Closing the Achievement Gap

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achievement gap
adolescent learning theory
Case Study Districts
Case Study Schools
Category=JN
College Aspirations
Early Adolescent Development
educational equity
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eq_society-politics
Ethnic Achievement Gap
Fall Reading
High Poverty Schools
Higher Educational Aspirations
higher educational attainment
Illinois State Board
Instructional Coherence
ISAT
Large Urban School Districts
Middle Grades
Middle Grades Schools
Middle Grades Students
minority children
minority student outcomes
multiracial school achievement analysis
Professional Development
Racial Ethnic Compositions
School Racial Composition
school reform strategies
socioeconomic status impact
Student Background Characteristics
Students Meet State Standards
Summer Book
Summer Reading
Summer Reading Loss
Summer Reading Programs
urban education research
urban school systems
White Students Enrolled

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805895513
  • Weight: 181g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Apr 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Closing the Achievement Gap is made up of six articles. The first paper examines Cleveland's restructuring initiative in light of two theories on early adolescent development: person-in-environment theory and the focal theory of change. This is followed by a study that illustrates the difference in academic performance between low-income children and their peers, minority children and their classmates, and those schools that serve a majority of children from low-income families and those that serve a more advantaged population. The third article summarizes key findings of a study that examined the reform efforts of three large urban school districts and a portion of a fourth that had been successful in improving student achievement and reducing racial achievement gaps. It also discusses the implications for research and technical assistance. Next, survey data on 15,800 high school students from three urban school districts is used to investigate the impact of school-level support for higher educational attainment and school racial composition on students' actual educational aspirations. The final article explores whether reading books during summer vacation improves fall reading proficiency and whether access to books increases the volume of summer reading.

Samuel C. Stringfield