"New Jersey takes the top spot in the newly released 'Quality Counts 2019,'
the 23rd annual report card of state education systems issued by the Education
Week Research Center." Through my work with educational leaders in the
state, this comes as no surprise. On the whole, I know that they, and our
teachers, come to work each morning with an intense focus on improving student
outcomes, and with the growth mindset that "we can be better still."
I am also a school board member, and (humble?) parent of
three success stories of NJ public schools - recently-minted medical
professionals. I can take pride in my having made this education available to
my children, and for the small role I've played as a board member and public
schools advocate.
"The report . . . synthesizes 39 indicators that
capture a range of school finance, academic achievement, and socioeconomic
factors that affect the quality of state school systems." The article also
shares most improved, and largest declines in scores by state year over year.
What also stands out is that New Jersey and Massachusetts are the perennial top
performers by the metrics of this report card - either one NOT landing in the
top spot would be bigger news.
So, you ask, how does it feel to be #1 (assuming I may speak
for an entire state!)? Oh, fantastic. Reminds me of the time I was on the
championship youth football team. We ran away with the title that year - we
felt it was ours from the beginning. I was fortunate just to be on the team; my
dad had felt that I wasn't quite ready for varsity, so had the coaches keep me
in junior varsity. This ensured I was a starter, and I have to say I was
dominating. Of course, it was a collective, team effort - it was the overall
team that was great. And I, in all honesty, shouldn't have been on the team - I
was definitely bigger than the other kids.
Maybe it wasn't such a great experience, after all. My spot
could have been filled by a talented, deserving younger kid. Age and ability
considerations were not accounted for, let alone enforced when teams were made.
Did it make that much difference? I don't know. I do remember that we ran the
same offensive play - on my side of the line - over and over, all night in the
championship game.
I won't dwell on that any more. What about New Jersey
education, eh? We know that there is a correlation between median household
income and education results: New Jersey has the second-highest median income
in the country - 13.0% of New Jersey households earn $200,000 or more, and nearly
40% of New Jersey adults hold at least a bachelor’s degree (Massachusetts is
#4, and 43.4% of adults in the state have at least a bachelor’s degree) (America’s Richest and
Poorest States, Wall Street 24/7, Oct. 4, 2018). We spend
$16,543 per pupil on education, compared to the national average of $12,756,
adjusted for regional cost differences (Education Week, January 3, 2019).
Clearly, New Jersey comes to the game with some advantages
before the opening kick. It's great to be dominant in the league, but even
better when you're the underdog, surprising fans when the team comes from
nowhere with so-so talent and a lack of superstars. Maybe we should challenge
ourselves, aspire to more than beating Massachusetts. Play varsity ball.
Because there are still a lot of New Jersey kids not in the
game. According to the Nation's Report Card for 2017,
NAEP scores for Grade 8 show significant gaps between subgroups:
Mathematics gap in proficiency, 500-point scale:
- 34 points between white/black
(4-point improvement since 1990)
- 30 points between
white/Hispanic (7-point improvement since 1990)
Reading gap in proficiency, 500-point scale
- 28 points between black/white (no
significant change from 2003)
- 26 points between
white/Hispanic (no significant change from 2003)
Here are some other facts about New Jersey education, where
53% of students are non-white according to ProPublica: white students are 2.5 times more likely to
be enrolled in an AP course than black students (2.3 times more likely than
Hispanic students); black students are 5.4 times more likely to be suspended
compared to white students (2.4 times more likely, for Hispanic students).
How about this, New Jersey: let's aspire to being #1 in
closing the achievement gap - a challenge truly worthy of our talent and
"better angels." I am confident that we have the leadership to get
this done. And if you are a school board member, please see that the board is
talking about these gaps in your district -
enough crowing about how many of our kids are getting into Ivy League schools.
If I could go back, I think I would have tried harder to
move up to the youth varsity team that year. They weren't champions, but they
were worthy contenders. And if I could have elevated my game, and proven myself
against competitors my own size, I would have a much better reason to hold my
head high.
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