who may apply, and gives the name and telephone number of the ED office to contact for more information. ED General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) -- defines the administrative requirements for managing projects funded by discretionary grants awarded by ED. Grants and Contracts Information -- provides additional information including currently available contract solicitations, a forecast of upcoming contract opportunities, grants policy bulletins, and databases of contract and grant awards. ED Budget -- provides an overview of the Federal role in education, an explanation of the Federal budget process, news about ED's budget, and program-by-program details of the President's budget request. Some ED offices and programs maintain pages that may provide additional information of interest: Bilingual Education and Minority Languages (OBEMLA) Funding Opportunities Comprehensive School Reform Demonstration Program Migrant Education Grant Information Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA) Program Application Kits Resources for Postsecondary Institutions Safe & Drug-Free Schools Program Special Education Programs 1 of 2 1/25/2000 4:12 PM New Web Site Aims to Help Teachers Find Learning Resources http://www.ed.gov/PressReleases/12-1999/newweb.html FOR RELEASE December 9, 1999 Contact: Jim Bradshaw (202) 401-2310 NEW WEB SITE AIMS TO HELP TEACHERS FIND LEARNING RESOURCES www.thegateway.org A new tool is now available to help teachers pinpoint -- from thousands of learning resources on the Internet -- the one that is right for their students, U.S. Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley announced today. The Gateway to Educational Materials (GEM) at www.thegateway.org is designed for teachers to type a topic, grade level, and other information into a search screen that then retrieves -- from more than 140 web sites lessons, instructional units, and other free educational materials on that topic, for that grade level. "The web," Riley said, "puts many thousands of learning resources within reach of anyone with Internet access. It's no surprise that one of the most popular uses of this new medium, among teachers, is searching for resources that can help students learn. But finding the right resource on a particular topic for your students can take time. And time is in short supply for our teachers. That's one reason GEM is so important." GEM lets teachers, as well as parents and students, search instructional materials of more than 140 federal, state, university, non-profit, and commercial organizations. These materials may also be browsed by subject area or key word. Currently, more than 7,000 items are included in GEM with hundreds of new resources being added and new consortium members joining each month. "GEM is more than a web site," said Linda Roberts, special advisor to the secretary for technology. "It is a solution that was developed by a consortium of organizations that got together and said, 'Let's find a way to make it easier for teachers to find lesson ideas across all our web sites with one simple search'." Roberts noted that GEM is one of the Education Department's responses to President Clinton's April 19, 1997, call for federal agencies to improve and expand access to teaching and learning resources on the Internet. The department and more than 40 other federal organizations also responded by creating a web site that makes teaching and learning resources from across the federal government available in one place: the Federal Resources for Educational Excellence (FREE) web site at www.ed.gov/free/. While teaching and learning resources are the aim of both GEM and FREE, FREE focuses only on those created with federal support. GEM includes mostly materials not created with federal support. Also, the search tools differ. "FREE relies on an off-the-shelf tool that searches the full text of each resource," explained Keith Stubbs of the National Library of Education, who oversees the department's support for GEM. "GEM works like the card catalog system in a library. GEM looks through the card catalog, or what are technically called metadata records,' for resources that match what the teacher requests. The teacher can then read the card catalog descriptions of those resources, or go directly to the resources, which reside on the server of the organizations that created or own them. A GEM search retrieves fewer resources than most search tools, and with more precision. Also, in the future, teachers will be able to search and find resources by state academic standards." Both GEM and FREE respond to the president's technology goal of improving content and online learning resources. The president's technology goals also include Internet access for all students and teachers, connections to the Internet for all schools and classrooms, and training and support for all teachers, so that all teachers can integrate technology into instruction. The GEM Consortium is spearheaded by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology with I of 2 1/25/2000 4:10 PM New Web Site Arms to Help Teachers Find Learning Resources http://www.ed.gov/PressReleases/12-1999/newweb.hml support from the National Library of Education in the U.S. Department of Education. The ERIC Clearinghouse, located at Syracuse University's School of Information Studies, also developed the software and architecture for GEM. ### NOTE TO EDITORS: A list of organizations that are GEM Consortium Members may be found at www.geminfo.org/Consortium/members.html ED HOME 2 of 2 1/25/2000 4:10 PM ADMINISTRATION INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS CONTACTS AGENCY NAME TITLE PHONE FAX E-MAIL Agriculture, Maria Hernandez Director of Intergovernmental Affairs 202/720-6643 202/720-8819 [email protected] Commerce Edward Prewitt Deputy Assistant Secretary for 202/482-1389 202/482-6072 [email protected] IGA Corporation for John Vezina Intergovernmental Affairs 202/606-5000 202/565-2784 [email protected] National Service Defense: Linda Leeman Special Assistant, Office of Legislative 703/695-1436 703/697-8299 [email protected] Affairs Education Cheryl Parker Rose Director of IG and Interagency Affairs 202/401-3728 202/260-7465 [email protected] Energy Linda Lingle Principal Deputy & Asst. Secretary for 202/586-5450 202/586-4891 [email protected] Congressional & IGA Environmental Diane E. Thompson Associate Administrator for 202/260-5200 202/260-4046 [email protected] Protection Agency Congressional & IG Relations Richard Dickerson Director, Mayor's Desk 202/564-3704 202/501-1544 [email protected] FEMA Martha S. Braddock Director of Intergovernmental Affairs 202/646-4515 202/646-4039 [email protected] General/Services: Rachel Hirschberg Congressional Liaison for 202/501-0563 202/219-5742 [email protected] Administration Congressional and IGA Health and Human Andy Hyman Director, Office of 202/690-6060 202/205-2727 [email protected] Services Intergovernmental Affairs Housing and Urban Nancy Kirshner-Rodriguez Deputy Assistant Secretary for 202/708-0030 202/708-9981 [email protected] Development Intergovernmental Relations Office of the Secretary Interior Grace Garcia Director of Intergovernmental Affairs 202/208-5336 202/208-1821 [email protected] Justice Brian de Vallance Director Office of 202/514-3465 202/514-2504 [email protected] Intergovernmental Affairs Labor Mona Mohib Director of Intergovemmental Affairs 202/693-4600 202/693-4642 [email protected] NASA Ted Nakata Senior Advisor for IGA, Office of 202/358-0724 202/358-4336 [email protected] Policy and Plans Office of Nat'l. Drug Alejandra Castillo Director, Executive Assistant to the 202/395-7286 202/395-5653 [email protected] Control Policy Deputy Director OPM Elizabeth Harrington Special Assistant to the Director 202/606-1000 202/606-4489 [email protected] Overseas Private VACANT Intergovernmental Affairs 202/336-8649 202/218-0201 Investment Corp. Representative Small Business Lance Simmens Director, Office of Intergovernmental 202/205-7279 202/205-6802 [email protected] Administration Affairs 01/26/00 Social Security Juan Lopez WH Liaison and Special 202/358-6093 202/358-6076 [email protected] Administration Assistant State Herb Tyson Director Intergovernmental Affairs 202/647-5024 202/647-3340 [email protected] Transportation Evelyn Fierro Director of Intergovernmental Affairs 202/366-1304 202/366-7907 [email protected] Harold Gist Associate Director 202/366-1524 202/366-7907 [email protected] Treasury 77 Lisa Andrews Deputy Asst. Secretary for 202/622-9760 202/622-3638 [email protected] Public Liaison US Trade Rep. Christina Sevilla Director of 202/395-6120 202/395-3692 [email protected] Intergovernmental Affairs Emory Mayfield Special Assistant to the COS 202/395-9480 202/395-4549 [email protected] Veterans Affairs Maria Fernandez-Greczmiel Deputy Assistant Secretary for 202/273-5760 202/273-5716 [email protected] International Affairs THE WHITE HOUSE INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS STAFF DEPARTMENT NAME TITLE PHONE FAX E-MAIL WH IGA Staff Mickey Ibarra Assistant to the President and 202/456-7060 202/456-6220 [email protected] Director of IGA WH IGA Staff Raymond Martinez Deputy Director to the President 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] and Deputy Director of IGA WH IGA Staff Matthew Bennett Special Assistant to the 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] President for IGA WHIGA Staff Maria Soto Associate Director to the 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] Director of IGA WH-IGA/Staff Rachel Redington Associate Director to the 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] Director of IGA WHIGA Staff Todd Bledsoe Special Assistant to the 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] Deputy Director of IGA WHIGA Staff Seth Applebaum Special Assistant to the 202/456-7062 202/456-6220 [email protected] Director of IGA WH IGA Staff Adrienne Elrod Special Assistant to the 202/456-7060 202/456-6220 [email protected] Director of IGA WHIGA Staff Jacqueline Lain White House Fellow 202/456-2896 202/456-2889 [email protected] 01/26/00 Do You Know THE GOOD NEWS ABOUT AMERICAN EDUCATION? CENTER ON EDUCATION POLICY and AMERICAN YOUTH POLICY FORUM Center on Education Policy The Center on Education Policy is the national independent advocate for public education and for more effective public schools. The Center works to help Americans better understand the role of public education in a democracy and the need to improve the academic quality of public schools. We do not represent any special interests. Instead, we help citizens make sense of the conflicting opinions and perceptions about public education and create conditions that will lead to better public schools. Working at the national, state and local levels, the Center achieves its mission by producing publications. writing articles, convening meetings, making presentations and, upon request. providing expert advice. The Center also works jointly with many other education, business, state and civic organizations. Based in Washington, D.C., and founded in January 1995, the Center receives nearly all of its funding from charitable foundations. To learn more about our work, please visit our web site: www.etredpol.org. American Youth Policy Forum The American Youth Policy Forum is a nonpartisan professional development organization providing learning opportunities for policymakers and practitioners working on youth issues at the local. state and national levels. AYPF's goal is to provide participants with information, insights and networks on issues related to the development of healthy and successful young people. productive workers and participating citizens in a democratic society. including: schooling, transition to careers and career development. training and preparation for employment, postsecondary education, national and community service and related forms of youth development. Since 1993. AYPF has conducted an average of 40 events each year for over 2.000 participants. including lunchtime meetings and out-of-town field trips and foreign study missions with a thematic focus. Forum participants include Congressional staff. officials of various federal agencies, state and local govern- ment officials. policymakers from national non-profit and advocacy associations and members of the media who report on youth issues. AYPF also publishes, for the benefit of policymakers, practitioners and scholars. a wide variety of inexpensive and brief policy reports and background materials on youth issues. These may be consulted on our web site: www.aypf.org. Credits This publication was researched and written by Nancy Kober. a freelance writer and consultant to the Center on Education Policy. and Diane Stark Rentner. the Center's associate director. They received assistance and advice from Jack Jennings, the Center's director. and from Samuel Halperin. Betsy Brand. Glenda Partee and Donna Walker James of the American Youth Policy Forum. Cutting Edge Graphics of Washington. D.C., designed the publication. The Center on Education Policy and the American Youth Policy Forum thank our respective funders who support this report and the other activities of our two organizations. 2 D₀ You Know the Good Now about American Education? Do You Know THE GOOD NEWS ABOUT AMERICAN EDUCATION? Introduction 5 Data-Used in This Report 6 School Participation and Curriculum Fewer students are dropping out of school 7 High school students are taking more challenging courses 8 More girls are taking high-level mathematics and science courses 9 High school students are taking tougher mathematics and science courses 10 More students with disabilities are being educated in regular classrooms 12 The Work Ahead: School Participation and Curriculum 13 Student Achievement Student mathematics achievement is improving 14 Student science achievement is improving 16 SAT scores increased during the 1990s 18 ACT test scores are up 19 Students are taking more AP exams 20 The Work Ahead: Student Achievement 21 Educational Climate U.S. students receive more instructional time than European students 22 School crime is declining 24 The Work Ahead: Educational Climate 25 Teachers Public school teachers are well-educated 26 Public school teachers are better educated than private school teachers 27 Teachers have literacy levels comparable to other college graduates 28 The Work thead: Teachers 29 Higher Education More students are going on to higher education 30 More young adults are completing 4-vear college degrees 31 More women are earning graduate and professional degrees 32 The Work Ahead: Higher Education 33 Conclusion 34 INTRODUCTION Many people believe American public schools are failing. Such views are not surprising, since critics of public education emphasize only what's wrong with public schools, and negative stories about education appear frequently in the media. Seldom do people hear the good news about public education. There's no question that our public schools must become better. But the public also needs to recognize that there have been major improvements in public education since the early 1980s. when the nation started focusing seri- ously on school reform. The Center on Education Policy and the American Youth Policy Forum publish this report because informed citizens need to be aware of these positive trends. This booklet highlights important improvements in public education over the past 15-20 years, along with other positive data about the state of public education. This report updates and expands on the monthly one-page briefs issued by the Center on Education Policy in 1998 and 1999. The only findings included are those supported by objective national data banks, such as the National Center for Education Statistics. By laying out the facts in a succinct, straightforward way, we hope to dispel some widely-held misconceptions about public schools and give citizens solid evidence to inform their opinions, policy decisions and future actions. We present indicators that we believe are meaningful and interesting to parents and the general public. If an aspect of education is not discussed in this report, that does not mean it is negative. Many positive trends were not included for lack of space. Other areas. such as reading achievement, have not been included because the trends are mixed or vary by age groups. Emphasizing the positive. we do not ignore the problems facing public schools. Public schools must be improved. and many more students need to benefit from the general progress already made. For that reason. we include a brief discussion of The Work Ahead at the end of each group of indicators. These sections discuss some of the various actions that states, school districts and citizens can take to build on the progress already made-for example, by paying special attention to groups of students who are not doing as well, or by climinating obstacles that stand in the way of greater progress. Dr You Know the Good New about American Education? 5 By featuring objectively good news in this brief report, we hope to restore public confidence that school reform can make a difference and to encourage everyone to keep working to make public schools better for all students. DATA USED IN THIS REPORT This report includes a variety of statistics showing positive trends in education. These statistics are grouped into five broad categories: School Participation and Curriculum. Trends in school dropout rates, student course-taking patterns, and participation of students with disabilities. Student Achievement. Trends in student performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, various college entrance exams and other nationwide measures. Educational Climate. Data on school safety and crime and other environmental factors that affect student learning. Teachers. Statistics on the qualifications and experience of K-12 teachers. Higher Education. Trends in postsecondary enrollment and completion of degrees. The higher education data and a few of the K-12 indicators include data for students in both public and private institutions. Since 89% of K-12 students and 76% of postsecondary students attend public institutions, these indicators still reflect improvements in public education. To the extent possible. we have compared baseline data from the early 1980s with the most recent year available. The specific years vary depending on which data are available for a particular indicator. In some cases, we also include data earlier than the 1980s to show longer-term trends. For several indicators, reliable data on trends over time are not available, but we include current data showing positive aspects of public education. We chose the early 1980s as our primary baseline because that's when school reform became a major national issue. Since then, educational improvement has remained a high priority at the local, state and national levels, although the specific strategies have changed as the school reform movement has matured. Most recently, nearly all states have adopted standards to define what students should know and be able to do by the time they finish high school, along with new state tests to measure student progress. Most of these standards-based reforms are too new to have influenced the trends discussed in this report, but their effects on student learning should soon begin to appear. 0 De You Knew the Names about American Education? Do You Know? FEWER STUDENTS ARE DROPPING OUT OF SCHOOL School Participation and Curriculum THE FACTS Two-thirds of citizens surveyed mistakenly believe that high school dropout rates are going up and are higher than they were 25 years ago (1997 Phi Delta Kappa-Gallup Poll). In fact, dropout rates are lower today than they were in the 1970s and 1980s. Especially noteworthy is the sharp decline in the dropout rate of black youth. Percentage of 16- to 24-Year-Olds Who Were Not 1972 Enrolled in School and Had Not Completed High School or a GED 1983 By Race/Ethnicity, 1972, 1983, and 1997 1997 40% 35% 34% 32% 30% 25% 25% 21% 20% 18% 15% 15% 14% 13% 12% 11% 11% 10% 8% 5% 0% Total White Black Hispanic Note: This chart shows the "status dropout rate," the percentage of the U.S. population ages 16-24 who were not enrolled in school, had not completed high school, and did not possess a general education development (GED) certificate. Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Education Statistics 1998. Table 105. De You Know the Gred Names about American Education? 7 School Participation and Curriculum Do You Know? HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ARE TAKING MORE CHALLENGING COURSES THE FACTS The education reforms of the 1980s focused on raising the coursework requirements for high school students. As a result, more students today are taking tougher courses than their predecessors did in the early 1980s. The percentage of students completing a core academic curriculum that includes 4 years of English and 3 years each of social studies, science and mathematics more than tripled between 1982 and 1994, with large increases across all racial and ethnic groups. Percentage of High School Graduates 1982 Completing a Core Curriculum 1990 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982, 1990 and 1994 1994 60% 56% 53% 50% 49% 50% 46% 45% 41% 39% 40% 40% 40% 30% 30% 21% 21% 20% 16% 14% 12% 10% 7% 7% 0% Total White Black Hispanic Asian Native American Note: The "core curriculum" consists of 4 years of English and 3 years each of social studies, science and mathematics. Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. The 1994 High School Transcript Study Tabulations: Comparative Data on Credits Earned and Demographics for 1994, 1990, 1987, and 1982 High School Graduates Revised. 1998 8 D. You Know the deal Now about American Education? Do You Know? MORE GIRLS ARE TAKING HIGH-LEVEL MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE COURSES School Participation and Curriculum THE FACTS The gender gap in mathematics and science that had limited educational and career opportunities for girls and women is disappearing. The percentage of girls taking rigorous high school mathematics and science courses, such as algebra II, trigonometry, chemistry and physics, has gone up significantly since 1982. For example, 59% of the girls who graduated in 1994 had completed a chemistry course, compared with only 30% of the girls in the class of 1982. In fact, gender patterns have reversed for some courses, with girls enrolled at higher rates than boys in courses like algebra II and chemistry. Boys still had slightly higher rates of enrollment in physics and calculus in 1994. Percentage of High School Graduates Completing 1982 Algebra II, Trigonometry, Chemistry and Physics 1994 By Sex, 1982 and 1994 70% 61% 60% 59% 54% 53% 50% 40% 36% 35% 32% 30% 30% 27% 22% 20% 19% 11% 12% 9% 10% 10% T% 0% Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Algebra II Trigonometry Chemistry Physics Source: U.S. Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics. The 1994 High School Transcript Study Tabulations: Comparative Data on Credits Earned and Demographics for 1994, 1990, 1987, and 1982 High School Graduates Revised, 1998. Do You Know the Good News about American Education? 9 School Participation and Curriculum Do You Know? HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ARE TAKING TOUGHER MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE COURSES THE FACTS Recent education reforms emphasize the need for students to take more rigorous mathematics and science courses. Since 1982, the percentages of students taking higher-level courses, such as algebra II, trigonometry, chemistry and physics, have gone up significantly. (Enrollments have also gone up for other courses not shown here, from algebra I to calculus, and from biology to astronomy.) These increases in higher-level course-taking occurred across all racial and ethnic groups. Especially impressive is the growth in the numbers of black and Hispanic students taking courses like algebra II and chemistry. Percentage of High School Graduates Algebra 11, 1982 Completing Algebra II and Trigonometry Algebra 11, 1994 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1994 Trigonometry, 1982 Trigonometry, 1994 80% 70% 66% 62% 60% 58% 56% 50% 50% 44% 40% 40% 36% 30% 24% 20% 20% 16% 16% 12% 13% 10% 8% 9% 7% 7% 4% 4% 0% All White Black Hispanic Asian Note: These percentages do not include students who took these courses before they entered high school. Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The 1994 High School Transcript Study Tabulations: Comparative Data on Credits Earned and Demographics for 1994, 1990, 1987, and 1982 High School Graduates Revised, 1998. 111 Dr You Know the Aven about American Education? Percentage of High School Graduates Chemistry, 1982 Completing Chemistry and Physics Chemistry, 1994 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1994 Physics, 1982 School Participation and Curriculum Physics, 1994 80% 70% 69% 60% 58% 56% 53% 50% 46% 44% 44% 40% 34% 35% 31% 30% 25% 26% 22% 20% 17% 15% 16% 16% 14% 10% 8% 6% 0% All White Black Hispanic Asian Note: These percentages do not include students who took these courses before they entered high school. Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. The 1994 High School Transcript Study Tabulations: Comparative Data on Credits Earned and Demographics for 1994, 1990, 1987, and 1982 High School Graduates Revised. 1998 Do You Know the Good N.W. about American Education? 11 School Participation and Curriculum Do You Know? MORE STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES ARE BEING EDUCATED IN REGULAR CLASSROOMS THE FACTS The federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act requires children with disabilities to be educated in the "least restrictive environment" and encourages them to be educated in general classroom settings, with appropriate services and supports. When students with disabilities are educated alongside other children in regular classrooms, they have increased opportunities to study the same curriculum as their peers, meet higher performance expectations, and learn the knowledge and skills necessary for independent adult life. This approach also helps children without disabilities avoid damaging stereotypes and understand how much people have in common. Between 1986 and 1996, the percentage of children with disabilities who were educated in regular classrooms increased from 26% to 45%. The proportion of children with disabilities served in resource rooms or separate classes decreased, except for students with certain severe disabilities, such as autism. The percentage educated in separate facilities, such as state institutions for the disabled, dropped from 7% to 4%. These trends represent significant progress from 25 years ago. when 90% of developmentally disabled children were housed in state institutions and approximately I million children with disabilities were shut out of schools altogether (U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, IDEA General Information: Overview, 1997). Percentage of Students with Disabilities, Ages 6-21 1986 Placed in Various Learning Environments 1996 1986 and 1996 80% 68% 70% 60% 50% 50% 45% 40% 30% 26% 20% 10% 7% 4% 0% Regular Classroom Resource Room or Separate Facility Separate Class Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. The Condition of Education 1999. Indicator 20. Percentages do not total 100% due to rounding 1.' 11, You Know the N.... about American Education? THE WORK AHEAD: SCHOOL PARTICIPATION AND CURRICULUM School Participation and Curriculum The U. S. job market has changed considerably since the early 1970s. Young people without a high school diploma are limited mostly to low-paying jobs with little chance for advancement. Indeed, some economists predict that the only way to get a well-paying job and have a secure career will be to complete additional study beyond high school. So the first step of the work ahead is for states and school districts to ensure that all students earn at least a high school diploma. Students need more than a credential, however, to be ready for the workplace or higher education. They also must have high-level knowledge and skills, which are best learned by pursuing a rigorous high school curriculum. In a technology-dependent workforce, a strong mathematics and science background is especially important. The growth in the number of students taking challenging coursework is a promising trend. The work ahead should include aggressive efforts to encourage all students to complete four years of English and three years each of social studies, science and mathematics before they graduate. These efforts should begin in middle school, with strategies that encourage students to take gateway courses like algebra before 9th grade. At the high school level, states and school districts should eliminate the "general track" of courses that do not adequately prepare students for either the workplace or higher education. High schools should also offer advanced courses like calculus and physics, so that students are not hindered from progressing because these key courses are not available. Some students will need extra help to meet graduation requirements and succeed in a rigorous curriculum. States and school districts should adopt strategies that have proved to be effective with students who are struggling to keep pace or who learn in different ways. These strategies include: counseling and mentoring programs that connect students with caring adults who can guide their academic progress; teaching methods that emphasize how academic knowledge applies in real-world contexts; "tech-prep" programs that integrate academic and technical education and lead directly into a two-year college or technical certificate program; and "career academies" that teach high-level academic skills through a curriculum centered around particular employment sectors, such as health care, hospitality, or finance. The work ahead must also include continuing attention to students with disabilities. Although these students have benefitted from inclusion in regular classrooms and are graduating at higher rates than 15 years ago, they still drop out at twice the rate of their peers (OSERS, IDEA General Information: Overview, 1997). States and school districts should hold students with disabilities to high standards, while recognizing that they often need intensive assistance to graduate and make the transition from school to work or further education. Effective strategies include building relation- ships between students and caring adults, teaching problem-solving strategies and monitoring student behavior. Do You Know the vired Visa about American Education? 13 Do You Know? STUDENT MATHEMATICS ACHIEVEMENT IS IMPROVING THE FACTS Between 1982 and 1996, students improved their achievement in mathematics, as measured by the National Assessment of Educational Progress. (NAEP is the only national testing program that measures trends in student achievement in Student Achievement key subject areas.) Average NAEP mathematics scores rose for all three age groups tested, with 9-year-old students making the most progress. Black and Hispanic students have made significant gains so that racial/ethnic differences in achievement have narrowed since 1982. Trends in Average NAEP Mathematics Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 9-YEAR-OLDS 219 Total 231 224 White 237 195 Black 212 204 Hispanic 215 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Note: NAEP uses a scale of 0-500. Students who score at or above 200 on the NAEP mathematics scale can add and subtract two-digit numbers and recognize relationships among coins. Those who score at or above 250 can add. subtract. multiply and divide using whole numbers and solve one-step problems Those who score at or above 300 can compute with decimals, fractions and percents; recognize geometric figures; solve simple equations; and use moderately complex reasoning. Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, NAEP 1996 Trends in Academic Progress and The Condition of Education 1998. Indicator 18 14 no You Know the Good Notes about American Education? Trends in Average NAEP Mathematics Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 13-YEAR-OLDS 269 Total 274 274 White 281 240 Black 252 252 Student Achievement Hispanic 256 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Trends in Average NAEP Mathematics Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 17-YEAR-OLDS 298 Total 307 304 White 313 272 Black 286 277 Hispanic 292 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Note: NAEP uses a scale of 0-500. Students who score at or above 200 on the NAEP mathematics scale can add and subtract two-digit numbers and recognize relationships among coins. Those who score at or above 250 can add. subtract, multiply and divide using whole numbers and solve one-step problems Those who score at or above 300 can compute with decimals. fractions and percents; recognize geometric figures; solve simple equations: and use moderately complex reasoning Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, NAEP 1996 Trends in Academic Progress and The Condition of Education 1998. Indicator 18. D₀ You Know the Good Names about American Education? 15 Do You Know? STUDENT SCIENCE ACHIEVEMENT IS IMPROVING THE FACTS Between 1982 and 1996, science achievement increased for all three age groups tested by NAEP, with the greatest gains among black and Hispanic students. (NAEP is the only national testing program that measures trends in Student Achievement student achievement in key subject areas.) Trends in NAEP Average Science Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 9-YEAR-OLDS 221 Total 230 229 White 239 187 Black 202 189 Hispanic 207 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Note: NAEP uses a scale of 0-500. Students who score at or above 200 on the NAEP science scale under- stand simple scientific principles; for example. they show some knowledge of the structure and functions of plants and animals. Those who score at or above 250 can apply general scientific information; for example, they can interpret data from simple tables and make inferences about the outcomes of experiments. Those who score at or above 300 can analyze scientific procedures and data Source: US Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 1999, Indicator I 10 De You Knew the Gred News about American Education? Trends in NAEP Average Science Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 13-YEAR-OLDS 250 Total 256 257 White 266 217 Black 226 226 Student Achievement Hispanic 232 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Trends in NAEP Average Science Scale Scores 1982 By Race/Ethnicity, 1982 and 1996 1996 17-YEAR-OLDS 283 Total 296 293 White 307 235 Black 260 249 Hispanic 269 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Note: NAEP uses a scale of 0-500 Students who score at or above 200 on the NAEP science scale under- stand simple scientific principles; for example, they show some knowledge of the structure and functions of plants and animals Those who score at or above 250 can apply general scientific information; for example, they can interpret data from simple tables and make inferences about the outcomes of experiments. Those who score at or above 300 can analyze scientific procedures and data. Source: U.S. Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 1999, Indicator I. De You Know the Good News about American Education? 17 Do You Know? SAT SCORES INCREASED DURING THE 1990s THE FACTS High school students who plan to apply to college often take the college entrance examination known as the SAT, or Scholastic Assessment Test. Although some people are under the impression that SAT scores are falling, scores actually went up during the 1990s. The 1999 SAT mathematics average is markedly higher Student Achlevement than the average for either 1983 or 1989. The 1999 verbal average is 1 point higher than it was in 1989 and has remained the same for the past four years. This is good news, since the proportion of test-takers who did not speak English as a first language increased from 6% in 1989 to 8% in 1999. It is also encouraging that mathematics and verbal scores have increased even as the population of test-takers has grown much larger and more racially and ethnically diverse. Mean SAT Scores for College-Bound Seniors 1983 1983, 1989 and 1999 1989 1999 520 515 511 510 505 505 504 503 502 500 495 494 490 485 480 Mathematics Verbal Caution: College entrance exams, such as the SAT and ACT. are designed only to be predictors of college success and should not be used as indicators of how well American schools and students are doing. Further, since students voluntarily choose to take these tests. the results are not based on a representative sample. Note: The SAT uses a scale of 200-800. Source: The College Board, News From the College Board, 'College Board Reports 'Decade of Promise' for America's College-Bound Students As Record Numbers Take the SAT and Advanced Placement Courses," August 31, 1999. 18 D₀ You Know the Good News about American Education? Do You Know? ACT TEST SCORES ARE UP THE FACTS The ACT is another popular college entrance examination taken by high school students who want to go to college. In 1999, the national average composite score on the ACT remained the same as in 1998. continuing a 10-year trend of stable or increasing scores. These results have occurred at a time when record numbers of students are taking the exam-a factor that normally would cause scores to drop. The ACT program has concluded that the students taking the exam today must be at least as well prepared as those tested in the past. Student Achievement ACT National Average Composite Scores 1983 1982, 1990 and 1999 1989 21.4 1999 21.2 21.0 21.0 20.8 20.6 20.6 20.4 20.3 20.2 20.0 Caution: College entrance exams. such as the ACT and SAT, are designed only to be predictors of college success and should not be used as indicators of how well American schools and students are doing. Further, since students voluntarily choose to take these tests, the results are not based on a representative sample. Note: The ACT uses a scale of 0-36. Sources: ACT August 17. 1999 press release; and US Department of Education, Digest of Education Statistics 1997 De You Know the and Viva about American Education? 10 Do You Know? STUDENTS ARE TAKING MORE AP EXAMS THE FACTS Between 1984 and 1997, the number of Advanced Placement (AP) exams taken by high school students nearly tripled, growing from 50 exams per 1,000 twelfth-grade students to 131. Since then, the numbers have continued to rise. Minority students now comprise 30% of all AP test-takers, up from 22% a decade Student Achievement ago (The College Board, press release, August 31, 1999). AP exams are annual tests offered in many different subject areas that give students an opportunity to demonstrate college-level achievement. Many institutions of higher education offer college credits to students who score at least a 3 on a scale of 0 to 5. Number of AP Exams Taken Per 1,000 1984 Twelfth-Grade Students 1990 By Race/Ethnicity, 1984, 1990 and 1997 1997 160 140 131 132 120 103 100 100 85 80 60 54 50 48 40 37 26 24 20 8 0 Total White Black Hispanic Note: Includes exams taken by both 11th and 12th graders. Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 1999, Indicator 14. 20 Do You Know the Gard Now about American Education? THE WORK AHEAD: STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT Although U.S. students have made promising achievement gains during the past 15 years, the nation still has a way to go before all young people are academically well prepared. This is especially apparent at the secondary level. In a recent international achievement study, U.S. 4th graders performed above average in math, but our 8th and 12th graders lagged behind students from many other countries. In science, U.S. 4th graders performed in the top tier of nations, and our 8th graders achieved above the international average, but our 12th graders performed below average (U.S. Department of Education, Third International Mathematics and Science Study, 1998). States and school districts should persist in their efforts to raise achievement in all core subjects. Students who take rigorous academic courses have higher test scores than other students. All students, whether headed for the workplace or higher education, Student Achievement should be encouraged to take challenging academic courses. Other critical steps for states and school districts include: setting high standards for student learning; strengthening the secondary school curriculum to provide more focus and depth; ensuring that subject-matter courses are taught by qualified teachers with credentials in the field they are teaching; encouraging all students to take college entrance examinations and providing extra help to prepare them for these tests; and making AP courses available in the 44% of high schools that do not offer them. Strategies to raise achievement should also include extra assistance or different teaching methods for students who are struggling to meet high academic standards. In science and math. for example, many students do better when teachers make clear how the content and skills being taught apply to real-life problems and careers. Closing the gap between white and Asian students and their black and Hispanic counterparts should be a major thrust of the work ahead. Although minority students have made considerable gains, a gap still remains. Socioeconomic factors, such as racial-ethnic differences in family income and parents' educational levels, play a role in this gap. Poverty has a negative correlation with school achievement, and black and Hispanic children are more than twice as likely to live in poverty as white children (NCES, The Condition of Education 1997). Yet teachers in schools with high minority enrollments or high poverty are somewhat less likely to have a master's degree or a college major or minor in their main field of assignment than teachers in schools with few minority children or low poverty (NCES, Teacher Quality: A Report on the Preparation and Qualifications of Public School Teachers, 1999). To close achievement gaps, states and school districts should make special efforts to: recruit and hire teachers for high-poverty and high-minority schools who have academic backgrounds and full certification in the fields they are teaching; encourage all middle school students to take rigorous coursework; and make low-income students aware of programs to help finance the costs of AP exams, as well as the costs of postsecondary education. Dr You Know the Good News about American Education? 21 Do You Know? U.S. STUDENTS RECEIVE MORE INSTRUCTIONAL TIME THAN EUROPEAN STUDENTS THE FACTS Students in the United States receive more instructional time than students in the seven European countries studied by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. In 1994. U.S. primary schools provided an average of 958 teaching hours per year. compared with 923 in France and 760 hours in Germany. The U.S. secondary school averages were also higher. Number of Teaching Hours Per Year in Public Schools Primary Level, 1994 PRIMARY U.S.A. 958 Educational Climate Denmark 750 France 923 Germany 760 Ireland 915 Italy 748 Spain 900 Sweden 624 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 Note: Number of teaching hours is the total number of hours per year during which a full-time classroom teacher is responsible for teaching a group of students. Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Education at a Glance: OECD Indicators. 1996. and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 1998. Indicator 38. 22 D₀ You Know the doal Vess about American Education? Number of Teaching Hours Per Year in Public Schools Lower Secondary Level, 1994 LOWER SECONDARY U.S.A. 964 Denmark 750 France 660 Germany 712 Ireland 735 Italy 612 Spain 900 Sweden 576 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 Number of Teaching Hours Per Year in Public Schools Upper Secondary Level, 1994 UPPER SECONDARY Educational Climate U.S.A. 943 Denmark 480 France 660 Germany 650 Ireland 735 Italy 612 Spain 630 Sweden 528 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 Note: Number of teaching hours is the total number of hours per year during which a full-time classroom teacher is responsible for teaching a group of students. Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Education at a Glance OECD Indicators, 1996; and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 1998, Indicator 38. Do You Know the Good News about American Education? 23 Do You Know? SCHOOL CRIME IS DECLINING THE FACTS The overall school crime rate decreased between 1993 and 1997. In 1993, there were 155 school-related crimes for every 1,000 students ages 12 to 18, while in 1997 there were 102 such incidents. The most common crime at school is theft, rather than violent crime. Although recent, tragic school shootings have reminded the nation that violent death at school is intolerable no matter how rare an event, children are safer in schools than in the community or at home. Less than 1% of the 2,500 child homicides and suicides during the last 6 months of 1997 took place at school or on the way to and from school. There were also significant decreases between 1993 and 1997 in the percentages of high school students who carried a weapon on school property or were involved in a physical fight at school (U.S. Department of Education, 1999 Annual Report on School Safety). Educational Climate School-Related Crimes Against Students 1993 Ages 12 to 18 1997 1993 and 1997 200 Number of Incidents per 1,000 Students 155 150 102 96 100 63 59 50 40 12 8 0 Overall Crime Theft Violent Serious Violent Note: Serious violent crimes are defined as rape, sexual assault, robbery and aggravated assault. Violent crimes include serious violent crimes and simple assault. Source: U.S. Departments of Education and Justice. Indicators of School Crime and Safety 1999. 24 D₀ You Know the Good Names about American Education? THE WORK AHEAD: EDUCATIONAL CLIMATE Creating a safe climate that promotes learning is a joint responsibility of the community, schools, educators, parents and students. Continuing steps to reduce crime and violence at home and school should be part of the work ahead. Even though serious crime is down, students seem to feel less safe at school than they did a few years ago. In 1989, 6% of students ages 12 to 19 feared being harmed at school, but by 1995, this figure had risen to 9%. Street gangs and drugs on school property continue to be a problem at some schools. In 1995, 28% of students reported that there were gangs at their school, and almost one-third said they had been offered, sold, or given an illegal drug on school property (U.S. Departments of Education and Justice, Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 1999). Parents and families need to teach children respect for others and help them to resolve conflicts through non-violent means. States, communities and schools should ensure that schools have and enforce strict codes of student behavior and have in place preventive approaches, such as conflict resolution strategies, counseling for troubled students and character education. States, communities and schools also should develop special strategies to improve the safety of children in urban areas, who are more vulnerable to serious violent crime than suburban or rural children. Time devoted to teaching and learning is another factor that both educators and parents can influence. Recently many schools have sought to boost the amount of time spent on instruction, and the international data cited above suggest these efforts may be paying off. Whether added instructional time translates into higher Educational Climate achievement, however, depends on how well the time is used. To improve the educational climate, states, communities and school districts should: organize the school day so that students have adequate instructional time to learn core academic subjects; keep interruptions to a minimum; provide teachers with professional development in effective use of classroom time; and offer before- and after-school activities in a safe and structured environment. Students themselves must also make a serious effort to stay focused and learn while in class. Parents can shape the learning environment by setting clear guidelines for children about study, homework, television, and other recreational activities. Children who spend several hours a day watching TV or playing computer games obviously have less time to spend on homework, reading and other active pursuits. In addition, parents can help to create a learning climate at home by reading aloud to their young children and having their children read to them, and by talking with their children about the television programs they watch and the books they read. Dr You Know the deal 1.4. about American Iducation? 25 Do You Know? PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS ARE WELL-EDUCATED THE FACTS Public school teachers are well-educated, according to a 1998 national survey by the National Center for Education Statistics. Virtually all public school teachers have a bachelor's degree, and nearly half (45%) hold a master's degree. One percent have doctorates. These percentages have remained much the same since 1993-94. Other good news about teacher qualifications came out of this survey: Teachers have stronger backgrounds in academic disciplines than crities have asserted. Two-thirds of high school teachers, 44% of middle school teachers and 22% of elementary teachers have an undergraduate or graduate major in an academic field (such as English or mathematics). rather than a major in an education field (such as general education or mathematics education). Ninety-three percent of general elementary teachers and 92% of subject- matter teachers are fully certified in the field of their main teaching assignment (in other words. the field in which they taught most often). Percentage of Full-Time Public School Teachers Who Hold Various Degrees, 1998 100% 100% (rounded) 90% 80% 70% 60% Teachers 50% 45% 40% 30% 20% 10% 5% 1% 1% 0% Bachelor's Master's Doctorate Other Other degree certificate Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Teacher Quality A Report on the Preparation and Qualifications of Public School Teachers, 1999. 26 De You Know the desa New about American Iducation: Do You Know? PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS ARE BETTER EDUCATED THAN PRIVATE SCHOOL TEACHERS THE FACTS In 1993-94, virtually all public school teachers (99.3%) had completed at least a bachelor's degree, compared with 93.4% of private school teachers. Public school teachers also had more experience on average: 14.8 years of experience for public school teachers versus 12.2 years of experience for private school teachers. Educational Attainment of Public and Private Public School Teachers Private 1993-94 100% 99.3% 93.4% 90% 80% Bachelor's or Higher Teachers Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Schools and Staffing in the United States: A Statistical Profile, 1993-94 and The Condition of Education 1998. Note: Although data on teacher education were updated for public school teachers in 1998. comparable data were not collected that year for private school teachers. Do You Know the Good News about American Education? 27 Do You Know? TEACHERS HAVE LITERACY LEVELS COMPARABLE TO OTHER COLLEGE GRADUATES THE FACTS Some critics of public education contend that school teachers have low literacy skills, but this isn't the case. Data from a 1992 national study of adult literacy suggest that teachers have a level of literacy comparable to that of other college graduates. The prose literacy of teachers is not significantly different from that of engineers, physicians, writers, sales representatives, registered nurses and other college-educated professionals. ("Prose literacy" means the ability to understand, analyze and synthesize information from written texts.) Scientists were the only professionals who had measurably higher prose literacy skills than teachers. Prose Literacy of Teachers and Adults in Other Occupations, 1992 Average prose literacy scores All adults with 334 bachelor's degrees Scientists 354 Engineers 339 Physicians 335 Teachers 333 Teachers Writers and 332 Artists Sales 328 Representatives Registered 326 Nurses 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 Source: U.S. Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics. National Adult Literacy Survey 1992 and The Condition of Education 1995. Indicator 58. 28 D₀ You Know the Good New about American Education? THE WORK AHEAD: TEACHERS Public school teachers have the education, certification and academic backgrounds necessary for teaching. States, school districts, colleges and universities must next address the issues of out-of-field teaching, recruitment and retention, competitive compensation, teacher preparation and professional development. Although the vast majority of public secondary school teachers have an undergraduate or graduate major or minor in their main field of assignment, some still teach courses outside their field. In 1998, 18% of mathematics teachers, 14% of English teachers and 12% of science teachers in grades 7 through 12 did not have a major or minor in their main field of assignment (NCES, Teacher Quality, 1999). These figures probably understate the problem because they omit teachers who teach most of their courses in their major field but teach a few courses outside their field. Issues of teacher qualification are most acute in low-income areas, central cities, and schools with high minority enrollments; teachers in these settings are somewhat less likely than other teachers to have full (rather than provisional) certification, to have a master's degree, or to have a major or minor in their assigned field. States, higher education institutions and school districts should work together to ensure that all teachers-especially in schools with the greatest needs-have at least a major in the subject they are teaching. Large cohorts of experienced teachers are approaching retirement age at the same time that secondary school enrollments are about to surge-a combination that could intensify existing teacher shortages. College graduates with good literacy skills can choose from a wide range of occupations, including many that pay better than teaching. In 1992, for example, teachers who scored at prose literacy level 3, the middle range of the National Adult Literacy Survey, had median weekly wages of $475, compared with $603 for other college graduates scoring at level 3 (U.S. Department of Education, National Adult Literacy Survey 1992). School districts should raise teacher salaries and offer other incentives to attract and keep highly qualified candidates. States and higher education institutions should develop incentives, such as alternative certification, to encourage knowledgeable, experienced people from other fields to become teachers. State and local reform initiatives have raised the bar for student learning, which places greater demands on teachers. To prepare new cohorts of teachers for these heightened expectations will require reforms in teacher education programs. Colleges and universities should strengthen the academic course requirements for Teachers prospective teachers and should provide them with high-quality education and practice in effective teaching methods. School districts should provide supports for new teachers. such as mentoring and sustained professional development. School districts should also provide all teachers with more sustained professional development, rather than short-term workshops. Teachers need professional development in such areas as teaching to high standards, integrating the use of technology into their teaching, acquiring deeper content knowledge in their field, teaching students with limited English proficiency, and teaching students with disabilities in the regular classroom. Currently, 37% of teachers said they felt only somewhat well prepared or not at all prepared to address the needs of children with disabilities (NCES, Teacher Quality). Do You Know the Good Visa about American Education? 29 Do You Know? MORE STUDENTS ARE GOING ON TO HIGHER EDUCATION THE FACTS Compared with young people of the early 1980s, many more students today are going to college soon after they complete high school. Especially noteworthy are the increases among black students and women. College Enrollment Rates of High School 1983 Graduates Ages 16-24 1997 By Sex and Race/Ethnicity, 1983 and 1997 100% 90% 80% 70% 70% 67% 68% 66% 64% 60% 60% 55% 53% 53% 54% 52% 50% 39% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Total Male Female White Black Hispanic Note: Chart shows percentage of high school completers (including GED recipients) ages 16-24 who were enrolled in college during the October after they finished high school. Due to small sample sizes, the percentages shown for black and Hispanic students are subject to relatively large sampling errors Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Education Statistics 1998. Tables 183 and 184. Higher Education 30 Do You Knew the Gred New about American Education Do You Know? MORE YOUNG ADULTS ARE COMPLETING 4-YEAR COLLEGE DEGREES THE FACTS Between 1985 and 1998, there was an increase in the percentage of young adults who had completed a bachelor's degree or higher by age 29. The completion rates rose for white and black students, but decreased for Hispanic students. Particularly noteworthy is the rising rate among women, who are now more likely than men to complete a college degree. Percentage of Adults Age 25-29 Who Had 1983 Completed a Bachelor's Degree 1998 By Sex and Race/Ethnicity, 1983 and 1998 50% 45% 40% 35% 35% 32% 31% 30% 30% 28% 27% 26% 25% 25% 20% 18% 18% 17% 16% 15% 10% 5% 0% Total Male Female White Black Hispanic Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Condition of Education 1999, Table 59-3. Higher Education D₀ You Know the Good N.W. about American Education? 31 Do You Know? MORE WOMEN ARE EARNING GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL DEGREES THE FACTS Since passage of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which aimed to bring about equal educational opportunity by gender, the number of women earning graduate and professional degrees has gone up significantly. Women now constitute a larger share of medical, dental and law graduates, and of doctoral degree holders, than they did two decades ago. For example, women earned 43% of the law degrees granted in 1994, compared with only 7% in 1972. Percentage of Degree Recipients Who Are Women 1972 1972, 1983 and 1996 1983 1996 50% 45% 43% 41% 40% 40% 36% 36% 35% 33% 30% 27% 25% 20% 17% 16% 15% 10% 9% 7% 5% 1% 0% Medical Dental Law Doctoral Source: U.S. Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics. Digest of Education Statistics 1998, Tables 244 and 259. Higher Education 32 Do You know the if Name about American Education: THE WORK AHEAD: HIGHER EDUCATION More students are enrolling in college than ever before, but only about 31% of high school graduates ages 25 to 29 had completed a bachelor's degree or higher in 1998 (U.S. Department of Education, Condition of Education 1999). About 9% had completed an associate's degree (U.S. Department of Commerce, Current Population Survey, March 1998). although this figure does not include students who left higher education with a technical certificate or who transferred from a two-year to a four-college to pursue a bachelor's degree. Higher education institutions and secondary schools must work together to ensure that more students who start college complete a technical certificate or an associate's or bachelor's degree. This is especially important for black and Hispanic students, who have lower college completion rates. States and school districts should implement programs in middle and high schools to: let students know early on which courses they need to take-particularly mathematics, science and language courses-to prepare for success in postsecondary education; provide more intensive academic help for students who are struggling: and strengthen counseling programs to help students better understand the kinds of preparation required for various jobs, make wise choices about courses of study and types of institutions, and be well-informed about access to financial aid. Although gender and racial-ethnic gaps have narrowed in higher education, women and minorities are still underrepresented in mathematics, engineering and the physical sciences. A mathematics or science degree often leads to a high-paying career and is good preparation for a job in fast-growing technological fields. Schools and higher education institutions should take steps to: kindle early interest in mathematics and science among girls and boys, and particularly students of color; be aware of and address gender and racial differences in attitudes about mathematics and science; provide better counseling about course decisions and career options related to mathematics and science; and provide supports so that students can persist in a challenging curriculum all the way through high school and postsecondary education. Higher Education De You Know the Good N.... about American Education? 33 CONCLUSION The statistics highlighted in this brief report are a sample of the many benefits emerging from a decade and a half of school reform and sustained investment in our schools and our teachers. What is perhaps most remarkable is that our nation has made these improvements with a very diverse population, a strong tradition of local control of education. and enormous variation among states and school districts in their student population, policies and practices. Americans should give credit to public education for the progress made thus far in course-taking, school completion, student achievement, school safety, teacher quality and access to higher education. But this is just a beginning. There are still many areas where our nation should improve or fine-tune education reforms. Examples of needed improvements include: closing racial and ethnic gaps in achievement, high school graduation and completion of postsecondary degrees; encouraging more students to take harder courses at an earlier age; improving student achievement in reading, writing and other key subjects and accelerating the gains already made in mathematics and science; continuing the drop in school crime and eliminating violent crime; and strengthening the preparation of new teachers and ensuring that all courses are taught by teachers with a certification or major in that field. As the data in this report demonstrate. educational improvement is an achievable goal. Public education is moving in the right direction. Continued support from citizens and political leaders will maintain this welcome momentum. it Dr You Know the deal Now about American Education? This publication is not copyrighted and may be freely quoted without permission. provided the source is identified as: Do You Know the Good News about American Education? Published in 2000 by the Center on Education Policy and the American Youth Policy Forum. Washington, D.C. See our other publications CENTER ON EDUCATION POLICY CEP Center on Education Policy 1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 619 Washington, D.C. 20036 Phone: 202-822-8065 Fax: 202-822-6008 E-Mail: [email protected] Web Site: www.ctredpol.org AMERICAN F Y 0 () R 0 U T M 11 POLICY American Youth Policy Forum 1836 Jefferson Place, NW Washington, D.C. 20036 Phone: 202-775-9731 Fax: 202-775-9733 E-Mail: [email protected] Web Site: www.aypf.org