Messing With Texas
Speaking of Texas, since I included a blog post by RiShawn Biddle in my last email criticizing Gov. Perry, it's only fair that I include this blurb from a NYT op ed yesterday:
On Friday, in a Bloomberg Television interview, Education Secretary Arne Duncan tried to open up another anti-Texan front, saying he feels "very, very badly for the children" in Texas's supposedly underfinanced public schools. But here, too, the evidence doesn't back up Duncan's criticism. Texas does have higher high school dropout rates than the average American state. But then again, Texas isn't an average state: it's an enormous melting pot that shares a porous, 1,969-mile border with Mexico. Once you control for demographics and compare like with like, the Texan educational record looks much more impressive.
When a 2009 McKinsey study contrasted Perry's home state to the similarly sized and situated California, it found that Texas students were "one to two years of learning ahead of California students of the same age, even though Texas has less income per capita and spends less per pupil than California."
When it comes to minority achievement, Texas looks even better: On the 2009 National Assessment of Educational Progress math exam, black eighth graders in Texas outscored black eighth graders in every other state.
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August 21, 2011
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