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Posts Tagged ‘achievement gap’

2010 Graduation Rate - 93%

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

For the past decade ACE has increased graduation rates among Colorado low-income kids. When provided access to quality schools, and given a choice, kids can excel.

This year was no exception.

The Class of 2010 posted a 93% graduation rate! This compares to low-income graduation rates of 49% in Denver and 57% in Aurora.

What’s more, ACE kids graduate ready for college. 100% of ACE’s 2009 graduates are still in college today, and every single 2010 grad has specific plans to attend college.

We’re closing the achievement gap. What does this mean?

A high school diploma can improve the quality of life, and our entire state economy and society. Research shows that high school dropouts cost communities $2 million over their lifetimes when factoring decreased earning potential, increased reliance on government assistance and increased likelihood of spending time in prison.

In Colorado, 61% of the 21,178 low-income students who should have graduated in 2009 actually earned a diploma

The Results Are In

Monday, August 10th, 2009

School choice works.

When given the opportunity to attend the school of their choice, children - including low-income, at-risk kids - can be successful. Take ACE’s 2009 results as proof:

Higher Graduation Rates

ACE Graduation Rate – 86%

Colorado Low-Income Graduation Rate – 59%

Denver Public Schools Low-Income Graduation Rate – 45%

Better Prepared for College

ACT Average Composite Score – 19.4

Colorado Low-Income ACT Average – 15.7

Denver Public Schools Low-Income ACT Average – 14.4

Take that, achievement gap.

Mind the Gap

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

mind-the-gap

A national report released yesterday shows that the achievement gap between white and minority student academic performance in America persists, despite gains in many states. That minority students (generally low-income, inner city kids) are not receiving the instruction they need and are falling further behind their white peers is one of the most troubling outcomes of our public education system. These are the kids that need a quality education the most, so they can break that generational cycle of poverty.

Locally, there is reason to be cautiously optimistic, however. In Colorado, for example, “black students have gained ground on their white peers on eighth-grade math tests over the past two decades.” Colorado joins Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas as the only states where black student scores grew faster than white students.

But the gap is still wide and vexing to educational experts, and entire generations of minority children are being swallowed up by this achievement gap.

The Denver Post’s rationalizing for this gap is beyond troubling:

Research has shown that education problems begin even before school for minorities and children of poverty. Factors include low birth weight and poor nutrition.

Minority children and those raised in poor households are exposed to more television, don’t read as much, aren’t talked to as much, and have less involvement with parents and adults — all correlations to poor educational performance later in life.

The students ACE serves are 100% low-income and mainly minority inner-city kids, exposed to the same struggles and temptations of poverty, nutrition, gangs, drugs and television. Many were failing in their assigned public school, fast becoming another statistic. But once they enter private school - mostly small, neighborhood schools that are able to give them the attention they need - academic performance improves, parental satisfaction increases, and kids begin to thrive.

It’s the instruction they receive at school that makes the difference, not their birth weight. We need to continue to hold our educational establishment’s feet to the fire, without making excuses.