The Most Important Book of the Year
by Mona Charen
Abigail and Stephen Thernstrom have produced
a book that should rock the nation. "No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap
in Learning" is an absolutely brilliant analysis of what ails American
education today. Though the Thernstroms will doubtless receive a certain amount
of abuse for tackling this sensitive subject, no fair-minded person reading
this scholarly and lucid book can fail to recognize their good faith. It is
hard to imagine a more necessary book about domestic policy.
The Thernstrom deserve the title "civil rights activists"
more than any other living Americans because they are outraged about the greatest
obstacle to full racial equality -- poor educational performance by black
and Hispanic kids. They begin with an unflinching look at the data. The average
black 17-year-old scored in the 23rd percentile in reading in 1999, compared
with the average white at the 50th percentile.
"That means," write the Thernstroms, "that
77 percent of white students today read better than the average black student.
And conversely, only 23 percent of blacks read as well or better than the
average white."
In math and science, things are even worse. The average
black student was at the 14th percentile in math, behind seven out of eight
whites. And in science, the black average was at the 10th percentile, behind
nine out of 10 whites. "The average black and Hispanic student at the
end of high school has academic skills that are at about the eighth-grade
level."
Twenty-five years ago, the gap was even larger. But there
is little comfort in that, because after progress during the 1980s, the gap
began to widen again during the 1990s, so that all of the earlier gains were
wiped out.
"No Excuses" next demolishes the conventional
wisdom about failing kids and failing schools. Is it lack of funding, crumbling
infrastructure, lack of textbooks, racist teachers or culturally biased tests?
No. For 25 years, we've been lavishing money on education with very little
to show for it. The imagined contrast in spending between rich and poor neighborhoods
turns out to be illusory. Schools with more than 50 percent minority enrollment
spent nearly as much ($4,103) per pupil as those that were nearly all while
($4,389) in 1989-1990. And even comparing wealthy suburban schools to inner
city ones, the deferential turns out to be only about 5 percent.
Textbooks? Balboa High in San Francisco was sued by the
ACLU for failing to provide its students with textbooks. But the principal
explains that the funds are available, it's just that teachers fail to place
timely orders, companies are slow to ship the books and students lose them.
The place "hemorrhages" textbooks, one teacher complains.
Even the black children who attend wealthy suburban schools
perform extremely poorly on academic test, below the level of poor whites.
So what to make of it
Hispanic students suffer from the recent immigrant handicap. But
for blacks, the answer lies partly in the realm of culture. Black parents
simply do not demand as much academic rigor as whites and Asians. Black students
who reported that they were "working just as hard as they could"
spent 3.9 hours per week on homework. For whites, the figure was 5.4 hours,
nearly 40 percent higher. And for Asians, the figure was 7.5 hours.
Black kids spend more than twice as many hours a day watching
television as whites. And when students were surveyed about the lowest grade
they could receive without getting into trouble with their parents, Asians
said A-, whites said B-, and blacks and Hispanics said C-.
This is not to let schools off the hook. Parents and the
home environment are important but not the whole story. The Terhnstroms take
the reader to a number of innovative charter schools in poor neighborhoods
that are taking average kids from less than ideal homes (no "creaming")
and producing highly successful pupils.
Among the roadblocks to reform are teachers unions that
strenuously resist merit pay, competency tests, alternative certification
and choice. "Unless more schools are freed from the constraints of the
traditional public school system," the Thernstroms write, "the racial
gap in academic achievement will not significantly narrow, we suspect. Indeed,
every urban school should become a charter. States must insist that schools
meet rigorous academic standards, and student results on statewide standards-based
tests should be the most important measure of success."
The motto of one of the schools the Thernstroms admire is
"No excuses." It is staggering to consider that so many have been
content for so long to excuse the sandal of failing schools in America. This
learned and deeply humane books shines a spotlight on them and point to the
way to a better future.
Mona Charen is the author of "Useful
Idiots," which will be released by Regnery Publishing in mid-February.
COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Published in The Times Examiner - 10-29-03