South's schools swell with poor kids
http://www.newsobserver.com/front/story/754155.html
WASHINGTON - For the first time in more than 40 years, the majority of
children in public schools in the South are poor, according to a report
released today.
In 11 Southern states, a significant increase in the
number of poor children attending public school has pushed their
numbers above 50 percent of the student body. North Carolina comes
close -- 49 percent of the state's schoolchildren live below the
poverty line.
The increase has sent district officials scurrying
for solutions on how to best educate kids who are coming from
economically disadvantaged homes.
"The future of the South's
ability to have an educated population is going to depend on how well
we can improve these students' education," said Steve Suitts, a program
coordinator with the Atlanta-based Southern Education Foundation, a
nonprofit organization that focuses on Southern educational issues and
conducted the study.
In places like Memphis, Tenn., where roughly
80 percent of students come from low-income homes, that has meant
adopting models that address teaching children in poverty. In Florida's
Miami-Dade district, where 61 percent of students are on free or
reduced-price lunch, that has meant strengthening efforts to improve
all students' math and reading scores and curb dropout rates.
--------------
Standardized high school exit exams put states to the test
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2007-10-29-exit-exams_N.htm?loc=interstitialskipIf a student spends 13 years in school and
doesn't learn basic math, English, history and science, should she get
a high school diploma? Should she sue?
States are facing these questions as they
grapple with what seems a simple requirement: asking graduating seniors
to pass exit exams in core subjects.
Twenty-two states have some type of exit exams; four are phasing them in.
Observers are divided on whether the tests
improve education as a coalition of business leaders, governors and
advocates for low-income children asks states to hold firm.
But the tests are proving controversial.
Maryland has delayed exams by two years. The state Board of Education
meets today and Wednesday to decide whether to move the date again.