Earlier this
week I posted a piece on the Brookings
report that schools are no worse today than in the past, contrary to the
hysteria whipped by Ed Deformers and pundits that school’s today are in crisis.
Their analysis of PISA test scores indicated that while U.S. math and science
scores have been improving slightly, they never were (and still aren’t) very strong
compared with other wealthy countries.
However, in
many ways, K-12 education has been making dramatic gains. Students today are
taking more math and science courses than a generation ago, while more
are going straight to college after graduation. Between 1990 and 2009, the
percentage of high school students taking chemistry jumped from 49% to 70%, and
the percentage taking physics rose from 21% to 36%, according to The Condition of Education 2012, a new report reviewed on the Good Education website. There were similar gains in
math, with 16% of students taking calculus in 2009, compared with 7% in 1990,
and 11% taking statistics, compared with 1% in 1990.
The number
of students entering college right after high school jumped from 49% in 1979,
to 70% in 2009. While gains were seen for most ethnic groups and were largest
for African Americans (66% in 2010, compared with 43% in 1975), there are still
significant disparities in total college enrollment. A higher percentage of
white students (70%) and a much higher percentage of Asian students (88%) are
going to college right out of high school than black students (66%), while the
rate for Hispanic students has remained flat over the past several decades. The
most glaring disparities, however, were among different income groups, with
only 52% of low-income students attending college right out of high school,
compared with 82% of students from high-income families.
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