| Although
minority students in urban districts lag well behind whites
on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP),
results indicate African Americans and Hispanic students are
performing on par with their racial and ethnic counterparts
in suburban and rural areas. The 2003 NAEP in mathematics
and reading was administered to a representative sample of
students in grades four and eight for each state, and on a
trial basis to students in nine large urban school districts.
Fourth- and eighth-grade public school students in nine urban
school districts participated in the 2003 Trial Urban District
Assessment (TUDA). They included: Atlantic City, Boston School
District, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, City of Chicago School
District 299, Cleveland Municipal School District, Houston
Independent School District, Los Angeles Unified, New York
City Public Schools, and San Diego City Unified. The District
of Columbia is also included in the comparisons. Findings
from the National Assessment of Educational Progress 2003
Trial Urban District Assessment (TUDA) for both reading and
mathematics can be reviewed at the NCES web site. For a look
at the TUDA reading results go to http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/reading/results2003/districtresults.asp
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
students scored above the national average in both subjects
and for both grades. What factors may have contributed to
this difference? Possible answers may be found in the report
from the Council of Great City Schools, Foundation for Success:
Case Studies for How Urban School System Improve Student Achievement.
This document presents a case study of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
school district along with four other districts. It can be
viewed at http://www.cgcs.org/pdfs/Foundations.pdf.
Teachers
Under
pressure from legislators, North Carolina education leaders
agreed to drop state testing requirements for the thousands
of out-of-state teachers who are recruited every year to help
fill classroom vacancies, reported The (Raleigh) News &
Observer. Newly graduated teachers from colleges and universities
in North Carolina also will no longer need to pass subject-area
tests to teach in middle or high school classrooms. Schools
view the test as a barrier to attracting and hiring teachers
who are licensed in other states but lack the tests or scores
required by North Carolina. State leaders say that the new
federal standards for teachers under the No Child Left Behind
law give North Carolina schools an extra measure of quality
control at the same time that they made the policy change
necessary.
© 2004 American Association of School Administrators.
All rights reserved.
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