抖音成人

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America鈥檚 Public School Teachers Are Far Less Diverse Than Their Students
Recently released data from the National Education Association shows that while the diversity of American public schoolchildren is rapidly increasing, teachers remain overwhelmingly white.

The American public school system has shown a steady rise in the number of enrolled students since the beginning of this century. According to the , 47.7 million students attended public schools in 2001, a number that increased to 49.5 million by 2011. By 2023 the public school population is projected to be over 52 million students.

Not only is the overall student population growing, but its ethnic makeup is also shifting as well. As shown in the graph at right, as the number of white public school students has decreased, the number of minority students has rapidly increased, especially students who identify as Hispanic. In fact, by 2023, white students will comprise just 45 percent of public school students nationwide, while Hispanic students will represent 30 percent.

Educational Disparities Follow Racial and Ethnic Lines

As the student population in the United States continues to become more and more diverse, it becomes evident that students of color are often shortchanged because to educate children of various cultural and ethnic backgrounds. Particularly in the West and the South, where population growth has been explosive, public schools are struggling to provide services to children who have little or no English speaking abilities. Furthermore, since poverty disproportionately impacts children of color, districts additionally struggle to finance free and reduced lunch programs, before and after school academic support, additional classroom personnel, and

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Nation鈥檚 Public School Personnel Embroiled in Cheating Scandals

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Nation鈥檚 Public School Personnel Embroiled in Cheating Scandals
In today鈥檚 climate of high-stakes testing, some teachers and administrators are cheating the system by providing test answers to students, changing student answers, and reviewing test questions before state tests are administered in order to feign the appearance of student success.

As the pressure to demonstrate student achievement has increased over the last decade, some educators have begun bending the rules. While cheating scandals involving teachers are nothing new, with the passage of the (NCLB) in 2002, the stakes for teachers and students alike rose dramatically.

NCLB鈥檚 strict testing and performance requirements have gotten the most attention over the years. Students in elementary and middle grades are required to be tested annually in math and reading. High school students must be tested at least once between tenth and twelfth grade. Schools must also demonstrate 鈥渁dequate yearly progress,鈥 in which students show year-to-year improvement towards the eventual goal that 100 percent of students are proficient on tests in both subject areas.

Originally, districts had until 2014 to meet 100 percent proficiency. But by 2011 it became clear that thousands of schools across the country would not meet this goal. As a result, the Obama Administration agreed to that could not reach the goal, however, districts had to agree to implement teacher evaluation systems that were directly tied to student test scores if waivers were to be granted. Thus, cheating scandals involving educators have since become much more commonplace.

Cheating Cases Reported Across the Nation

with 鈥渇ostering a culture of cheating鈥 after the state鈥檚 attorney general discovered in 2008 that teachers had provided test answers to students, improperly reviewed state

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Should Public School Students be Allowed to Pray Before Lunch?

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Should Public School Students be Allowed to Pray Before Lunch?
A recent incident in a Florida elementary school in which a teacher allegedly told a student that she could not pray before eating her lunch has thrust the question of religion in public schools back into the limelight.

The presence of religion, and more specifically, prayer, in public schools has long been a hot-button topic in the United States. Religious parents maintain that their child has the right to pray and engage in other religious activities while at public school. Meanwhile, parents on the other side of the issue argue that their children should not be subjected to state-sponsored religious activities. Numerous court battles have more clearly defined the role religion can play in public schools, however, the debate regarding the nature and extent of religious practices at school continues.

Religion in Schools: A Brief Overview

In the late 1950s, the Board of Regents of New York鈥檚 public schools system composed a nondenominational prayer for students to recite at the beginning of the school day. The prayer was strictly voluntary. A group of parents, including Steven Engel, took exception to the practice and filed suit against the Board. After state courts sided with the Board, thus upholding the school鈥檚 right to hold the voluntary morning prayer, Engel appealed the case to the Supreme Court. In 1962 the Court handed down their decision in the landmark case, , in which they declared the practice of school-sponsored prayer unconstitutional.

This video deals with the question of whether or not prayer in school is legal.

In the majority opinion, the justices argued that neither the voluntary nature nor the nondenominational nature of

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Texas Schools: Enrollment Skyrockets

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Texas Schools: Enrollment Skyrockets
Fueled by immigration of Hispanics to Texas, the state鈥檚 school system continues to grow at a frenetic pace, with a current enrollment of more than five million students. In this article, we dig into the numbers to examine how the Texas school system is changing, and what these changes mean for the future.

Everything is bigger in Texas, including the . No state has experienced more growth in the number of K-12 students over the last decade than Texas. Although the majority of the growth is among the Hispanic student population, all ethnic groups except Caucasians experienced both numerical and percentage increases in enrollment during the 2011-2012 and 2012-2013 school years. These increases in minority enrollment and decreases in white enrollment continue a trend that dates back to the 1980s.

Enrollment Reflects Increasing Diversity

According to the Texas Education Agency, over the last decade, the state鈥檚 public school system has added over 820,000 students, which reflects a 19 percent increase in total enrollment. When viewed longitudinally, enrollment growth in Texas is even more pronounced: Since the 1987-1988 school year, enrollment has increased by a whopping 1.85 million students, representing a growth of over 57 percent.

In the 2012-2013 academic year, Texas public school students were:

  • 51.3 percent Hispanic;
  • 30 percent white;
  • 12.7 percent African-American;
  • 3.6 percent Asian, and
  • 1.8 percent multi-racial.

These numbers are representative of the increasing ethnic and cultural diversity of students enrolling in Texas public schools. The Hispanic student population surpassed the 50 percent mark in 2011 and is the fastest-growing segment of Texas鈥 student population. Conversely, white enrollment, which has been decreasing for years, is projected to continue declining for the next several decades. In 2000, over 41 percent of Texas students were white, but that number now stands at just over 31 percent. By 2050, experts

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New York City Schools: Most Segregated in the Nation

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New York City Schools: Most Segregated in the Nation
A recent report reveals that public schools in New York isolate students not only by race, but also by socioeconomic status. In this article, we examine the extent of segregation in New York鈥檚 schools, its causes, and potential solutions to this problem.

On May 17, 1954, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which declared that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional. Yet, 60 years later, public schools across the nation continue to be highly segregated based on race and socioeconomic status. Curiously, America鈥檚 most segregated schools are not in the Deep South but in New York, a state that has expansive ethnic, cultural, social, and economic diversity. Perhaps even more surprising, New York City, one of the most diverse cities in the world, also has one of the most segregated school districts in the country.

Segregation by the Numbers

According to a by UCLA鈥檚 Civil Rights Project, school segregation in New York is widespread. It occurs in metropolitan New York City, rural areas, and urban locales upstate. However, as the nation鈥檚 largest public school system with 1.1 million students, the New York City Public Schools greatly influenced the depth and breadth of the segregation problem. And a significant problem it is. Although the number of Asian and Latino students has dramatically increased since the late 1980s, exposure of these groups to white students has decreased. In fact, of New York City鈥檚 32 school districts, 19 had less than 10 percent white enrollment as recently as 2010. Some of New York City鈥檚 schools, particularly charter and magnet schools, are identified by the authors of the report as being so segregated that they are classified as 鈥渁partheid schools.鈥

Compounding the problem

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