Education Meeting America S Needs PDF
Education Meeting America S Needs PDF
Education Meeting America S Needs PDF
MEETING AMERICA’S
NEEDS?
TABLE OF CONTENTS
P R E F A C E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii CHAPTER 5
National Policies for Improvement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
CHAPTER 1 Eight National Education Goals were created between 1989 and
An Overview of American Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1994, after an influential report warned about mediocrity in
The United States is one of the most highly educated nations American schools. This chapter discusses the reauthorization of
in the world. This chapter presents and interprets data about the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, called the No
education in America, focusing on enrollment (historical, Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001, compliance with the
current, and projected); trends in educational attainment, accountability standards this law sets, and reactions to and public
including racial, ethnic, and gender differences; and spending opinion about NCLB.
on public and private schools from elementary through post-
secondary. CHAPTER 6
Students at Risk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
CHAPTER 2 Among the barriers to academic success examined in this chapter
Preprimary, Elementary, and Secondary Schools . . . . 13 are poverty, lack of English proficiency, difficult transitions to
In its coverage of preprimary, elementary, and secondary schools, middle school and junior high, and dropping out. Health-risk
this chapter includes such enrollment trends as preprimary behaviors that may hinder educational achievement (such as
growth, geographic shifts, racial and ethnic diversity, and poverty substance abuse, smoking, and early sexual activity) are treated
rate. A major topic is school financing—subdivided into types and extensively, and risks to students from suicide and school violence
sources—revenues, expenditures, and international comparisons. are assessed.
Public and private schools are also compared in this chapter,
which ends with data on attendance and high school graduation CHAPTER 7
rates. Issues in Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105
As the result of controversial efforts to improve American
CHAPTER 3 education, students can attend charter, parochial, or for-profit
Education for Special School Populations. . . . . . . . . 41 institutions; schools outside their immediate neighborhoods; or
How does the American education system serve students with even home schools. Other debates touched on in this chapter
special needs? This chapter describes programs for the physically include religious expression in public schools, the Pledge of Alle-
giance, the teaching of evolution, bilingual education, school size,
and mentally disabled, the gifted and talented, the financially
technology, and parental involvement.
disadvantaged, and migrant and homeless children. Legislation
aimed at helping such students is discussed, along with trends in
each of the four categories. Inclusion, Title I, Free Lunch CHAPTER 8
programs, and Head Start are also covered. Teachers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .121
This chapter covers issues related to teachers, such as employment
CHAPTER 4 situation, salaries, and turnover. It also presents information on
Testing and Achievement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 the Teacher and Principal Training and Recruiting Fund and
statistics on crimes against teachers.
Chapter 4 treats measures of academic success. Results from
the National Assessment of Educational Progress in the cate-
gories of reading, mathematics, science, writing, geography, CHAPTER 9
and U.S. history are given and explained in the first part. Colleges and Universities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .127
Long-term trend data for reading and mathematics are the College and university enrollment is analyzed in this chapter
major focus of this section. Additional sections deal with inter- (by student age, race, ethnicity, and nationality; size and type
national comparisons, Carnegie units and exit exams as of school; and degree level). Other topics addressed here
requirements for high school graduation, and scores on college include post-secondary institutions serving specifically women,
entrance exams. African-Americans, Hispanics, or Native Americans;
Education v
degree-granting trends; persistence; faculty; rising costs and school problems and quality, school reforms, reasons for student
financial assistance; distance education; and substance abuse failure, and the achievement gap between minority and white
on campus. children.
CHAPTER 10 I M P O R T A N T N A M E S A N D A D D R E S S E S . . . . . . .163
Public Opinions about Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . .155
R E S O U R C E S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165
Chapter 10 concerns public opinion on education, as reflected by
Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup polls that posed questions about public I N D E X . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .167
Education: Meeting America’s Needs? is part of the content. Each book also presents the widely held positions
Information Plus Reference Series. The purpose of each and important ideas that shape how the book’s subject is
volume of the series is to present the latest facts on a topic discussed in the United States. These positions are
of pressing concern in modern American life. These explained in detail and, where possible, in the words of
topics include today’s most controversial and most stu- their proponents. Some of the other material to be found
died social issues: abortion, capital punishment, care for in these books includes: historical background; descrip-
the elderly, crime, the environment, health care, immigra- tions of major events related to the subject; relevant laws
tion, minorities, national security, social welfare, women, and court cases; and examples of how these issues play
youth, and many more. Although written especially for out in American life. Some books also feature primary
the high school and undergraduate student, this series is documents or have pro and con debate sections giving the
an excellent resource for anyone in need of factual infor- words and opinions of prominent Americans on both sides
mation on current affairs. of a controversial topic. All material is presented in an
even-handed and unbiased manner; the reader will never
By presenting the facts, it is Thomson Gale’s inten- be encouraged to accept one view of an issue over
tion to provide its readers with everything they need to another.
reach an informed opinion on current issues. To that end,
there is a particular emphasis in this series on the pre-
sentation of scientific studies, surveys, and statistics. HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
These data are generally presented in the form of tables, From escalating violence in the classroom to the
charts, and other graphics placed within the text of each production of high school graduates capable of competing
book. Every graphic is directly referred to and carefully in today’s global marketplace, education is a hotly dis-
explained in the text. The source of each graphic is pre- puted topic in America. This book presents a snapshot of
sented within the graphic itself. The data used in these education in the United States. Areas covered include an
graphics are drawn from the most reputable and reliable overview of American education; primary, elementary,
sources, in particular from the various branches of the and secondary schools; public versus private schooling;
U.S. government and from major independent polling special education; education of gifted children; testing
organizations. Every effort has been made to secure the and achievement of students at the primary, secondary,
most recent information available. The reader should bear and college levels; national education goals; and ‘‘at-
in mind that many major studies take years to conduct, risk’’ students, including trends in dropout rates, drug
and that additional years often pass before the data from use, and violence in schools. Also discussed are colleges
these studies are made available to the public. Therefore, and universities; issues such as home schooling, school
in many cases the most recent information available in choice, and vouchers; trends in teacher supply and
2006 dated from 2003 or 2004. Older statistics are some- demand; and public opinions about education.
times presented as well if they are of particular interest
and no more recent information exists. Education: Meeting America’s Needs? consists of ten
chapters and three appendices. Each of the chapters is
Although statistics are a major focus of the Informa- devoted to a particular aspect of education in the United
tion Plus Reference Series, they are by no means its only States. For a summary of the information covered in each
Education vii
chapter, please see the synopses provided in the Table of Appendices
Contents at the front of the book. Chapters generally In addition to the main body text and images, Educa-
begin with an overview of the basic facts and background tion: Meeting America’s Needs? has three appendices.
information on the chapter’s topic, then proceed to exam- The first is the Important Names and Addresses directory.
ine subtopics of particular interest. For example, Chapter Here the reader will find contact information for a number
3, Education for Special School Populations, begins with of government and private organizations that can provide
the definition of disability and then goes on to discuss the further information on education. The second appendix is
numbers and characteristics of special education students, the Resources section, which can also assist the reader in
programs to meet their needs, and the transition from conducting his or her own research. In this section the
special education to higher education and the workforce. author and editors of Education: Meeting America’s
This is followed by a section on programs for gifted and Needs? describe some of the sources that were most
talented students. The chapter concludes with a section on useful during the compilation of this book. The final
disadvantaged students and programs developed to meet appendix is the detailed Index, which facilitates reader
their needs. Readers can find their way through a chapter access to specific topics in this book.
by looking for the section and subsection headings, which
are clearly set off from the text. They can also refer to the
book’s extensive Index if they already know what they ADVISORY BOARD CONTRIBUTIONS
are looking for. The staff of Information Plus would like to extend its
heartfelt appreciation to the Information Plus Advisory
Statistical Information Board. This dedicated group of media professionals pro-
The tables and figures featured throughout Educa- vides feedback on the series on an ongoing basis. Their
tion: Meeting America’s Needs? will be of particular use comments allow the editorial staff who work on the
to the reader in learning about this issue. These tables and project to make the series better and more user-friendly.
figures represent an extensive collection of the most Our top priority is to produce the highest-quality and most
recent and important statistics on education and related useful books possible, and the Advisory Board’s contri-
issues—for example, graphics in the book cover public butions to this process are invaluable.
elementary and secondary school revenue sources and The members of the Information Plus Advisory Board
amounts, student proficiency in reading, progress toward are:
meeting requirements of the No Child Left Behind Act,
public opinion on the use of vouchers, percentages of • Kathleen R. Bonn, Librarian, Newbury Park High
public school teachers without a major or minor in the School, Newbury Park, California
fields in which they teach, percentages of those partici- • Madelyn Garner, Librarian, San Jacinto College—
pating in adult education, and the number of college North Campus, Houston, Texas
degrees conferred in various fields. Thomson Gale
• Anne Oxenrider, Media Specialist, Dundee High
believes that making this information available to the
School, Dundee, Michigan
reader is the most important way in which we fulfill the
goal of this book: to help readers understand the issues • Charles R. Rodgers, Director of Libraries, Pasco–
and controversies surrounding education in the United Hernando Community College, Dade City, Florida
States and reach their own conclusions. • James N. Zitzelsberger, Library Media Department
Each table or figure has a unique identifier appearing Chairman, Oshkosh West High School, Oshkosh,
above it for ease of identification and reference. Titles for the Wisconsin
tables and figures explain their purpose. At the end of each
table or figure, the original source of the data is provided. COMMENTS AND SUGGESTIONS
In order to help readers understand these often com- The editors of the Information Plus Reference Series
plicated statistics, all tables and figures are explained in welcome your feedback on Education: Meeting America’s
the text. References in the text direct the reader to the Needs? Please direct all correspondence to:
relevant statistics. Furthermore, the contents of all tables Editors
and figures are fully indexed. Please see the opening Information Plus Reference Series
section of the Index at the back of this volume for a 27500 Drake Rd.
description of how to find tables and figures within it. Farmington Hills, MI 48331-3535
American education has always faced challenges. and older had completed four years or more of high
Debates about the purposes of schools, the benefits of school, but almost one in seven (13.7%) had completed
education, the best approach to teaching and learning, fewer than five years of elementary school. By 2002 in
and calls for reform of the system have been common in the same age group, 84.1% of Americans had completed
the history of education in the United States. Since the high school, while only 1.6% had fewer than five years of
1980s the nation has been working to resolve such critical formal education. In 1940 less than 5% of the population
issues as low academic performance, high dropout rates, twenty-five and older had completed four or more years
and drug use and violence in schools. Parents worry about of college; by 2002 about 26.7% had done so. (See Table
the escalating cost of a college education. Political and 1.2 and Figure 1.1.)
community leaders question the ability of U.S. schools to Among people ages twenty-five to twenty-nine,
produce high school graduates capable of competing in 86.4% had completed four years of high school or more
an increasingly technical and international environment. in 2002, while 29.3% had completed four or more years
Educational leaders raise concerns about the impacts of of college. White Americans were more likely than
poverty on education, and about the adequacy of school African-Americans or Hispanic Americans to have com-
resources. Voters and legislators debate the merits of alter- pleted both high school and college. (See Table 1.2.)
native schools, including whether parents who educate
their children in private schools should receive federal or
state subsidies. Calls for school accountability are heard SCHOOL ENROLLMENT
from both taxpayers and elected officials. Virtually all American children five to seventeen
years old are enrolled in school. According to the U.S.
Despite these problems, the United States remains Department of Education, in 2001 more than 95% of all
one of the most highly educated nations in the world. young people in this age group attended school. The
According to the U.S. Department of Education, in fall enrollment of three- and four-year-olds has increased
2003 approximately 79.7 million Americans were substantially since 1980, from 36.7% in that year to
involved either directly or indirectly in providing or 52.4% in 2001. (See Table 1.3.)
receiving formal education. About 70.7 million students
were enrolled in schools and colleges, and 4.2 million The proportion of people enrolled in school drops
instructors were teaching at the elementary, secondary, sharply after age eighteen. By this age young people
or college level. Another 4.8 million people were either graduate from or leave high school and may not
professional, administrative, and support personnel at immediately go on to any form of higher education.
educational institutions. (See Table 1.1.) However, the proportion of older teens attending school
has increased since 1980. According to the U.S. Depart-
ment of Education, in 2001 the proportion of eighteen-
EDUCATION LEVEL OF POPULATION and nineteen-year-olds enrolled in school reached 61%,
HAS GROWN up from 46.4% in 1980. (See Table 1.3.)
The number of school years completed among Amer-
icans age twenty-five and older has been increasing. Enrollment Numbers Change
According to the U.S. Department of Education, in The number of students enrolled in elementary and
1940 about one in four Americans (24.5%) twenty-five secondary schools and in colleges is roughly proportional
Education 1
TABLE 1.1
Projected number of participants in educational institutions, by level and control of institution, Fall 2003
[In millions]
All levels
(elementary,
secondary, Elementary and secondary schools Degree-granting institutions
and degree-
Participants granting) Total Public Private Total Public Private
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Note: Includes enrollments in local public school systems and in most private schools (religiously affiliated and nonsectarian). Excludes subcollegiate departments of institutions of
higher education and federal schools. Elementary and secondary includes most kindergarten and some nursery school enrollment. Excludes preprimary enrollment in schools that do
not offer first grade or above. Degree-granting institutions include full-time and part-time students enrolled in degree-credit and nondegree-credit programs in universities, other 4–
year colleges, and 2–year colleges that participated in Title IV federal financial aid programs. Data for teachers and other staff in public and private elementary and secondary schools
and colleges and universities are reported in terms of full-time equivalents. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 1. Projected Number of Participants in Educational Institutions, by Level and
Control of Institution: Fall 2003,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt001.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
to the birth rates of the previous two decades. After World 2008, after which it will decline slightly until
War II and the Korean conflict, the nation experienced a 2013. College enrollments, unlike elementary and sec-
‘‘baby boom’’ (1946–64) as returning soldiers settled down ondary enrollments, have risen consistently and are
to start families. Consequently, school enrollment grew expected to reach almost 18.2 million by 2013. (See
rapidly during the 1950s and 1960s as these babies Table 1.4.)
matured to school age. According to the U.S. Department
of Education, total enrollment peaked at sixty-one million
in 1975, a number not attained again until 1991. Elemen- EDUCATIONAL DIFFERENCES
tary enrollment, which includes the figures for public pre- Race and Ethnicity
kindergarten through grade eight and private kindergarten The marked difference in educational attainment that
through grade eight, reached a record high of 36.7 million once existed between whites and minorities has nar-
in 1969, and high school enrollment peaked at 15.7 million rowed, although there are still significant gaps. Accord-
in 1976. (See Table 1.4.) ing to the U.S. Department of Education, about 88.7% of
white adults age twenty-five and older were high school
Birth rates declined as the baby boom waned, and so
graduates in 2002, while 79.2% of African-Americans
did school enrollments in the 1970s. An ‘‘echo effect’’
and 57% of Hispanics were graduates. The most signifi-
occurred in the 1980s, when those born during the baby
cant advances can be seen among young adults ages
boom started their own families. This increase in birth
twenty-five to twenty-nine, where 93% of whites,
rates triggered an increase in school enrollment in the
87.6% of African-Americans, and 62.4% of Hispanics
early 1990s. In 1991 the enrollment of students at schools
were high school graduates in 2002, compared to 41.2%
of all levels was 61.7 million. In the years following
of whites and 12.3% of blacks and other races in 1940.
1991, school enrollment grew about 1% to 2% annually,
(See Table 1.2.)
to 69.8 million in 2001. (See Table 1.4.)
In 1940 white adults age twenty-five and older were
After a high of 36.7 million in 1969, elementary
3.7 times more likely than African-Americans and other
enrollment in public and private schools gradually
minorities to have completed four years of college (4.9%
declined and leveled off in the late 1980s at around
versus 1.3%). More than sixty years later, whites twenty-
thirty-three million. Elementary enrollment then rose
five and older were 1.7 times more likely to complete
through the 1990s to about thirty-nine million in 2001.
four years of college than African-Americans and
It is expected to stay fairly stable through 2013. (See
2.6 times more likely to complete four years of college
Table 1.4.)
than Hispanics. According to the U.S. Department of
Public high school enrollment, which began to Education, in 2002, 29.4% of whites, 17.2% of African-
decline in the late 1970s, started to increase again in Americans, and 11.1% of Hispanics completed four or
the 1990s and is expected to continue to grow until more years of college. More than one-third of white
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002
Education
Total White, non-Hispanica Black, non-Hispanica Hispanic
Less than High school 4 or more Less than High school 4 or more Less than High school 4 or more Less than 5 High school 4 or more
5 years of completion years of 5 years of completion or years of 5 years of completion or years of years of completion years of
Age and year elementary school or higherb collegec elementary school higherb collegec elementary school higherb collegec elementary school or higherb collegec
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Males and females
25 and over
1910d 23.8 13.5 2.7 — — — — — — — — —
1920d 22.0 16.4 3.3 — — — — — — — — —
1930d 17.5 19.1 3.9 — — — — — — — — —
April 1940 13.7 24.5 4.6 10.9 26.1 4.9 41.8 7.7 1.3 — — —
April 1950 11.1 34.3 6.2 8.9 36.4 6.6 32.6 13.7 2.2 — — —
April 1960 8.3 41.1 7.7 6.7 43.2 8.1 23.5 21.7 3.5 — — —
March 1970 5.3 55.2 11.0 4.2 57.4 11.6 14.7 36.1 6.1 — — —
March 1975 4.2 62.5 13.9 2.6 65.8 14.9 12.3 42.6 6.4 18.2 38.5 6.6
March 1980 3.4 68.6 17.0 1.9 71.9 18.4 9.1 51.4 7.9 15.8 44.5 7.6
March 1985 2.7 73.9 19.4 1.4 77.5 20.8 6.1 59.9 11.1 13.5 47.9 8.5
March 1986 2.7 74.7 19.4 1.4 78.2 20.9 5.3 62.5 10.9 12.9 48.5 8.4
March 1987 2.4 75.6 19.9 1.3 79.0 21.4 4.9 63.6 10.8 11.9 50.9 8.6
March 1988 2.4 76.2 20.3 1.2 79.8 21.8 4.8 63.5 11.2 12.2 51.0 10.0
March 1989 2.5 76.9 21.1 1.2 80.7 22.8 5.2 64.7 11.7 12.2 50.9 9.9
March 1990 2.4 77.6 21.3 1.1 81.4 23.1 5.1 66.2 11.3 12.3 50.8 9.2
March 1991 2.4 78.4 21.4 1.1 82.4 23.3 4.7 66.8 11.5 12.5 51.3 9.7
March 1992 2.1 79.4 21.4 0.9 83.4 23.2 3.9 67.7 11.9 11.8 52.6 9.3
March 1993 2.1 80.2 21.9 0.8 84.1 23.8 3.7 70.5 12.2 11.8 53.1 9.0
March 1994 1.9 80.9 22.2 0.8 84.9 24.3 2.7 73.0 12.9 10.8 53.3 9.1
March 1995 1.8 81.7 23.0 0.7 85.9 25.4 2.5 73.8 13.3 10.6 53.4 9.3
March 1996 1.8 81.7 23.6 0.6 86.0 25.9 2.2 74.6 13.8 10.3 53.1 9.3
March 1997 1.7 82.1 23.9 0.6 86.3 26.2 2.0 75.3 13.3 9.4 54.7 10.3
March 1998 1.6 82.8 24.4 0.6 87.1 26.6 1.7 76.4 14.8 9.3 55.5 11.0
March 1999 1.6 83.4 25.2 0.6 87.7 27.7 1.7 77.4 15.5 9.0 56.1 10.9
March 2000 1.6 84.1 25.6 0.5 88.4 28.1 1.6 78.9 16.6 8.7 57.0 10.6
March 2001 1.6 84.3 26.1 0.5 88.7 28.6 1.3 79.5 16.1 9.3 56.5 11.2
March 2002 1.6 84.1 26.7 0.5 88.7 29.4 1.6 79.2 17.2 8.7 57.0 11.1
25 to 29
1920d — — — 12.9 22.0 4.5 44.6 6.3 1.2 — — —
April 1940 5.9 38.1 5.9 3.4 41.2 6.4 27.0 12.3 1.6 — — —
April 1950 4.6 52.8 7.7 3.3 56.3 8.2 16.1 23.6 2.8 — — —
April 1960 2.8 60.7 11.0 2.2 63.7 11.8 7.2 38.6 5.4 — — —
March 1970 1.1 75.4 16.4 0.9 77.8 17.3 2.2 58.4 10.0 — — —
March 1975 1.0 83.1 21.9 0.6 86.6 23.8 0.5 71.1 10.5 8.0 53.1 8.8
March 1980 0.8 85.4 22.5 0.3 89.2 25.0 0.6 76.7 11.6 6.7 58.0 7.7
March 1985 0.7 86.1 22.2 0.2 89.5 24.4 0.4 80.5 11.6 6.0 60.9 11.1
March 1986 0.9 86.1 22.4 0.4 89.6 25.2 0.5 83.5 11.8 5.6 59.1 9.0
March 1987 0.9 86.0 22.0 0.4 89.4 24.6 0.4 83.4 11.5 4.8 59.8 8.7
March 1988 1.0 85.9 22.7 0.3 89.7 25.1 0.3 80.9 12.0 6.0 62.3 11.3
March 1989 1.0 85.5 23.4 0.3 89.3 26.3 0.5 82.3 12.6 5.4 61.0 10.1
March 1990 1.2 85.7 23.2 0.3 90.1 26.4 1.0 81.7 13.4 7.3 58.2 8.1
March 1991 1.0 85.4 23.2 0.4 89.8 26.7 0.5 81.8 11.0 5.8 56.7 9.2
3
March 1994 0.8 86.1 23.3 0.2 91.1 27.1 0.6 84.1 13.6 3.6 60.3 8.0
4
TABLE 1.2
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002 [CONTINUED]
Education
Education
TABLE 1.2
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002 [CONTINUED]
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 8. Percent of Persons Age 25 and Over and 25 to 29, by Years of School Completed, Race/Ethnicity, and Sex: Selected Years,
1910–2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/
tables/dt008.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
60
PROJECTIONS TO 2013
40
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)
20 estimates that the total public and private elementary and
secondary enrollment will increase from 54.2 million in
0 2002 to 56.4 million in 2013. Enrollment in public pre-
1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2002
kindergarten through eighth grade was projected to hit its
Year
lowest level in 2005, and then begin a modest climb to
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M.
Hoffman, “Figure 3. Years of School Completed by Persons 25 Years
35.4 million. Public enrollment in grades nine through
Old and Over, 1940–2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, twelve is expected to rise through 2007, and then start to
NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for fall slightly. The number of people attending degree-
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed
.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_03.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed
granting institutions of higher learning is projected to
July 26, 2005) increase from 16.1 million in 2002 to 18.2 million by
2013. (See Table 1.4.)
Percent of the population ages 3 to 34 enrolled in school, by race/ethnicity, sex, and age, selected years, October 1980–October 2001
Total, 3 to 34 years 49.7 48.8 54.0 49.8 50.9 50.0 56.2 49.9 48.5 47.7 52.1 49.8
3 and 4 years 36.7 37.4 38.2 28.5 37.8 39.2 36.4 30.1 35.5 35.5 40.0 26.6
5 and 6 years 95.7 95.9 95.5 94.5 95.0 95.4 94.1 94.0 96.4 96.5 97.0 94.9
7 to 9 years 99.1 99.1 99.4 98.4 99.0 99.0 99.5 97.7 99.2 99.2 99.3 99.0
10 to 13 years 99.4 99.4 99.4 99.7 99.4 99.4 99.4 99.4 99.4 99.3 99.3 99.9
14 and 15 years 98.2 98.7 97.9 94.3 98.7 98.9 98.4 96.7 97.7 98.5 97.3 92.1
16 and 17 years 89.0 89.2 90.7 81.8 89.1 89.4 90.7 81.5 88.8 89.0 90.6 82.2
18 and 19 years 46.4 47.0 45.8 37.8 47.0 48.5 42.9 36.9 45.8 45.7 48.3 38.8
20 and 21 years 31.0 33.0 23.3 19.5 32.6 34.8 22.8 21.4 29.5 31.3 23.7 17.6
22 to 24 years 16.3 16.8 13.6 11.7 17.8 18.7 13.4 10.7 14.9 15.0 13.7 12.6
25 to 29 years 9.3 9.4 8.8 6.9 9.8 9.8 10.6 6.8 8.8 9.1 7.5 6.9
30 to 34 years 6.4 6.4 6.9 5.1 5.9 5.6 7.2 6.2 7.0 7.2 6.6 4.1
1985
Total, 3 to 34 years 48.3 47.8 50.8 47.7 49.2 48.7 52.6 47.5 47.4 46.9 49.2 47.9
3 and 4 years 38.9 40.3 42.8 27.0 36.7 39.1 34.6 26.4 41.2 41.6 50.3 27.7
5 and 6 years 96.1 96.6 95.7 94.5 95.3 95.6 94.5 95.3 97.0 97.6 97.1 93.7
7 to 9 years 99.1 99.4 98.6 98.4 99.0 99.3 98.4 98.9 99.2 99.4 98.9 98.0
10 to 13 years 99.3 99.3 99.5 99.4 99.2 99.2 99.1 99.1 99.4 99.3 99.9 99.7
14 and 15 years 98.1 98.3 98.1 96.1 98.3 98.4 98.5 96.2 97.9 98.1 97.6 96.0
16 and 17 years 91.7 92.5 91.8 84.5 92.4 92.9 92.0 88.9 90.9 92.2 91.6 80.0
18 and 19 years 51.6 53.7 43.5 41.8 52.2 53.4 49.4 38.6 51.0 54.0 37.8 44.7
20 and 21 years 35.3 37.2 27.7 24.0 36.5 38.8 29.9 20.3 34.1 35.7 25.8 27.4
22 to 24 years 16.9 17.5 13.8 11.6 18.8 19.8 13.5 12.6 15.1 15.4 14.0 10.4
25 to 29 years 9.2 9.6 7.4 6.6 9.4 9.7 5.8 8.2 9.1 9.4 8.7 4.9
30 to 34 years 6.1 6.2 5.2 5.7 5.4 5.6 3.9 4.0 6.8 6.9 6.2 7.5
1990
Total, 3 to 34 years 50.2 49.8 52.2 47.2 50.9 50.4 54.3 46.8 49.5 49.2 50.3 47.7
3 and 4 years 44.4 47.2 41.8 30.7 43.9 47.9 38.1 28.0 44.9 46.6 45.5 33.6
5 and 6 years 96.5 96.7 96.5 94.9 96.5 96.8 96.2 95.8 96.4 96.7 96.9 93.9
7 to 9 years 99.7 99.7 99.8 99.5 99.7 99.7 99.9 99.5 99.6 99.7 99.8 99.4
10 to 13 years 99.6 99.7 99.9 99.1 99.6 99.6 99.9 99.0 99.7 99.7 99.8 99.1
14 and 15 years 99.0 99.0 99.4 99.0 99.1 99.2 99.7 99.1 98.9 98.9 99.1 98.8
16 and 17 years 92.5 93.5 91.7 85.4 92.6 93.4 93.0 85.5 92.4 93.7 90.5 85.3
18 and 19 years 57.2 59.1 55.0 44.0 58.2 59.7 60.4 40.7 56.3 58.5 49.8 47.2
20 and 21 years 39.7 43.1 28.3 27.2 40.3 44.2 31.0 21.7 39.2 42.0 25.8 33.1
22 to 24 years 21.0 21.9 19.7 9.9 22.3 23.7 19.3 11.2 19.9 20.3 20.0 8.4
25 to 29 years 9.7 10.4 6.1 6.3 9.2 10.0 4.7 4.6 10.2 10.7 7.3 8.1
30 to 34 years 5.8 6.2 4.5 3.6 4.8 5.0 2.3 4.0 6.9 7.4 6.3 3.1
Note: Includes enrollment in any type of graded public, parochial, or other private schools. Includes nursery schools, kindergartens, elementary schools, high schools, colleges, universities, and professional schools. Attendance may be on either a
full-time or part-time basis and during the day or night. Enrollments in “special” schools, such as trade schools, business colleges, or correspondence schools, are not included. Begining 1995, preprimary enrollment was collected using new procedures.
May not be comparable to figures for earlier years. Total includes persons from other racial/ethnic groups not shown separately.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 6. Percent of the Population 3 to 34 Years Old Enrolled in School, by Race/Ethnicity, Sex, and Age: Selected Years, October 1980 to
October 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/
d03/tables/dt006.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education
TABLE 1.4
Enrollment in educational institutions, by level and control of institution, selected years, 1869–70 to Fall 2013
[In thousands]
— Not available.
a
Beginning in fall 1980, data include estimates for an expanded universe of private schools. Therefore, direct comparisons with earlier years should be avoided.
b
Data for 1869–70 through 1949–50 include resident degree-credit students enrolled at any time during the academic year. Beginning in 1959, data include all resident and extension
students enrolled at the beginning of the fall term.
c
Estimated.
d
Projected.
Note: Elementary and secondary enrollment includes pupils in local public school systems and in most private schools (religiously affiliated and nonsectarian), but generally excludes
pupils in subcollegiate departments of colleges, federal schools, and home-schooled children. Based on the National Household Education Survey, the homeschooled children numbered
approximately 850,000 in the spring of 1999. Public elementary enrollment includes most preprimary school pupils. Private elementary enrollment includes some preprimary students.
Beginning in 1996–97, data are for degreegranting institutions. Degree-granting institutions are 2-year and 4-year institutions that were eligible to participate in Title IV federal financial
aid programs. Data for degree-granting institutions for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Detail may not
sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 3. Enrollment in Educational Institutions, by Level and Control of
Institution: Selected Years, 1869–70 to Fall 2013,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt003.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Total expenditures of educational institutions related to the GDP, selected years, 1929–30 to 2001–02
— Not available.
a
Preliminary data for public elementary and secondary schools and estimates for colleges and universities.
b
Estimated.
Note: Total expenditures for public elementary and secondary schools include current expenditures, interest on school debt, and capital outlay. Data for private elementary and
secondary schools are estimated. Total expenditures for colleges and universities include current-fund expenditures and additions to plant value. Excludes expenditures of postsecondary
institutions that do not confer associate or higher degrees. Data for 1995–96 and later years are for 4-year and 2-year degree-granting institutions that were eligible to participate in
Title IV federal financial aid programs. Some data revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 29. Total Expenditures of Educational Institutions Related to the Gross
Domestic Product, by Level of Institution: Selected Years, 1929–30 to 2001–02,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt029.asp (accessed July
26, 2005)
SCHOOL ENROLLMENTS programs has also increased. In 2001 more than half
Preprimary, elementary, and secondary school enroll- (51.8%) of children in preprimary programs attended
ments reflect the number of births over a specific period. school all day, compared to 31.8% in 1980 and 17% in
Because of the baby boom (1946–64), school enrollment 1970. (See Table 2.1.)
grew rapidly during the 1950s and 1960s and then declined
steadily during the 1970s and 1980s. According to the U.S. Geographic Shifts
Department of Education, in 1985 public elementary and There have been significant changes in regional
secondary school enrollment increased for the first time school enrollment. According to the U.S. Department of
since 1971. Enrollment has grown slowly but steadily Education, between 1970 and 1980, school enrollment in
since the mid-1980s, reaching an estimated 47.9 million forty-one states and the District of Columbia dropped,
in public schools and 6.2 million in private schools in fall with most of the decline occurring at the elementary
2002. Slow but steady growth is projected to continue until level. Between fall 1996 and fall 2001, thirteen states
2010, when it most likely will decline slightly in 2011, increased enrollment by 5% or more, while sixteen other
rising again in 2013. (See Figure 2.1.) states reported increases of less than 5%. Decreases in
school enrollment were reported in twenty-one states and
Preprimary Growth the District of Columbia. (See Figure 2.2.)
In contrast to the declining elementary and secondary During the 2001–02 school year, according to the
school enrollment during the 1970s and early 1980s, pre- U.S. Department of Education, 32,695 of the 91,759
primary enrollment showed substantial growth. According public elementary and secondary schools in the United
to the U.S. Department of Education, between 1970 and States were located in urban fringe areas (that is, outside
1980 preprimary enrollment rose from 4.1 million to 4.9 the central city but within the metropolitan area). That
million preschool-age children. While the overall popula- figure represented 36% of all American public schools.
tion of three- to five-year-olds grew 29% between 1980 Rural areas of the country contained another 27%
and 1993, enrollment in preprimary programs rose 35%, to (24,565). Public schools within large (10,746) and
6.6 million. In 1994 new data collection methods indicated midsized cities (10,813) combined to account for 23.5%
that 61% of the nation’s 12.3 million three- to five-year- of the total. (See Table 2.2.)
olds were enrolled in preprimary programs. These increases
reflect the greater availability of and interest in preschool School Size
education. In 1965 only 27.1% of the 12.5 million children
in this age group were enrolled in nursery school or kin- According to the U.S. Department of Education, in
dergarten. By October 2001, 63.9% of the 11.9 million 2001–02 the average enrollment at public schools was
preschool-age children in the United States were enrolled 520 students per school—477 in elementary schools and
in preprimary programs. Note that because of the change in 718 in secondary schools. Most (70.4%) public school
data collection methods, figures prior to 1994 may not be students attended schools with enrollments of 500 stu-
comparable to later years. (See Table 2.1.) dents or more. More than a fifth (20.3%) were enrolled at
schools with between 300 and 499 students, and 9.3% of
As the proportion of working mothers has grown, the public school students attended schools with enrollments
proportion of young children in full-day preprimary of less than 300 students. (See Table 2.3.)
Education 13
FIGURE 2.1 remains a persistent problem for the nation and its
schools. Children who are poor are more likely to be
Public elementary and secondary enrollment in undernourished, subject to frequent illnesses, and gener-
prekindergarten– grade 12, by grade level, with projections, ally much less ready for learning.
Fall 1965–2014
Poverty rates vary widely by race and ethnicity, as
well as by the type of household in which a child lives.
Total Grades pre K–8 Grades 9–12 In 2003 the proportion of whites (of all age groups)
living in poverty was 10.5%, compared to 24.4% of
Projected African-Americans and 22.5% of Hispanics. Families
50,000
living in households headed by a female with no spouse
Enrollment (in thousands)
Enrollment of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children in preprimary programs, selected years, October 1965–October 2001
[In thousands]
[In thousands]
— Not available.
a
Data collected using new procedures. May not be comparable with figures prior to 1994.
b
Enrollment data include only those students in preprimary programs.
Note: Data are based on sample surveys of the civilian noninstitutional population. Although cells with fewer than 75,000 children are subject to wide sampling variation, they are
included in the table to permit various types of aggregations. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 43. Enrollment of 3-, 4-, and 5-Year-Old Children in Preprimary Programs,
by Level and Control of Program and by Attendance Status: Selected Years, October 1965 to October 2001 (in Thousands),” in Digest of Education Statistics,
2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/
digest/d03/tables/dt043.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
cycles. Local school funding is usually linked to property acceptable level of educational services. States have
taxes. When a recession occurs or businesses close or started to focus on determining educational adequacy
move away, causing property values to decline, school rather than requiring equity.
funding is directly affected. Also, per capita income and Education experts are developing standards—what it
property values are typically lower in rural areas, and local takes in terms of teachers, curriculum, and expenditures—
taxes may not be enough to fund the district’s schools. In to achieve an adequate education. The definition of
these cases, states must find ways to fill the gap. adequacy differs from state to state. Each state is examin-
To try to resolve these problems, many states now ing what a core education means and how much it costs.
use complex formulas for distributing state education In Financing Education So That No Child Is Left
funds to equalize the per-pupil expenditure statewide— Behind: Determining the Costs of Improving Student
that is, they give proportionately more state funds per Performance, by Andrew Reschovsky and Jennifer
student to poor districts than to wealthy districts. Imazeki (in William J. Fowler, Jr., ed., Developments in
Another issue is the adequacy of the education the School Finance: 2003, U.S. Department of Education,
state offers children. According to Overview and National Center for Education Statistics, Washington,
Inventory of State Education Reforms: 1990 to 2000 DC, August 2004), the authors state that, prior to the
(David Hurst, Alexandra Tan, Anne Meek, and Jason recent court cases, the focus of most school funding
Sellers, U.S. Department of Education, National Center reform efforts has been on resources rather than on the
for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, July 2003), link between educational finance and student perfor-
disparities in spending between wealthy and impover- mance. The study found that the amount of money
ished school districts led to legal challenges during the required for student performance standards varies across
1970s and 1980s. Some state courts have found that school districts due to factors beyond the school districts’
state education finance systems failed to deliver an control. Some districts have to pay higher salaries in
Percentage change in public elementary and secondary enrollment, by state, Fall 1996–Fall 2001
Percent change
Increase of more than 10 percent Increase of less than 5 percent Increase of 5 to10 percent Decrease
WA
NH ME
MT
ND
OR MN VT
ID MA
SD WI NY
WY MI RI
CT
IA PA
NV NE NJ
OH
UT IL IN
DE
CO WV
VA MD
CA KS MO
KY
DC
NC
TN
AZ OK SC
NM
AR
MS AL GA
LA
TX
AK
FL
HI
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Figure 9. Percentage Change in Public Elementary and Secondary Enrollment,
by State: Fall 1996 to Fall 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_09.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed July 26, 2005)
order to attract teachers; others have large numbers of revenue for Alaska and 3.9% for New Jersey. Local and
economically disadvantaged students, or students from intermediate sources accounted for 88.1% of school
families where English is not the first language, and these revenue in the District of Columbia, and less than
schools need extra resources. 0.5% in Hawaii. (See Table 2.6.)
Revenues Expenditures
According to the U.S. Department of Education, in According to the U.S. Department of Education in A
the 2000–01 school year revenues for public elementary Guide to Education and No Child Left Behind, federal,
and secondary schools totaled $401 billion. State state, and local government spending for public elemen-
(49.7%) and local authorities (40.8%) provided most tary and secondary education amounted to $591.3 billion
of the revenues, with less than 7.3% coming from the during the 2003–04 school year. (See Figure 2.4.)
federal government and 2.3% from private sources. The
proportions of federal, state, and local funding varied by The NCES estimates that per-pupil spending in
state. In Hawaii the state provided 89.8% of revenue, 2002–03, the last year for which figures have been
while in Nevada the state provided only 28.6%. released, averaged $8,041. Figure 2.5 offers a graphic depi-
The federal government supplied 15.8% of the school ction of the dramatic rise in public schools’ expenditures
Characteristics of public elementary and secondary enrollment and finances, by type of locale, 2000–01 and 2001–02
Education
Education
TABLE 2.2
Characteristics of public elementary and secondary enrollment and finances, by type of locale, 2000–01 and 2001–02 [CONTINUED]
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 88. Public Elementary and Secondary Students, Schools, Pupil to Teacher Ratios, and Finances, by Type of Locale: 2000–01 and
2001–02,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/
tables/dt088.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Public elementary and secondary schools and enrollment, by type and size of school, 2001–02
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 93. Public Elementary and Secondary Schools and Enrollment, by Type and Size of School: 2001–02,” in Digest of Education
Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt093.asp (accessed July 26,
2005)
Education
TABLE 2.4
Enrollment in public elementary and secondary schools, by race/ethnicity, Fall 1991 and Fall 2001
since 1960. Adjusted for inflation, expenditures per educating its people. In 2000, according to the U.S.
student have risen more than 60% since 1980, according Department of Education, public expenditures for
to the NCES. education in the United States totaled 5% of GDP—
3.5% for primary and secondary education, and
International Comparisons of Expenditures another 1.1% for higher education. (See Figure 2.6
per Student and Table 2.7.) Of the selected countries listed in
One method of measuring a country’s commit- Table 2.7, Denmark spent the highest proportion
ment to education is to examine what portion of its (8.4%) of GDP on education, and Russia spent the
gross domestic product (GDP, the total value of lowest proportion (3%) in 2000. For primary and
goods and services produced in the nation) goes to secondary education, Sweden and New Zealand tied
— Not available.
# Rounds to zero.
*Excludes persons of Hispanic origin.
Note: Percentage distribution based upon students for whom race/ethnicity was reported, which may be less than the total number of students in the state. Detail may not sum to totals
due to rounding.
SOURCE: Adapted from Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 42. Percentage Distribution of Enrollment in Public
Elementary and Secondary Schools, by Race/Ethnicity and State or Jurisdiction: Fall 1991 and Fall 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES
2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/
tables/dt042.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Change in poverty
2002 below poverty 2003 below poverty (2003 less 2002)a
Characteristic Number Percentage Number Percentage Number Percentage
People
Total 34,570 12.1 35,861 12.5 1,291 0.3
Family status
In families 24,534 10.4 25,684 10.8 1,150 0.4
Householder 7,229 9.6 7,607 10.0 378 0.4
Related children under 18 11,646 16.3 12,340 17.2 694 0.9
Related children under 6 4,296 18.5 4,654 19.8 358 1.4
In unrelated subfamilies 417 33.7 464 38.6 46 4.9
Reference person 167 31.7 191 37.6 25 5.8
Children under 18 241 35.4 271 41.7 31 6.3
Unrelated individual 9,618 20.4 9,713 20.4 95 —
Male 4,023 17.7 4,154 18.0 131 0.3
Female 5,595 22.9 5,559 22.6 ⫺36 ⫺0.2
Raceb and Hispanic origin
White alone or in combination 24,074 10.3 24,950 10.6 876 0.3
White alonec 23,466 10.2 24,272 10.5 806 0.3
White alone, not Hispanic 15,567 8.0 15,902 8.2 335 0.2
Black alone or in combination 8,884 23.9 9,108 24.3 224 0.4
Black aloned 8,602 24.1 8,781 24.4 180 0.3
Asian alone or in combination 1,243 10.0 1,527 11.8 284 1.9
Asian alonee 1,161 10.1 1,401 11.8 240 1.8
Hispanic origin (of any race) 8,555 21.8 9,051 22.5 497 0.6
Age
Under 18 years 12,133 16.7 12,866 17.6 733 0.9
18 to 64 years 18,861 10.6 19,443 10.8 582 0.2
65 years and older 3,576 10.4 3,552 10.2 ⫺24 ⫺0.2
Nativity
Native 29,012 11.5 29,965 11.8 952 0.3
Foreign born 5,558 16.6 5,897 17.2 339 0.6
Naturalized citizen 1,285 10.0 1,309 10.0 24 —
Not a citizen 4,273 20.7 4,588 21.7 315 1.0
Region
Northeast 5,871 10.9 6,052 11.3 182 0.4
Midwest 6,616 10.3 6,932 10.7 316 0.5
South 14,019 13.8 14,548 14.1 529 0.3
West 8,064 12.4 8,329 12.6 265 0.2
Residence
Inside metropolitan areas 27,096 11.6 28,367 12.1 1,271 0.4
Inside central cities 13,784 16.7 14,551 17.5 767 0.8
Outside central cities 13,311 8.9 13,816 9.1 504 0.2
Outside metropolitan areas 7,474 14.2 7,495 14.2 20 —
Work experience
All workers (16 years and older) 8,954 5.9 8,820 5.8 ⫺134 ⫺0.1
Worked full-time year-round 2,635 2.6 2,636 2.6 1 —
Not full-time year-round 6,318 12.4 6,183 12.2 ⫺135 ⫺0.3
Did not work at least one week 14,647 21.0 15,446 21.5 799 0.4
schools (16.2). These ratios were considerably lower than public schools) usually decides whether the programs and
they had been during the 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s. (See services will be provided in its schools.
Table 2.10.) Schools offer a variety of student services, such as
free or reduced-price lunches financed by public funds,
SUPPORTIVE PROGRAMS AND SERVICES services for disabled students, remedial programs,
The type of supportive programs and services avail- programs for gifted and talented students, programs
able to schools and school districts is one indicator of the under Chapter I (federal funds designated for special
access students have to educational opportunities. educational programs for disadvantaged children) of
Although individual schools can apply directly for these the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
programs and services, the school district (especially in (P.L. 89-10), drug and alcohol prevention programs,
People and families in poverty, by selected characteristics, 2002 and 2003 [CONTINUED]
[Numbers in thousands. People as of March of the following year.]
Change in poverty
2002 below poverty 2003 below poverty (2003 less 2002)a
Characteristic Number Percentage Number Percentage Number Percentage
Families
Total 7,229 9.6 7,607 10.0 378 0.4
Type of family
Married-couple 3,052 5.3 3,115 5.4 63 0.1
Female householder, no husband present 3,613 26.5 3,856 28.0 243 1.4
Male householder, no wife present 564 12.1 636 13.5 73 1.4
SOURCE: Carmen DeNavas-Walt, Bernadette D. Proctor, and Robert J. Mills, “Table 3. People and Families in Poverty by Selected Characteristics: 2002 and
2003,” in Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2003, Current Population Reports P60-226, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Economics and Statistics Administration, U.S. Census Bureau, Washington, DC, August 2004, http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/p60-226.pdf (accessed
July 26, 2005)
— Not available.
a
Not applicable.
b
Rounds to zero.
c
Includes revenues from gifts, and tuition and fees from patrons.
Note: Excludes revenues for state education agencies. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 157. Revenues for Public Elementary and Secondary Schools, by Source
and State or Jurisdiction: 2000–01,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt157.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
FIGURE 2.4
550 591.3
482.0
462.7
500 442.7
411.3
450
384.9
400 341.4
329.2
350 318.3
292.5
Dollars in billions
287.5
274.3
300 261.3
249.0
250
200
150
100
50
0
1990– 1991– 1992– 1993– 1994– 1995– 1996– 1997– 1998– 1999– 2000– 2001– 2002– 2003–
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Years
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, “Expenditures for Elementary and Secondary Education,” in A Guide to Education and No Child Left Behind,
U.S. Department of Education, Office of the Secretary, Office of Public Affairs, Washington DC, 2004, http://www.ed.gov/nclb/overview/intro/guide/
guide_pg11.html#spending (accessed July 26, 2005)
Compulsory Attendance CCSSO, in 2004 nearly all U.S. states required students
Most industrialized Western nations require children to attend school starting between ages five and eight and
to attend school for about ten years. According to the continuing through ages sixteen to eighteen. In 2004,
Public direct expenditures for education as a percentage of the GDP, selected countries, 2000
Australia 5.1
Canada 5.5
Finland 6.0
France 5.8
Germany 4.5
Italy 4.6
Japan 3.6
Korea 4.3
Mexico 4.9
Country
Netherlands 4.8
Norway 6.7
Portugal 5.7
Spain 4.4
Sweden 7.4
Switzerland 5.4
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Percentage of GDP
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Figure 28. Public Direct Expenditures for Education as a Percentage of the
Gross Domestic Product: Selected Countries, 2000,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National
Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_28.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed
July 26, 2005)
links between high schools and postsecondary • Incorporating both school- and work-based learning
institutions, include a challenging academic core, offer • Increasing business partnerships within the community
nonduplicative technical courses leading to a degree or
certificate, and focus on career pathways that are in • Preparing students for continuing education
demand and lead to economic self-sufficiency. The Office • Establishing partnerships with postsecondary institu-
of Vocational and Adult Education, a division of the tions, including colleges and universities; and
Department of Education, has identified several areas • Taking advantage of higher technology and the
crucial to the future of technical education, including: Internet
Public expenditures on education as a percentage of the GDP, by level and country, selected years, 1985–2000
— Not available.
a
Includes preprimary and other expenditures not classified by level.
b
Data are for Flemish Belgium only.
c
Data for 1985 are for the former West Germany.
d
Data are for 2000.
Note: Direct public expenditure on educational services includes both amounts spent directly by governments to hire educational personnel and to procure other resources, and amounts
provided by governments to public or private institutions, or households. Figures for 1985 also include transfers and payments to private entities, and thus are not strictly comparable
with later figures. Some data revised from previously published figures.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 416. Total Public Direct Expenditures on Education as a Percentage of the
Gross Domestic Product, by Level and Country: Selected Years, 1985 to 2000,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt416.asp (accesssed July
26, 2005)
Annual expenditures on public and private institutions per student and as a percentage of GDP for OECD countries, by level of education,
2000
— Not available.
a
Per student expenditures are calculated based on public and private full-time-equivalent (FTE) enrollment figures for the 1999–2000 school year and on current expenditures and capital
outlays from both public and private sources where data are available.
b
GDP adjusted to national financial year.
c
Includes postsecondary nontertiary data (International Standard Classification of Education [ISCED] level 4) for Belgium, Finland, Japan, Norway, Poland, Slovak Republic, Spain, and
the United Kingdom.
d
Includes all tertiary level data. Also, includes postsecondary nontertiary data for Canada, Japan, and the United States.
e
Total includes elementary/secondary, postsecondary, and postsecondary nontertiary expenditures.
f
Data are for full- and part-time students.
Note: Educational expenditures are from public and private revenue sources. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) indices are used to convert other currencies to U.S. dollars. Within-country
consumer price indices are used to adjust the PPP indices to account for inflation because the fiscal year has a different starting date in different countries. Includes all institutions,
public and private, with the exception of Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Norway, Poland, Switzerland, and Turkey, which include public institutions only.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Stephen Provasnik, Patrick Rooney, Anindita Sen, and Richard Tobin, “Table 36–1. Annual Expenditures on Public and
Private Institutions Per Student and as a Percentage of GDP for OECD Countries, by Level of Education: 2000,” in The Condition of Education, 2004, NCES
2004-077, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2004/
section6/table.asp?tableID=92 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Private elementary and secondary school enrollment and as a percentage of total enrollment in public and private schools, by region and
grade level, selected years, 1989–90 to 2001–02
[Totals in thousands]
*Grades K–8 and 9–12 do not include ungraded students and therefore these two categories do not sum to grades K–12.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Table 2–2. Private Elementary and
Secondary School Enrollment and as a Percentage of Total Enrollment in Public and Private Schools, by Region and Grade Level: Various School Years,
1989–90 through 2001–02,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2005/section1/table.asp?tableID=225 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Private school enrollment in kindergarten–grade 12, by type of school, 1989–90 and 2001–02
[Percentage distribution]
1989–90 2001–02
100
80
60 55
Percent
47
40 36
32 32
23
20 15 17 15 17
11 13 11 13
9 10
7 7
0
Total Parochial Diocesan Private Total Conservative Affiliated Unaffiliated
Christian
Catholic Other religiousa Nonsectarianb
a
Other religious schools have a religious orientation or purpose, but are not Roman Catholic. Conservative Christian schools are those with membership in at least one of four
associations: Accelerated Christian Education, American Association of Christian Schools, Association of Christian Schools International, or Oral Roberts University Education
Fellowship. Affiliated schools are those with membership in one of 11 associations: Association of Christian Teachers and Schools, Christian Schools International, Council of
Islamic Schools in North America, Evangelical Lutheran Education Association, Friends Council on Education, General Conference of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, National
Association of Episcopal Schools, National Christian School Association, National Society for Hebrew Day Schools, Solomon Schechter Day Schools, Southern Baptist Association
of Christian Schools or indicating membership in “other religious school associations.” Unaffiliated schools are those that have a religious orientation or purpose, but are not
classied as Conservative Christian or afliated.
b
Nonsectarian schools do not have a religious orientation or purpose.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Private School Enrollment:
Percentage Distribution of Private School Students in Kindergarten through Grade 12, by Type of School: 1989–90 and 2001– 02,” in The Condition
of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces
.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Public and private elementary and secondary teachers, enrollment, and pupil to teacher ratios, selected years, Fall 1955 –Fall 2002
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 64. Public and Private Elementary and Secondary Teachers, Enrollment, and
Pupil to Teacher Ratios: Selected Years, Fall 1955 to Fall 2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt064.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Current expenditures per pupil for public elementary and secondary schools, by function, state,and outlying areas, 2002–03
[In dollars]
— Not available.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. National totals do not include outlying areas. Both the District of Columbia and Hawaii have only one school district each;
therefore, neither is comparable to other states.
a
Prekindergarten students were imputed, affecting total student count and per pupil expenditure calculation. In Tennessee, prekindergarten students were imputed and tuition
expenditures (included in instruction) were redistributed.
b
Value affected by redistribution of reported expenditure values to correct for missing data items.
SOURCE: Jason Hill and Frank Johnson, “Table 5. Student Membership and Current Expenditures Per Pupil in Membership for Public Elementary and
Secondary Schools, by Function, State, and Outlying Areas: School Year 2002–03,” in Revenues and Expenditures for Public Elementary and Secondary
Education: School Year 2002–03, NCES 2005-353, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, April 2005,
http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/pubs/npefs03/table_5.asp?popup=1 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Full-day and half-day kindergarten programs, 1995–2002 Required days in school, 1989–2002
Local policy Full day Half day 180 days or more 175–179
35 33 33 34
35
30 30
Number of states
25
25
Number of states
20
20
15 13
15 10 9
8
5
10
0
5 1989 1995 2002
Number and percentage distribution of prekindergarten children in public elementary schools, by selected student and school
characteristics, 2000–01
# Rounds to zero.
*Interpret data with caution (estimates are unstable).
a
American Indian includes Alaska Native, Asian includes Pacific Islander and Native Hawaiian, black includes African American, and Hispanic includes Latino. Racial categories exclude
Hispanic origin.
b
LEP refers to limited English proficient students, or “English language learners.”
c
Low income is defined as eligible for free or reduced-price lunch.
d
IEP refers to students with Individualized Education Programs and includes children in special education and general education classes.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Data on some of the variables in this table are missing for some cases.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Stephen Provasnik, Patrick Rooney, Anindita Sen, and Richard Tobin, “Table 2–2. Number and Percentage Distribution of
Prekindergarten Children in Public Elementary Schools, by Age, Race/Ethnicity, and Selected Student and School Characteristics: 2000–01,” in The Condition
of Education, 2004, NCES 2004-077, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/
programs/coe/2004/section1/table.asp?tableID⫽33 (accessed July 26, 2005)
High school graduates compared with population age 17, selected years, 1869–70 to 2002–03
[Numbers in thousands]
[Numbers in thousands]
— Not available.
a
For years 1869–70 through 1989–90, 17-year-old population is an estimate of the October 17-year-old population based on July data. Data for 1990–91 and later years are October
estimates prepared by the Census Bureau.
b
Includes graduates of public and private schools.
c
Data for 1929–30 and preceding years are from statistics of public high schools and exclude graduates from high schools that failed to report to the Office of Education.
d
For most years, private school data have been estimated based on periodic private school surveys.
e
Public high school graduates based on state estimates.
Note: Includes graduates of regular day school programs. Excludes graduates of other programs, when separately reported, and recipients of high school equivalency certificates. Some
data have been revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 102. High School Graduates Compared with Population 17 Years of Age, by
Sex of Graduates and Control of School: Selected Years, 1869–70 to 2002–03,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt102.asp (accessed July 26,
2005)
— Not available.
a
Number of people taking the GED tests (one or more subtests).
b
Number of people completing the entire GED battery of five tests.
c
Number of people receiving high school equivalency credentials based on the GED tests.
d
Data for 1988 and prior years are for number of test takers and may not be comparable to later years.
e
Includes outlying areas.
Note: Except where indicated, data are for United States only and exclude outlying areas. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding. Some data have been revised from previously
published figures.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 105. General Educational Development (GED) Test Takers and Credentials
Issued, by Age: 1971 to 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt105.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
The right to public education is guaranteed to all • To assess and assure the effectiveness of efforts to
children in the United States. For many children, how- provide early intervention services and education of
ever, acquiring an education that fits their special children with disabilities.
needs is not always easy. For the mentally or physi-
cally disabled, gifted or talented, or significantly dis- Change in the Number Served
advantaged, preparation for adulthood requires extra As a result of IDEA, an increasing number of stu-
effort on the part of both the children and the educa- dents have been served in programs for the disabled.
tion system. According to the U.S. Department of Education, during
2001–02, about 6.4 million disabled children and youth
ages three through twenty-one were served. Between
DISABLED CHILDREN
1976–77 and 2001–02 the number of students participat-
In 1975 Congress passed the Education for All Han- ing in these programs rose by more than 2.7 million, a
dicapped Children Act (P.L. 94-142, amended in 1983 by 73% increase. Between 1991–92 and 2001–02, the largest
P.L. 98-199), which required schools to develop pro- change was in the number of students with autism or
grams for disabled children. In 1992 the Act was renamed traumatic brain injury from 5,000 to 118,000, a 2,360%
the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). increase. (See Table 3.1.)
It defines disabled children as those who are:
Prior to the 1991–92 school year, students with aut-
mentally retarded, hard of hearing, deaf, orthopedically ism or traumatic brain injury were distributed among
impaired, other health impaired, speech and language several categories, but primarily ‘‘other health impair-
impaired, visually impaired, seriously emotionally dis- ments.’’ Even with the removal of students with autism
turbed, children with specific learning disabilities who,
or traumatic brain injury, the category ‘‘other health
by reason thereof, require special education and related
services (20 U.S.C. 1401 [a][1]). impairments,’’ which includes students who have atten-
tion deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), increased by
In its 1993 report To Assure the Free Appropriate 481% between 1991–92 and 2001–02, from 58,000 to
Public Education of All Children with Disabilities, the 337,000. The number of deaf-blind students decreased
U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Educa- from 3,000 in 1980–81 to 2,000 in 2001–02, a 33%
tion Programs (OSEP) stated the purposes of IDEA: reduction. The proportion of children and youth with
• To help states develop early intervention services for disabilities, as a percentage of public school enrollment,
infants and toddlers with disabilities and their has risen steadily from 8.3% in 1976–77 to 13.4% in
families. 2001–02. (See Table 3.1.) Some of this increase may
reflect more effective identification of people with
• To assure a free appropriate public education to all disabilities.
children and youth with disabilities.
The majority of students with disabilities who were
• To protect the rights of disabled children and youth served in federally supported programs in 2001–02 were
from birth to age twenty-one and their families. those identified as having specific learning disabilities
• To help provide early intervention services and the (44.4%), speech or language impairments (16.9%), men-
education of all children with disabilities. tal retardation (9.2%), emotional disturbance (7.4%), or
Education 41
42
TABLE 3.1
Students ages 3–21 served in federally supported programs for the disabled, by type of disability, selected years, 1976–77 to 2001–02
Type of disability 1976–77 1980–81 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94 1994–95 1995–96 1996–97 1997–98 1998–99 1999–2000 2000–01 2001–02
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Number served in thousands
Education
Education
TABLE 3.1
Students ages 3–21 served in federally supported programs for the disabled, by type of disability, selected years, 1976–77 to 2001–02 [CONTINUED]
Type of disability 1976–77 1980–81 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94 1994–95 1995–96 1996–97 1997–98 1998–99 1999–2000 2000–01 2001–02
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Number served as a percent of total enrollmentb
All disabilities 8.3 10.1 11.3 11.4 11.6 11.8 12.0 12.2 12.4 12.6 12.8 13.0 13.2 13.3 13.4
Specific learning disabilities 1.8 3.6 5.0 5.2 5.3 5.5 5.5 5.6 5.8 5.8 5.9 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0
Speech or language impairments 2.9 2.9 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3
Mental retardation 2.2 2.0 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.2
Emotional disturbance 0.6 0.8 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
Hearing impairments 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1
Orthopedic impairments 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2
Other health impairments 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.7
Visual impairments 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
Multiple disabilities — 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3
Deaf-blindness — * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Autism and traumatic brain injury — — — — * * 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2
Developmental delay — — — — — — — — — — # # # 0.1 0.1
Preschool disableda — — 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.3 1.3
— Not available.
*Rounds to zero.
a
Includes preschool children 3–5 years served under Chapter I and IDEA, Part B. Prior to 1987–88, these students were included in the counts by disability condition. Beginning in 1987–88, states were no longer required to report preschool children
(0–5 years) by disability condition.
b
Based on the total enrollment in public schools, kindergarten through 12th grade, including a relatively small number of prekindergarten students.
Note: Includes students served under Chapter I and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), formerly the Education of the Handicapped Act. Prior to October 1994, children and youth with disabilities were served under the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act, Part B, and Chapter 1 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. In October 1994, Congress passed the Improving America’s Schools Act in which funding for children and youth with disabilities was consolidated under
IDEA, Part B. Data reported in this table for years prior to 1993–94 include children ages 0–21 served under Chapter 1. Counts are based on reports from the 50 states and the District of Columbia only (i.e., figures from outlying areas are not included).
Increases since 1987–88 are due in part to new legislation enacted in fall 1986, which mandates public school special education services for all disabled children ages 3 through 5, in addition to age groups previously mandated. Some data have been
revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 52. Children 3 to 21 Years Old Served in Federally Supported Programs for the Disabled,by Type of Disability: Selected Years,
1976–77 to 2001–02,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/
digest/d03/tables/dt052.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Number and percentage of public school students participating in select programs, 2002–03
Education
Number of Percent of Number of students Number of students Number of Percent of all
Number of Percent of students students receiving migrant receiving migrant students eligible students eligible
students students receiving receiving services during services during for free or reduced- for free or reduced-
State with IEPs with IEPs ELL services ELL services school yeara summer price meals price meals
Reporting statesb 6,449,904 13.4 4,029,340 8.4 — — 16,955,477 35.2
Alabama 94,343 12.9 10,568 1.4 7,825 2,630 364,226 50.1
Alaska 18,131 13.5 16,378 12.2 10,220 1,369 34,846 25.9
c c
Arizona 101,648 10.6 143,744 14.9 2,094 8,635
Arkansas 57,185 12.7 15,146 3.4 8,813 1,558 218,277 48.4
California 673,935 10.8 1,599,542 25.6 230,478 151,112 3,002,890 48.1
Colorado 75,585 10.1 86,128 11.5 12,653 3,026 214,115 28.5
Connecticut 74,020 12.9 22,651 4.0 4,551 2,206 145,017 25.4
Delaware 16,723 14.4 3,449 3.0 291 170 41,319 35.5
District of Columbia 12,400 16.3 5,798 7.6 814 115 47,189 62.0
Florida 389,632 15.3 203,712 8.0 49,091 4,357 1,148,685 45.4
Georgia 177,608 11.9 70,464 4.7 9,539 3,671 674,800 45.1
Hawaii 22,814 12.4 12,853 7.0 1,520 271 80,630 43.9
Idaho 28,904 11.6 18,747 7.5 8,347 4,284 90,447 36.4
Illinois 305,970 14.7 168,727 8.1 — 2,441 741,954 35.6
Indiana 166,414 16.6 42,629 4.2 — — 325,856 32.5
Iowa 73,123 15.2 13,961 2.9 4,538 833 137,404 28.5
Kansas 63,845 13.6 17,942 3.8 12,526 3,444 168,744 36.0
Kentucky 100,294 15.2 6,343 1.0 14,801 4,873 434,012 69.0
Louisiana 99,729 13.7 11,108 1.5 4,077 3,443 443,102 60.7
Maine 33,763 16.1 2,632 1.3 — 2,730 62,047 30.4
Maryland 106,299 12.3 27,311 3.2 348 900 265,989 30.7
Massachusetts 150,551 15.3 51,622 5.3 2,203 — 257,359 26.2
c c c
Michigan 238,273 13.3 — 553,124 31.0
Minnesota 111,960 13.2 51,275 6.1 987 3,326 231,450 27.3
Mississippi 63,738 12.9 2,250 0.5 2,405 950 321,712 65.3
Missouri 143,383 15.5 13,121 1.4 4,616 485 333,964 36.2
Montana 19,162 12.8 6,642 4.4 — — 47,877 31.9
Nebraska 45,018 15.8 13,803 4.8 13,419 3,382 92,423 32.4
Nevada 42,504 11.5 58,753 15.9 548 40 125,660 34.1
New Hampshire 29,238 14.1 3,270 1.6 155 — 32,132 15.5
New Jersey 218,533 16.0 57,548 4.2 868 1,298 371,392 27.2
New Mexico 63,593 19.9 65,317 20.4 1,924 583 182,469 57.0
c c
New York 420,274 14.4 178,909 6.1 — —
North Carolina 190,146 14.2 59,849 4.5 15,132 9,021 452,486 33.9
North Dakota 13,653 13.1 883 0.8 291 438 29,270 28.1
c
Ohio 248,127 13.5 25,782 1.4 — 535,072 29.2
Oklahoma 91,184 14.6 40,192 6.4 — 631 320,600 51.3
Oregon 71,433 12.9 52,331 9.4 20,394 5,105 211,674 38.5
Pennsylvania 242,837 13.4 — — 8,768 7,446 528,011 29.1
Rhode Island 32,500 20.4 10,087 6.3 — — 53,084 33.4
South Carolina 109,423 15.8 7,467 1.1 518 1,022 343,810 49.6
South Dakota 17,241 13.5 4,524 3.5 2,265 245 38,800 30.3
Tennessee 142,566 15.8 — — — — — —
Texas 502,700 11.8 630,686 14.8 108,649 — 1,968,976 46.2
Utah 56,085 11.6 43,299 8.9 4,105 3,485 149,728 30.9
Vermont 13,765 13.8 1,057 1.1 858 411 25,501 25.5
45
46
TABLE 3.2
Number and percentage of public school students participating in select programs, 2002–03 [CONTINUED]
— Not available.
a
Migrant students include those who were enrolled at any time during the previous (2001–02) regular school year. They are reported for each school in which they enrolled; because this is a duplicated count, the table does not show migrants as a
percentage of all students.
b
Reporting states total includes the 50 states and the District of Columbia. It is suppressed if data were missing for 15 percent or more of all school or agencies. State totals exclude states for which data were missing for 20 percent or more of the
schools or agencies.
c
Data were missing for more than 20 percent of schools or districts.
Note: IEP is the acronym for individualized education program. ELL is the acronym for English language learner. Some data items were more likely to be missing from charter schools than from other schools. Free lunch data were missing for 459 of
2,575 charter schools in the 50 states and District of Columbia and migrant student data were missing for 417. Data on ELL students were missing for 248 of the total 1,241 operational charter school districts in the 50 states and District of Columbia.
Percentages are based on schools and agencies reporting. Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: Lee Hoffman, Jennifer Sable, Julia Naum, and Dell Gray, “Table 3. Number and Percentage of Public School Students Participating in Selected Programs: United States and Other Jurisdictions, School Year
2002–03,” Public Elementary and Secondary Students, Staff, Schools, and School Districts: School Year 2002–03, NCES 2005-314, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute for
Education Sciences, Washington, DC, February 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005314.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education
TABLE 3.3
Disabled persons ages 6–21 receiving education services, by educational environment and type of disability, 1999–2001
[Percentage distribution]
Regular school,
outside regular class
Less More Separate Separate Public Private Homebound/
All than 21 21–60 than 60 public school private school residential residential hospital
Type of disability environments percent percent percent facility facility facility facility placement
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1999–2000
All persons, 6 to 21 years old 100.0 47.3 28.3 20.3 1.9 1.0 0.4 0.3 0.5
Specific learning disabilities 100.0 45.3 37.9 15.8 0.4 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.2
Speech or language impairments 100.0 87.5 6.7 5.3 0.2 0.2 * * 0.1
Mental retardation 100.0 14.1 29.5 50.5 4.1 0.9 0.4 0.2 0.4
Emotional disturbance 100.0 25.8 23.4 32.8 7.5 5.5 1.5 2.0 1.5
Hearing impairments 100.0 40.3 19.3 24.5 5.4 1.6 8.0 0.6 0.2
Orthopedic impairments 100.0 44.4 21.9 27.7 3.5 0.7 0.1 0.1 1.6
Other health impairments 100.0 44.9 33.2 17.2 0.9 0.7 0.1 0.2 2.7
Visual impairments 100.0 49.1 19.5 17.7 4.6 1.1 6.5 0.9 0.6
Multiple disabilities 100.0 11.2 18.8 43.0 15.0 6.8 1.3 1.4 2.5
Deaf-blindness 100.0 14.8 10.1 39.7 13.8 3.4 12.2 4.2 1.7
Autism 100.0 20.7 14.5 49.9 7.9 5.4 0.2 1.1 0.5
Traumatic brain injury 100.0 31.0 26.6 31.6 2.6 4.6 0.4 0.9 2.3
Developmental delay 100.0 44.7 29.7 24.2 0.8 0.2 * * 0.3
2000–01
All persons, 6 to 21 years old 100.0 46.5 29.8 19.5 1.9 1.1 0.4 0.3 0.5
Specific learning disabilities 100.0 44.3 40.3 14.4 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.2
Speech or language impairments 100.0 85.6 8.4 5.1 0.2 0.6 * * 0.1
Mental retardation 100.0 13.2 29.1 51.7 4.2 0.9 0.3 0.2 0.4
Emotional disturbance 100.0 26.8 23.4 31.8 7.7 5.4 1.6 2.0 1.3
Hearing impairments 100.0 42.3 20.0 22.5 4.4 1.9 8.3 0.6 0.2
Orthopedic impairments 100.0 46.4 23.4 24.3 3.5 0.7 0.1 0.1 1.6
Other health impairments 100.0 45.1 33.9 16.7 0.8 0.8 0.2 0.2 2.4
Visual impairments 100.0 50.5 20.1 16.0 4.7 1.2 5.9 0.9 0.7
Multiple disabilities 100.0 12.1 16.0 45.5 14.6 6.9 1.3 1.3 2.3
Deaf-blindness 100.0 18.1 9.9 34.2 14.5 4.5 12.5 4.4 1.9
Autism 100.0 24.3 15.3 46.4 7.2 5.2 0.3 0.9 0.4
Traumatic brain injury 100.0 32.3 27.9 29.4 2.8 4.2 0.3 0.9 2.2
Developmental delay 100.0 46.4 29.9 22.3 0.6 0.4 * 0.1 0.2
*Rounds to zero.
Note: Data by disability condition are only reported for 6- to 21-year-old students. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 53. Percentage Distribution of Disabled Persons 6 to 21 Years Old Receiving
Education Services for the Disabled, by Educational Environment and Type of Disability: United States and Outlying Areas, 1999–2000,” in Digest of
Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://
nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt053.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
students in regular classrooms benefits both disabled and services by spending between 21% and 60% of the school
nondisabled students. day outside of regular classes. Another 19.5% were
served most of the time in separate classrooms within a
In this inclusion model of instruction, the special regular education building, spending more than 60% of
education student spends part of the day in the regular the day outside of the regular classroom. Almost nine out
classroom. The student spends the rest of the day in a of every ten speech or language impaired children
resource room with a special education teacher, where (85.6%) were educated primarily in regular classrooms,
the student receives help in subjects such as reading or and more than half (51.7%) of those with mental retarda-
mathematics. According to the U.S. Department of Edu- tion received special education mostly outside of regular
cation, during the 2000–01 school year, 96% of disabled classrooms. (See Table 3.3.)
students ages six through twenty-one received most of
their educational and related services in school settings According to the U.S. Department of Education, in
with nondisabled students. Spending most of the time in the 2003–04 school year, 50% of all students with dis-
the regular classroom and less than 21% of the time abilities were in regular classrooms 80% or more of
outside of the regular classroom was the most common the day. White students (55%) were more likely to
instructional environment (46.5%). An additional 29.8% spend 80% or more of their day in regular classrooms
of students received special education and related than African-American (39%), Hispanic (46%), Native
Students ages 6–21 served by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, by placement and race/ethnicity, 2003–04
[Percentage distribution]
80 percent or more of day 79–40 percent of day in a Less than 40 percent of day Not in a regular school
in a regular classroom regular classroom in a regular classroom
Total 50 28 19 4
American Indian 50 33 14 3
Asian/Pacfic
Race/ethnicity
49 24 23 4
Islander
Black 39 28 28 5
White 55 28 14 4
Hispanic 46 27 23 3
0 20 40 60 80 100
Percent of students
Note: Students counted as disabled are those students served under Part B of the IDEA in the United States and outlying areas. American Indian includes Alaska Native, Black
includes African American, Pacific Islander includes Native Hawaiian, and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic origin unless specfied. Detail may not sum to
totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Students with Disabilities:
Percentage Distribution of Students Ages 6–21 Served by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, by Placement in Educational Environment and
Race/Ethnicity: 2003–04,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
States that collect data on Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) youth leaving high school, June 2002–June 2003
States without routine data collection efforts States with routine data collection efforts
WA
MT ND ME
OR MN VT
NH
ID MA
SD WI NY
WY MI RI
CT
IA PA NJ
NE
NV OH
UT IL IN DE
CO WV MD
CA VA
KS MO
KY
NC
TN
AZ OK
NM AR SC
GA
MS AL
TX LA
AK FL
HI
SOURCE: Lacinda Ayers and Tranchau Nguyen, “Figure 3. States That Collect Data on IDEA Youth Leaving High School,” in Special Education: Federal
Actions Can Assist States in Improving Postsecondary Outcomes for Youth, GAO-03-773, U.S. General Accounting Office, Washington, DC, July 2003,
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d03773.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
memory, motivation, physical dexterity, social adeptness, • These children and youth exhibit high performance
and aesthetic sensitivity—qualities needed to succeed in capability in intellectual, creative, and/or artistic
life but not measured by IQ tests. areas, possess an unusual leadership capacity, or excel
in specific academic fields. They require services or
Researchers and educators generally agree that intel-
activities not ordinarily provided by the schools.
ligence takes many forms and that multiple criteria are
necessary for measurement. Educators are learning to • Outstanding talents are present in children and youth
identify outstanding talent by evaluating student abilities from all cultural groups, across all economic strata,
in different settings, rather than relying solely on test and in all areas of human endeavor.
scores. The following definition, based on that in the
Jacob K. Javits Gifted and Talented Students Education Identifying Gifted Students
Act of 1988 (P.L. 100-297), reflects the current knowl- Most states and localities have developed definitions
edge and thinking. of gifted and talented students based on the 1972 Marland
• Children and youth with outstanding talent perform or Report to Congress (P.L. 91-230, section 806). This defi-
show the potential for performing at remarkably high nition identified such areas as general intellectual ability,
levels of accomplishment when compared with others specific academic aptitude, creative or productive think-
of their age, experience, or environment. ing, leadership ability, visual and performing artistic talent,
Number of students with disabilities exiting special education, by basis of exit, age, and type of disability, 2000–01
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 109. Number of Students with Disabilities Exiting Special Education, by
Basis of Exit, Age, and Type of Disability: United States and Outlying Areas: 2000–01,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt109.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
and psychomotor ability, and estimated that gifted students leadership abilities. The Act gives funding priority to
represent at least 3% to 5% of the student population. programs that support gifted and talented students who
However, the methods used by most districts to identify are economically disadvantaged, speak limited English,
gifted students lag far behind the Marland definition. or have disabilities. Under the 2001 reauthorization of
the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA; also
Serving Gifted Students known as the No Child Left Behind Act), grants for gifted
According to the National Survey on the State Gov- and talented education are awarded under two priorities.
ernance of K12 Gifted and Talented Education (Michael The first priority supports the development of models that
Swanson, Tennessee Initiative for Gifted Education serve students who are underrepresented in gifted and
Reform, August 2002), identification of gifted students talented programs, and the second priority supports state
is mandated in thirty-two states. In some states gifted and local efforts to improve services for gifted and talented
programming is mandated, and in others both identifica- students. Authorized appropriations under the Javits Gifted
tion and service are mandated. Twenty-four states do not and Talented Students Education Program for fiscal year
have a full-time director of gifted education. Not all 2005 totaled more than $11 million, an increase of nearly
states and localities collect data in the same way, so it 70% from the $6.5 million appropriated in 2000.
is difficult to determine the exact number of students
served in gifted and talented programs. DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS
When the Jacob K. Javits Gifted and Talented Stu- Children who are disadvantaged economically and
dents Education Act was reauthorized in 1994, a small socially often lag behind their peers. Statistically, they
federal contribution was established. This program sup- start preschool education later or miss it entirely and thus
ports grants, research, and the development of national are less ready to start school. They have more learning
Percent of high school dropouts among persons ages 16–24, by sex and race/ethnicity, selected years, April 1960–October 2001
— Not available.
a
Based on the April 1960 decennial census.
b
White and black include persons of Hispanic origin.
c
Because of changes in data collection procedures, data may not be comparable with figures for earlier years.
Note: All races includes other racial/ethnic groups not shown separately. “Status” dropouts are 16- to 24-year-olds who are not enrolled in school and who have not completed a high
school program regardless of when they left school. People who have received GED credentials are counted as high school completers. All data except for 1960 are based on October
counts. Data are based upon sample surveys of the civilian noninstitutionalized population.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 107. Percent of High School Dropouts (Status Dropouts) Among Persons
16 to 24 Years Old, by Sex and Race/Ethnicity: Selected Years, April 1960 to October 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt107.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
during the 2002–03 school year, while New Hampshire the United States receiving ELL services. California (1.6
(15.5%) had the lowest. (See Table 3.2.) million), Texas (630,686), Florida (203,712), New York
(178,909) and Illinois (168,727) had the largest numbers
LEP Students of ELL students. The states with the largest proportions
Students with Limited English Proficiency (LEP) are of their students receiving ELL services were California
those for whom English is not their first language. They (25.6%), New Mexico (20.4%), Nevada (15.9%) and
are served by English as a Second Language (ESL) Texas (14.8%). (See Table 3.2.)
programs, which are sometimes known as English Lan-
guage Learner (ELL) programs. The primary purpose of Students on the Move
ESL programs is to teach students English so that they Children who move frequently during their school
can learn the content of instruction in English. years are more likely to have emotional or behavioral
According to the U.S. Department of Education, in problems, to repeat a grade, or to be suspended or
2002–03 there were more than four million students in expelled from school. Experts theorize that these children
Dropout rates of 16- to 24-year-olds, by race/ethnicity, Number of Title I eligible schools and percentage of students
October 1972–2002 served, 2002–03
Appropriations for Title I and Title IV, Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), 1999–2000 and 2000–01
[In thousands]
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 369. Appropriations for Title I and Title IV, Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
of 1994, by State or Other Area and Type of Appropriation: 1999–2000 and 2000–01,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2001, NCES 2002-130, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, February 2002, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d01/dt369.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
TABLE 3.11
Enrollment 905,851
Ages
Number of 5 year olds and older 5%
Number of 4 year olds 52%
Number of 3 year olds 34%
Number under 3 years of age 9%
Racial/ethnic composition
American Indian-Alaska Native 3.10%
Hispanic 31.20%
Black 31.10%
White 26.90%
Asian 1.80%
Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.90%
Multi-racial/other 5.00%
Number of grantees 1,604
Number of classrooms 48,260
Number of centers 20,050
Average cost per child $7,222
Paid staff 211,950
Volunteers 1,353,000
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services allocations for Head Start and enrollment in Head Start, 1999–2002
— Not available.
*Not applicable.
a
The distribution of enrollment by age was: 6 percent were 5 years old and over; 59 percent were 4-year-olds; 31 percent were 3-year-olds; and 4 percent were under 3 years of age.
Handicapped children accounted for 13 percent in Head Start programs. The racial/ethnic composition was: American Indian/Alaska Native, 3 percent; Hispanic, 27 percent; Black, 35
percent; White, 31 percent; and Asian, 3 percent.
b
The distribution of enrollment by age was: 5 percent were 5 years old and over; 56 percent were 4-year-olds; 33 percent were 3-year-olds; and 6 percent were under 3 years of age.
Handicapped children accounted for 13 percent in Head Start programs. The racial/ethnic composition was: American Indian/Alaska Native, 3 percent; Hispanic, 29 percent; Black, 35
percent; White, 30 percent; Asian, 2 percent, and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 1 percent.
c
The distribution of enrollment by age was: 4 percent were 5 years old and over; 54 percent were 4-year-olds; 35 percent were 3-year-olds; and 7 percent were under 3 years of age.
Handicapped children accounted for 13 percent in Head Start programs. The racial/ethnic composition was: American Indian/Alaska Native, 4 percent; Hispanic, 30 percent; Black, 34
percent; White, 30 percent; Asian, 2 percent, and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 1 percent.
d
The distribution of enrollment by age was: 5 percent were 5 years old and over; 52 percent were 4-year-olds; 36 percent were 3-year-olds; and 7 percent were under 3 years of age.
Handicapped children accounted for 13 percent in Head Start programs. The racial/ethnic composition was: American Indian/Alaska Native, 3 percent; Hispanic, 30 percent; Black, 33
percent; White, 28 percent; Asian, 2 percent, and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 1 percent.
e
Excludes other activities and outlying areas.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 374. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Allocations for Head
Start and Enrollment in Head Start, by State or Jurisdiction: Fiscal Years 1999 to 2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt374.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
STANDARDS AND ASSESSMENTS students know and can do in key subject areas and to measure
Content standards provide a framework for the knowl- educational progress over long periods of time. Designed as
edge and skills that students are expected to acquire. Per- a measure of the nation’s educational system, the NAEP is a
formance standards determine how well students should be series of reading, writing, mathematics, science, history,
able to perform relative to the content standards. civics, and geography tests. The tests are given periodically
Assessments provide information regarding the attainment to randomly selected samples of youth ages nine (grade
of standards. Elementary, secondary, and special education four), thirteen (grade eight), and seventeen (grade twelve)
programs rely on state standards-based assessment systems attending both public and private schools. Student perfor-
to evaluate the effectiveness of federal programs. According mance in all grade levels is measured on a proficiency scale
to federal expectations for Title I (the federal program that of zero to five hundred. This allows a comparison of younger
helps states and schools meet special education needs), students with older ones, as well as an assessment of progress
academic standards must be rigorous and exceed minimum from year to year. Table 4.1 shows the schedule from 1990 to
competencies. They must be fair, valid, and reliable, and 2010 for assessing individual subjects and releasing long-
include all students. Assessment results should be reported term trend data. (See Table 4.1.)
for schools and districts, and they must include demographic
categories (gender, race and ethnicity, English proficiency, Beginning with the 1990 assessments, the NAGB
disability, migrant status, and low income status). Title I also developed achievement levels for each subject at
legislation specifies that performance standards must pro- each grade level in an effort to measure the match
vide information for at least three levels of performance. between students’ actual achievement and their desired
achievement. A panel of teachers, education specialists,
and other members of the general public categorized
NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF these levels into basic, proficient, and advanced. Basic
EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS level was defined as ‘‘partial mastery of prerequisite
The National Assessment of Educational Progress knowledge and skills that are fundamental for proficient
(NAEP) has conducted assessments of American students work at each grade.’’ Proficient level was defined as
since 1969. The federally funded NAEP is the only regular ‘‘solid academic performance for each grade assessed.
national survey of educational achievement at the elemen- Students reaching this level have demonstrated compe-
tary, middle, and high school levels. It is authorized by tency over challenging subject matter, including sub-
Congress and administered by the National Center for ject-matter knowledge, application of such knowledge
Education Statistics (NCES). The Augustus F. Hawkins– to real-world situations, and analytical skills appropriate
Robert T. Stafford Elementary and Secondary School to the subject matter.’’ The advanced level was defined
Improvement Amendments of 1988 (P.L. 100-290) estab- as ‘‘superior performance.’’ Achievement levels provide
lished the National Assessment Governing Board (NAGB) another way to report assessment results, allowing com-
to formulate policy guidelines for NAEP. The NAGB parisons between percentages of students who achieve a
determines which subjects will be assessed and how they
particular level on one assessment with the percentage
will be assessed.
who achieve that level the next time that subject is
According to the U.S. Department of Education, the assessed. They are also used to make comparisons
NAEP has two major goals: to discover what American between states and the nation.
Education 61
TABLE 4.1 in a society that requires increasingly sophisticated
job skills.
Schedule of NAEP assessments, 1990–2010
The NAEP assesses proficiency in three different
Main NAEP types of reading: reading for literary experience, reading
Year National State Long-term trend
for information, and reading to perform a task. The first
1990 Mathematics Mathematics (8) Mathematics type of reading involves various genres of creative writ-
Science Science ing, including fiction, poetry, drama, biography, myths,
Reading Reading
Writing legends, and folktales, and students are asked to explore
1992 Mathematics Mathematics (4,8) Mathematics such literary features as characters, plots, and themes.
Reading Reading (4) Science
Writing Reading ‘‘Reading for information’’ assesses students’ ability to
Writing use magazines, newspapers, textbooks, and essays to gain
1994 Geography Reading (4) Mathematics
U.S. History Science knowledge about the world. The third type of reading
Reading Reading assessment addresses students’ capacity to use what they
Writing
1996 Mathematics Mathematics (4,8) Mathematics learn from such informational sources as train schedules,
Science Science (8) Science instruction manuals, game directions, and maps. This
Reading
Writing component is not part of fourth-grade assessments. Over-
1997 Arts (8) all, the NAEP reading assessments examine students’
1998 Reading Reading (4,8)
Writing Writing (8) ability to understand and interpret the material they read,
Civics to make connections between the material and their own
1999 Mathematics
Science experiences, and to evaluate the structure and content of
Reading what they have read.
2000 Mathematics Mathematics (4,8)
Science Science (4,8)
Reading (4)
NAEP reading performance is described in terms of
2001 U.S. History the percentage of students attaining the three achieve-
Geography
2002 Reading Reading (4,8)
ment levels—basic, proficient, and advanced. A 300
Writing Writing (4,8) score indicates relative proficiency in understanding
2003 Reading (4,8) Reading (4,8)
Mathematics (4,8) Mathematics (4,8)
complicated literary and informational material.
2004 Mathematics
Reading According to the National Center for Education Sta-
2005 Reading Reading (4,8) tistics, long-term trend data from 1971 to 2004 indicate
Mathematics Mathematics (4,8)
Science Science (4,8) that the average reading scale score for nine-year-olds
2006 U.S. History increased from 208 in 1971 to 219 in 2004. Reading
Economics (12)
Civics scores of nine-year-olds went up from 212 in 1999 to
2007 Reading (4,8) Reading (4,8) 219 in 2004. The reading scores of thirteen-year-olds
Mathematics (4,8) Mathematics (4,8)
Writing (8,12) Writing (8) went up four points between 1971 and 2004, from 255
2008 Arts (8) Mathematics to 259, but the score stayed the same between 1999 and
Reading
2009 Reading Reading (4,8) 2004 (259). For seventeen-year-olds, reading scores were
Mathematics Mathematics (4,8) the same in 2004 as in 1971 (285), and showed a three-
Science Science (4,8)
2010 World History (12) point decrease after 1999, when the average reading scale
Geography score was 288. (See Figure 4.1.)
Note: Grades tested are 4, 8, and 12 in main NAEP (National Assessment for Educational
Progress) and ages 9, 13, and 17 in Long-term Trend NAEP unless otherwise indicated. Prior to 1998, administration procedures for the
NAEP assessment schedules are subject to change. NAEP reading assessment did not permit the use of
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Schedule of NAEP accommodations such as extra time or individual (rather
Assessments,” in The Nation’s Report Card: An Introduction to the National
Assessment for Educational Progress (NAEP), NCES 2005-454 Revised,
than group) administration for special needs students. In
U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Educational Statistics, 1998 administration procedures were introduced that
Institute for Education Sciences, Washington, DC, n.d., http://nces.ed.gov/ allowed students with disabilities and limited English
nationsreportcard/pdf/about/2005454.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
proficiency to use such accommodations.
The NAEP defines an accommodation as a change in
testing conditions that removes barriers to participation
but does not alter what is being tested. Examples of
READING PERFORMANCE accommodations include extended time to complete the
The ability to read is fundamental to virtually all test, testing in small group or one-on-one sessions, use of
aspects of the education process. If students cannot a scribe to write the student’s answers, and reading the
read well, they usually cannot succeed in other subject instructions aloud. Bilingual test booklets can be used for
areas. Eventually, they may have additional problems subjects other than reading assessments.
Trends in average reading scale scores for students ages 9, 13, and 17, 1971–2004
500
320
310
300
289* 290* 290* 290* 288 288 288
290 285 286 285 285
280
270
Scale score
240
230
220 219
215* 212*
210* 211* 212* 209* 211* 211* 212*
210 208*
200
0
1971 1975 1980 1984 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1999 2004
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 1. Trends in Average Reading Scale Scores for Students Ages 9, 13, and 17: 1971–2004,” in
NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and Mathematics Findings in Brief, NCES 2005-463,
U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/
nationsreportcard/pdf/main2005/2005463.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Long-Term Trend Reading Scores of Nine-Year-Olds the average scores were not statistically different from
Scores of nine-year-olds increased for all ethnic those in 1999. The achievement gap between scores of
groups and both genders between 1971 and 2004, and white and African-American students decreased from
the average reading score of nine-year-olds in 2004 was 1971 to 2004, but has stayed about the same since
higher than in any previous assessment. The achievement 1999. The gap between white and Hispanic thirteen-
gap between scores of white and African-American nine- year-olds stayed about the same from 1975 to 2004.
year-olds decreased between 1971 and 2004. Between (See Table 4.3.) Among thirteen-year-olds, there was
white and Hispanic students at age nine, the achievement only a small change in the gender gap between males
gap decreased from 1975 to 1999, but it stayed the same and females from 1971 to 2004; on average, in 1971
from 1999 to 2004. (See Table 4.2.) On average, females females scored eleven points higher than males in read-
scored higher than males in reading in 2004. Among nine- ing, in 1999 females scored twelve points higher, and
year-olds, the gender gap between females and males in 2004 females scored ten points higher than males
decreased from thirteen points in 1971 to five points in in reading. The score gap between white and African-
2004. The score gap between white and African-American American students at age thirteen decreased seventeen
students decreased eighteen points from 1971 to 2004 and points from 1971 to 2004.
nine points between 1999 and 2004.
Long-Term Trend Reading Scores
Long-Term Trend Reading Scores of Thirteen-Year-Olds of Seventeen-Year-Olds
Scores of thirteen-year-olds increased for all ethnic On average, scores of all seventeen-year-olds showed
groups and both genders from 1971 to 1999, but in 2004 no statistically significant difference from 1971 to 2004.
Summary of trends in average reading and mathematics scale Summary of trends in average reading and mathematics scale
scores and score gaps for students age 9, 1971–2004 scores and score gaps for students age 13, 1971–2004
Reading Change from 1971* Change from 1999 Reading Change from 1971* Change from 1999
Overall Overall
Male Male
Female Female
White White
Black Black
Hispanic Hispanic
Mathematics Change from 1973 Change from 1999 Mathematics Change from 1973 Change from 1999
Overall Overall
Male Male
Female Female
White White
Black Black
Hispanic Hispanic
Racial/ethnic gaps: reading Change from 1971* Change from 1999 Racial/ethnic gaps: reading Change from 1971* Change from 1999
White-black White-black
White-Hispanic White-Hispanic
Racial/ethnic gaps: mathematics Change from 1973 Change from 1999 Racial/ethnic gaps: mathematics Change from 1973 Change from 1999
White-black White-black
White-Hispanic White-Hispanic
Average score or score gap increased. Average score or score gap increased.
Average score or score gap decreased. Average score or score gap decreased.
Any change in average score or score gap was not statistically significant. Any change in average score or score gap was not statistically significant.
*Data for Hispanic students are included in the overall national results but not reported *Data for Hispanic students are included in the overall national results but not reported
as a separate racial/ethnic category in 1971. Therefore, the results for Hispanic students as a separate racial/ethnic category in 1971. Therefore, the results for Hispanic students
are from 1975. are from 1975.
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 3. Summary of SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 6. Summary of
Trends in Average Reading and Mathematics Scale Scores and Score Gaps Trends in Average Reading and Mathematics Scale Scores and Score Gaps
for Students Age 9: 1971–2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic for Students Age 13: 1971–2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic
Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and
Mathematics Findings in Brief, NCES 2005-463, U.S. Department of Mathematics Findings in Brief, NCES 2005-463, U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education
Sciences, Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/ Sciences, Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/
pdf/main2005/2005463.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005) pdf/main2005/2005463.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
However, scores of African-American students increased do better in school. In 2001–02, one-third (33%) of
from 1971 to 1999. For Hispanic students they increased children about nine months of age were read to by a
from 1975 to 1999, and for both groups they stayed about relative on a daily basis; even fewer (27%) were told
the same from 1999 to 2004. The achievement gap stories. These numbers compared unfavorably with those
between scores of white and African-American students for other activities, including nearly three-quarters (74%)
decreased from 1971 to 1999. They also decreased between who were sung to, 68% who played peek-a-boo, 64%
white and Hispanic students from 1975 to 1999, but there who were taken on errands, and nearly half (47%) who
was no significant difference in scores for either group played outside every day. (See Table 4.5; while totals in
from 1999 to 2004. (See Table 4.4.) Among seventeen- Table 4.5 reflect percentages for children nine months of
year-olds, there were only small differences in the gender age, children were assessed as young as six months and
gap between males and females from 1971 to 2004; on as old as twenty-two months.)
average, in 1971 females scored twelve points higher than
males in reading, in 1999 females scored thirteen points More nine-month-old white children (41%) than
higher, and in 2004 females scored fourteen points higher African-American (23%), Hispanic (21%), Asian/Pacific
than males in reading. The score gap between white and Islander (26%), or Native American (18%) children were
African-American students at age seventeen decreased read to every day. Nearly half (48%) of children whose
twenty-four points from 1971 to 2004. mothers have a bachelor’s degree or higher were read to
daily. Poor children (22%) were less likely to be read to
Early Childhood Factors Associated than nonpoor children (36%). In terms of other literary
with Reading Performance activities, three-quarters (75%) of white children were sung
According to the National Center for Education Sta- to every day, which was not much different from African-
tistics, children whose family members read to them American (73%), Hispanic (70%), or Asian/Pacific Islander
eventually demonstrate higher reading performance and (71%). About 64% of Native American children were sung
Another way to look at the early development of Students at all three ages were asked about the num-
children is by the number of family risk factors. Risk ber of pages per day they read in school and for home-
factors include living in a household that is below the work. According to the National Center for Education
poverty level, having a language other than English spo- Statistics, nine-year-olds who reported reading five or
ken as the primary language at home, having a mother fewer pages per day had average reading scale scores of
whose highest education was less than a high school 211 in 2004. The score was 220 for students who read six
diploma or equivalent, and living in a single-parent to ten pages per day, 222 for students who read eleven to
household. According to the National Center for Educa- fifteen pages per day, 223 for students who read sixteen
tion Statistics, 41% of nine-month-old children who had to twenty pages per day, and 222 for students who read
no family risk factors were read to on a daily basis, while more than twenty pages per day. (See Figure 4.3.)
25% of those with one risk factor and 20% of those with Among thirteen-year-olds, the average reading scale
two or more risk factors were read to daily in 2001–02. score in 2004 for students who read five or fewer pages
(See Figure 4.2.) per day was 249. For students who read six to ten pages
per day, the score was 260. It was 262 for students who
Homework Habits and Reading Performance reported reading eleven to fifteen pages or sixteen to
The NAEP asked students background questions twenty pages per day, and 263 for students who read
about their school and home experiences. One question more than twenty pages per day. (See Figure 4.3.)
Percentage of babies who engaged in selected activities with a family member daily, by child and family characteristics, 2001–02
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Table 35–1. Percentage of Children
About 9 Months of Age Who Engaged in Selected Activities with a Family Member Daily in a Typical Week, by Child and Family Characteristics: 2001–02,”
in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005,
http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2005/section6/table.asp?tableID=301 (accessed July 26, 2005)
In 2004 seventeen-year-olds who read five or fewer twenty pages per day, and 297 for students who read more
pages per day had average reading scale scores of 268. The than twenty pages per day. (See Figure 4.3.)
scores were 282 for students who read six to ten pages per
day, 287 for those who read eleven to fifteen pages per Students were asked how often they read for fun.
day, 293 for students who reported reading sixteen to According to the National Center for Education Statistics,
Percentage of babies who engaged in selected activities with a family member daily, by number of family risk factors, 2001–02
100
80 77
73
70
65 67
64 64 63 64
60
Percent
51
46 47
41
40
31
25 25
20 20
20
0
Read stories Told stories Sung to Taken on errands Played peek-a-boo Played outside
Number of family risk factors*
*Family risk factors include living below the poverty level, living in a household where the primary language was not English, having a mother whose highest education was less
than a high school diploma or equivalent, and living in a single-parent household.
Note: While the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort (ECLS–B) was designed to collect information on children about 9 months of age (i.e., 8 to 10 months), children
were assessed as young as 6 months and as old as 22 months. Seventy-two percent of the children were between 8 and 10 months at the time of the assessment, and 84 percent
were between 8 and 11 months.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Parent–Child Interactions:
Percentage of Children About 9 Months of Age who Engaged in Selected Activities with a Family Member Daily in a Typical Week, by Number of Family
Risk Factors: 2001–02,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
among nine-year-olds, those who read for fun almost MATHEMATICS PERFORMANCE
every day had average reading scale scores of 220 in Since 1973 the NAEP has assessed the mathematics
2004. Those who reported reading for fun once or twice performance of nine-, thirteen-, and seventeen-year-olds.
per week scored 224 on average. The scores were 216 for The 2005 NAEP mathematics framework specifies
students who read for fun once or twice per month, 209 five content areas to be assessed: number properties and
for those who read for fun a few times per year, and 203 operations; measurement; geometry; data analysis
for students who reported that they never or hardly ever and probability; and algebra. According to the National
read for fun. (See Figure 4.4.) Center for Education Statistics, on the 2003 mathematics
The average reading scale score was 271 for thirteen- assessment, 39% of all grade eight students scored at the
year-olds who reported reading for fun almost every day. basic level, 23% at the proficient level, and 5% at the
The score was 261 for students who read for fun once or advanced level. The remaining students were categorized
twice per week, 256 for those who read for fun once as below basic level.
or twice per month, and 236 for students who never or
Long-term trend data for 1973 to 2004 from the
hardly ever read for fun. Too few students responded that
National Center for Education Statistics indicate that the
they read for fun only a few times per year for a reliable
average mathematics scale scores for nine-year-olds
estimate of the average reading scale score to be reported
increased from 219 in 1973 to 241 in 2004. Between
for this group. (See Figure 4.4.)
1999 and 2004 mathematics scores of nine-year-olds
For seventeen-year-olds who reported reading for fun went up nine points from 232 to 241. The mathematics
almost every day the average reading scale score was 305 scores of thirteen-year-olds rose fifteen points between
in 2004. It was 288 for students who reported reading for 1973 and 2004, from 266 to 281, with an increase of five
fun once or twice a week, 287 for those who read for fun points from 1999 to 2004 (276 to 281). For seventeen-
once or twice a month, 272 for those who read for fun a year-olds, mathematics scores were not much different in
few times per year, and 268 for students who never or 2004 (307) from the 1973 level (304). However, the 2004
hardly ever read for fun. (See Figure 4.4.) scores represented a slight decline from 1999, when
Average reading scale scores for students ages 9, 13, and 17, Average reading scale scores for students ages 9, 13, and 17,
by pages read per day in school and for homework, 2004 by frequency of reading for fun, 2004
Age 9 Age 9
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500 0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score Scale score
Age 13
Age 13
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500 0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score
Scale score
Age 17
Age 17
Frequency of reading for fun
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500 0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score Scale score
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–3. Average *Reporting standards not met. Sample size is insufficient to permit a reliable
Reading Scale Scores for Students Ages 9, 13, and 17, by Pages Read estimate.
Per Day in School and for Homework: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–5. Average
Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading
Reading Scale Scores for Students Ages 9, 13, and 17, by Frequency of
and Mathematics, NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of Education,
Reading for Fun: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic Progress:
National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences,
Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and Mathematics,
Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/
NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
main2005/2005464.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, Washington, DC,
July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/main2005/2005464
.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Trends in average mathematics scale scores for students ages 9, 13, and 17, 1973–2004
500
320
290
281
280 276*
273* 274* 274*
269* 269* 270*
270 266* 264*
Scale score
260
250
241
240
232*
230* 230* 231* 231*
230
222*
219* 219* 219*
220
210
200
0
1973 1978 1982 1986 1990 1992 1994 1996 1999 2004
Among students in grade eight, scores increased from of white and African-American nine-year-olds narrowed
263 in 1990 to 278 in 2003. In 1996 students with between 1973 and 1999, but it stayed about the same
accommodations scored 270, while those without accom- from 1999 to 2004. Between white and Hispanic students
modations scored 272. There was a two-point difference at age nine, the achievement gap in mathematics stayed
between the scores again in 2000, when students with about the same from 1975 to 1999, but it decreased
accommodations scored 273, and those without accom- from 1999 to 2004. (See Table 4.2.) Although there has
modations scored 275. Since there were no significant been a small score gap since 1973 and a three-point gap
differences between scores of students with and without in the 2004 mathematics scores of male and female nine-
accommodations, after 2000 the data for all students was year-olds, it was not considered statistically significant.
reported in only a single category, with accommodations. The score gap between white and African-American
(See Figure 4.6.) students decreased twelve points from 1973 to 2004.
Average mathematics scale scores for students age 13, by Average mathematics scale scores for students age 17, by
type of mathematics course, 2004 frequency of doing mathematics homework, 2004
Age 13 Age 17
mathematics homework
Regular mathematics 269
Frequency of doing
Often 312
Mathematics course
Pre-algebra 284
Sometimes 296
Algebra 296
*Reporting standard not met. Sample size is insufficient to permit a reliable SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–15. Average
estimate. Mathematics Scale Scores for Students Age 17, by Frequency of Doing
Mathematics Homework: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–7. Average
Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and
Mathematics Scale Scores for Students Age 13, by Type of Mathematics
Mathematics, NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of Education, National
Course: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic Progress: Three
Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences,
Decades of Student Performance in Reading and Mathematics, NCES
Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/
2005-464, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
main2005/2005464.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, Washington, DC,
July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/main2005/2005464
.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
At ages thirteen and seventeen, students were asked about
their use of computers for mathematics work. According
FIGURE 4.8 to the National Center for Education Statistics, thirteen-
year-olds who reported receiving computer instruction
Average mathematics scale scores for students age 17, by had average scale scores of 283 in 2004, while those
highest mathematics course taken, 2004 who did not receive computer instruction scored 280.
Students age thirteen who had access to a computer in
Age 17 school for mathematics scored 283, and those who did
not have access in school scored 282. Those who used a
Highest mathematics course taken
Pre-algebra (or less) 270 computer to solve mathematical problems scored 283,
Algebra (1st year) 282
while those who did not use a computer scored 278 on
average in 2004. (See Figure 4.10.)
Geometry 296
According to the National Center for Education
Algebra (2nd year) 310 Statistics, seventeen-year-olds who reported receiving
Calculus 336 computer instruction had average mathematics scale
scores of 307, which was the same as for those who did
Something else*
not receive computer instruction in 2004. Students at age
0 220 240 260 280 300 320 340 500 seventeen who had access to a computer in school for
Scale score mathematics scored 308, and those who did not have
*Reporting standards not met. Sample size is insufficient to permit a reliable access in school scored 303. Those who used a computer
estimate.
to solve mathematical problems scored 309, while those
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–9. Average who did not use a computer scored 303 on average in
Mathematics Scale Scores for Students Age 17, by Highest Mathematics
Course Taken: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic Progress:
2004. (See Figure 4.10.)
Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading and Mathematics,
NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, Washington, DC,
Television Viewing Habits and Mathematics Scores
July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/main2005/2005464 Students at all three ages (nine, thirteen, and seven-
.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005) teen) were asked how much television they watched
every day. According to the National Center for Educa-
tion Statistics, among nine-year-olds, students who
had average scale scores of 312 in 2004. Among those reported watching zero to two hours of television per
reporting that they did mathematics homework sometimes, day had average mathematics scale scores of 244 in
the score was 296, and students who never did math 2004. Those who watched three to five hours of televi-
homework scored 289 on average. (See Figure 4.9.) sion daily scored 245, while those who reported watching
Average mathematics scale scores for students ages 13 and Average mathematics scale scores for students ages 9, 13,
17, by access to and use of computers for mathematics, 2004 and 17, by amount of daily television watching, 2004
Age 13 Age 9
Computer instruction
Number of hours
watched per day
Yes 283 0 to 2 hours 244
Access to and use of computers
3 to 5 hours 245
No 280
Computer access 6 or more hours 229
Yes 283
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
No 282 Scale score
Computer use
Yes 283
Age 13
No 278
Number of hours
watched per day
0 to 2 hours 288
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score 3 to 5 hours 279
No 307
Age 17
Computer access
Yes 308
Number of hours
watched per day
0 to 2 hours 313
No 303
Computer use 3 to 5 hours 300
No 303
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score
0 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 500
Scale score SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–17. Average
Mathematics Scale Scores for Students Ages 9, 13, and 17, by Amount
SOURCE: National Assessment Governing Board, “Figure 4–13. Average
of Daily Television Watching: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in
Mathematics Scale Scores for Students Ages 13 and 17, by Access to Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in
and Use of Computers for Mathematics: 2004,” in NAEP 2004 Trends in Reading and Mathematics, NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of
Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in Reading Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of
and Mathematics, NCES 2005-464, U.S. Department of Education, Education Sciences, Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/
National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, nationsreportcard/pdf/main2005/2005464.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Washington, DC, July 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/
main2005/2005464.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
six or more hours of television every day had scores of watched three to five hours of television daily scored
229 on average. (See Figure 4.11.) 300, while students who reported watching six or more
hours of television every day had scores of 286 on aver-
According to the National Center for Education age. (See Figure 4.11.)
Statistics, thirteen-year-olds who reported watching zero
to two hours of television per day had average mathe-
SCIENCE PERFORMANCE
matics scale scores of 288 in 2004. Those who watched
three to five hours of television on a daily basis scored Since 1977 the NAEP has assessed the science per-
279, while students who reported watching six or more formance of students at age nine, thirteen, and seventeen.
hours of television every day had scores of 264 on According to the NAEP Web site (http://nces.ed.gov/
average. (See Figure 4.11.) nationsreportcard/science/whatmeasure.asp), the science
assessment addresses students’ knowledge of facts in
According to the National Center for Education areas of earth, physical, and life sciences and measures
Statistics, seventeen-year-olds who reported watching their ability to ‘‘use the tools, procedures, and reasoning
zero to two hours of television per day had average processes of science to develop an increased understand-
mathematics scale scores of 313 in 2004. Those who ing of the natural world.’’ The most recent results that
grades and twelfth-grade white students had lower scores *Significantly different from 2002.
Note: Percentages within each writing achievement level range may not add to 100, or to
in 2000 than they did in 1996. Eighth-grade male stu- the exact percentages at or above achievement levels, due to rounding.
dents’ average science score was higher in 2000 than it SOURCE: Hilary R. Persky, Mary C. Daane, and Ying Jin, “Table 2.1.
was in 1996. Twelfth-grade males and females scored Percentage of Students by Writing Achievement Level, Grades 4, 8, and
lower in 2000, on average, than they had in 1996. 12: 1998 and 2002,” in The Nation’s Report Card: Writing 2002, NCES
2003-529, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, Washington, DC, July 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/
WRITING PERFORMANCE pdf/main2002/2003529.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
dNational desired population does not cover all of the international desired
difference in average scores between 1999 and 2003, so SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar,
Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “International
the gain was made between 1995 and 1999. The TIMSS Mathematics Performance: Average Mathematics Scores of 8th-Grade
indicated that in 2003 U.S. students in grades four and Students, by Country: 2003,” in The Condition of Education, 2005,
eight scored above the international average in mathe- NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics,Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/
matics. On average, grade four students scored higher pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
than students in thirteen countries and lower than stu-
dents in eleven countries. The average score of U.S.
students in grade eight in mathematics was higher than
students in thirty countries, but students in thirteen coun-
tries outperformed U.S. eighth graders. (See Table 4.7.)
twenty-six. Students earned an average of 4.4 credits aHong Kong is a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of the People’s Republic of
dNational desired population does not cover all of the international desired
pan, September 2004), those polled were asked whether SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar,
Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “International
they favored or opposed requiring high school students Science Performance: Average Science Scores of 8th-Grade Students, by
to take four years of English, mathematics, and science Country: 2003,” in The Condition of Education,2005,NCES 2005-094,
to graduate from high school in their community. More U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf
than three-quarters (78%) favored this requirement. (accessed July 26, 2005)
Twenty percent opposed requiring four years of English,
mathematics, and science for high school graduation.
(See Table 4.10.)
According to the National Center for Education Sta-
tistics, since 1982 the proportion of students taking
High school course credit requirements, English, 2002 High school course credit requirements, science, 2002
50 50
45 45
40 40
Number of states
35 35
Number of states
30 30
25 25
20 20
15 15
10 10
5
5
0
0
SOURCE:Abigail Potts, Rolf K. Blank, and Andra Williams, “Table 8. SOURCE:Abigail Potts, Rolf K. Blank and Andra Williams, “Table 8.
High School Course Credit Requirements: English,” in Key State High School Course Credit Requirements: Science,” in Key State
Education Policies on PK–12 Education: 2002, Council of Chief State Education Policies on PK–12 Education: 2002, Council of Chief State
School Officers, Washington, DC, 2002. Reproduced with permission. School Officers, Washington, DC, 2002. Reproduced with permission.
High school course credit requirements, mathematics, 2002 High school course credit requirements, social studies, 2002
2 credits or less 2.5–3.5 credits or less 4 credits 2 credits or less 2.5–3.5 credits 4 credits
50 50
45 45
40 40
Number of states
35 35
Number of states
30 30
25
25
20
20
15
15
10
5 10
0 5
SOURCE:Abigail Potts, Rolf K. Blank and Andra Williams, “Table 8. 0
High School Course Credit Requirements: Mathematics,” in Key State SOURCE:Abigail Potts, Rolf K. Blank and Andra Williams, “Table 8.
Education Policies on PK–12 Education: 2002, Council of Chief State High School Course Credit Requirements: Social Studies,” in Key State
School Officers, Washington, DC, 2002. Reproduced with permission. Education Policies on PK–12 Education: 2002, Council of Chief State
School Officers, Washington, DC, 2002. Reproduced with permission.
Average number of Carnegie units earned by public high school graduates in various subject fields, by selected student characteristics, selected years, 1982–2000
SOURCE: Adapted from Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 137. Average Number of Carnegie Units Earned by Public High School Graduates in Various Subject Fields, by Selected
Student Characteristics: Selected Years, 1982 to 2000,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December
2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt137.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education
TABLE 4.10 FIGURE 4.16
Public opinion on whether four years of English, math, and Percentage of students in schools that offer at least four
science should be a high school graduation requirement, 2004 advanced courses each in mathematics, English, science, and
SOME STATES ARE NOW REQUIRING THAT HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS COMPLETE foreign language, by location, region, and 12th-grade
FOUR YEARS OF ENGLISH, MATH, AND SCIENCE IN ORDER TO GRADUATE FROM enrollment, 2000
HIGH SCHOOL. WOULD YOU FAVOR OR OPPOSE THIS REQUIREMENT IN THE PUBLIC
SCHOOLS IN YOUR COMMUNITY?
Location
No children Public school
National totals in school parents Central city 32
% % %
Urban fringe/
Favor 78 79 76 large town 25
Oppose 20 20 22
Don’t know 2 1 2 Rural/small town 5
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 34. Some states are Region
now requiring that high school students complete four years of English,
math, and science in order to graduate from high school. Would you favor or Northeast 31
oppose this requirement in the public schools in your community?,” in “The
Southeast 27
36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward
the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with Central 10
permission.
West 23
12th-grade enrollment
physical education; and foreign language was required in Less than 150 1
fourteen states. In addition, eleven states required speech
150–299 17
or communications classes, twenty-one states required
government, and twenty-four states required state, 300–449 29
national, or international history. 450 or more 43
ments to measure student achievement, designed school Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
report cards, rated their schools and publicly identified SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar,
failing schools, assisted low-performing schools with Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Availability of
Advanced Courses: Percentage of Students in Schools That Offer at
additional funding, and even closed or took over failing Least Four Advanced Courses Each in Mathematics, English, Science,
schools. Included in the various accountability measures and Foreign Language, by Location, Region, and 12th-Grade
is the high school exit examination. Enrollment: 2000,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES
2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
According to the Council of Chief State School Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/
pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Officers, twenty-nine states were either using high school
exit exams or were in the process of developing such tests
in 2002. Forty-two percent of the states required the
exam for graduation, 20% were developing an exam, science, and social studies; one state tested mathe-
and 38% of the states did not require a high school exit matics, English, and science; ten states tested mathe-
exam. (See Figure 4.17.) The CCSSO reported in Key matics and English; one state tested mathematics,
State Education Policies on PK–12 Education: 2004 that English, and computer skills; and thirty-one states did
60% of states would require an exit examination for the not require a high school exit exam. In 2004 there
class of 2009. were five states in the process of phasing in an exam.
Of the states that require an exit exam prior to gra- (See Figure 4.18.)
duation, a few differentiate the diplomas according to
Proponents of high school exit exams believe that
whether the test was passed or not. Most states initially
standardized tests are the best way to ensure high stan-
administer the exit exam in tenth or eleventh grade. This
dards and accountability. They maintain that tests can
allows time for remediation or other interventions to be
communicate what is expected of students and teachers
provided for students who fail the test the first time. All
and assess whether progress is being made. Supporters
states with high school exit exams allow students to take
believe that if tests are aligned to a rigorous curriculum,
the test multiple times.
they are the best chance that low-performing students
In 2004, according to the National Center for Educa- have to get the education they need and to narrow the
tion Statistics, nine states tested mathematics, English, minority achievement gap.
States with mandatory exit examinations, by subject, and states phasing in exit examinations, by date, 2004
Mathematics, English, science, Mathematics and English (10) No exit examination (31)
and social studies (9)
Mathematics, English, and Mathematics, English and
science (1) computer skills (1)
2008
WA NH
ME
VT
MT ND
MN
OR 2006 MA
ID SD WI NY
MI
WY RI
CT
IA PA
NV NE NJ
OH
2006 IL IN DE
UT WV
CO MD
2006 KS MO VA
KY
CA
NC
2006 TN
OK
AZ SC
NM AR
AL GA
MS
TX LA
AK FL
HI
Note: States labeled with years are scheduled to institute exit examinations in the year shown.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Exit Examinations: States
with Mandatory Exit Examinations, by Subject, and States Phasing in Exit Examinations, by Date: 2004,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES
2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf
(accessed July 26, 2005)
Race and Ethnicity of Test-Takers American students) still lagged behind the scores of
According to the College Board, in 2004 white stu- white students. White students averaged 528 on the
dents accounted for nearly two-thirds (63%) of those verbal section and 531 on the mathematics section in
taking the SAT, although the proportion of minority 2004, an increase of eight points and twelve points,
test-takers has risen steadily from 13% in 1973 to about respectively, since 1994. African-American students
37% in 2004. African-American students made up 12%; scored 430 on the verbal component and 427 on the
Asian-American students 10%; Hispanic students 10%; mathematics. These scores were two points and six points
and Native American students about 1%. Four percent of higher, respectively, than those of 1994. So while scores
test-takers classified themselves as ‘‘other’’ in the race/ for African-Americans have increased, the gap between
ethnicity category. African-Americans and whites has nevertheless widened.
In 2004 the average scores of Hispanic, Latino, Mexican-
Gains have been made since 1991, but overall American, and Puerto Rican students ranged from 451 to
SAT scores for minorities (with the exception of Asian- 461 on the verbal section and from 452 to 465 on the
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 21. Do you favor or
oppose using a single standardized test in the public schools in your
community to determine whether a student should receive a high school
diploma?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s
Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004.
Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 4.12
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Males 20.9 21.0 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.1 21.2 21.1 20.9 21.0 21.0
Females 20.7 20.7 20.8 20.8 20.9 20.9 20.9 20.9 20.7 20.8 20.9
SOURCE: The American College Testing Program, “National Average ACT Composite Score by Gender, 1994–2004,” in 2004 ACT National and State Scores,
http://www.act.org/news/data/04/charts/text.html (accessed July 26, 2005). Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 4.13
Education 83
change in Goal 6, ‘‘Adult Literacy and Learning,’’ Goal 7, Accountability for Results
‘‘Safe, Disciplined, and Alcohol- and Drug-Free Under NCLB, every state is required to set standards
Schools,’’ and Goal 8, ‘‘Parental Participation.’’ for grade-level achievement and to develop a system to
measure the progress of all students and subgroups of
Goals Not Considered a Failure students in meeting those state-determined grade-level
In 2002 Congress dissolved the National Education standards. According to the U.S. Department of Educa-
Goals Panel, and no additional reports have been tion in A Guide to Education and ‘‘No Child Left Behind’’
released. In spite of the inability of America’s schools (http://www.ed.gov/nclb/overview/intro/guide/), in 2005
to completely reach any of the eight National Education funding to support the development and implementation
Goals, both Republican and Democratic politicians cred- of state assessments was $410 million.
ited the goals with setting high standards.
NCLB created standards in each state for what a
child should know and learn in reading and mathematics
THE ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY in grades three through eight. Student progress and
EDUCATION ACT achievement are measured according to tests based upon
The Elementary and Secondary Education Act of those state standards and given to every child, every year.
1965 (ESEA, P.L. 89-10) authorized grants for elemen- The results are available in annual report cards on school
tary and secondary school programs for children of low- performance and on statewide progress. Statewide reports
income families; school library resources, textbooks, and present performance data classified by race, ethnicity,
other instructional materials for school children; supple- gender, and other criteria to demonstrate student achieve-
mentary educational centers and services; strengthening ment overall and to chart progress in closing the achieve-
state education agencies; and educational research and ment gap between disadvantaged students and other
research training. Once established, federal legislation is groups of students. A sample of students in each state
reviewed, revised, and reauthorized by Congress and participates in the fourth- and eighth-grade National
the president as time goes by. In the case of ESEA, Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) in reading
amendments were added in 1968 with the passage of and mathematics every other year. (See Table 4.1 in
P.L. 90-247, which modified existing programs, author- Chapter 4.) States that fail to meet the standards set by
ized support of regional centers for education of handi- NCLB can have their federal funding reduced. Individual
capped children, model centers and services for deaf-blind schools that fail to live up to the NCLB can also lose
children, recruitment of personnel and dissemination of students and funding.
information on education of the handicapped; technical
assistance to education in rural areas; support of dropout Reading First
prevention projects; and support of bilingual education Under the NCLB, federal funding for reading pro-
programs. grams was increased from $286 million in fiscal year
In 1994 ESEA was reauthorized by the Improving (FY) 2001 to more than $1.4 billion in FY 2005. The
America’s Schools Act (P.L. 103-382). The legislation goal of the Reading First initiative is for every child to be
included Title I, the federal government’s largest pro- able to read by the end of grade three. Awards are made
gram providing educational assistance to disadvantaged to states, which then make competitive sub-grants to
children; professional development and technical assis- local communities to identify students at risk and to
tance programs; a safe and drug-free schools and com- provide training to elementary school teachers on reading
munities provision; and provisions promoting school instruction. The Early Reading First program awards
equity. In 1995 the Elementary and Secondary Education grants to Local Education Agencies (LEAs) to support
Act was updated by Public Law 104-5, which amended language, literacy, and pre-reading development in pre-
Part A of Title IX relating to Native American education, school age children.
provided a technical amendment, and incorporated other
changes. Flexibility at the State and Local Level
NCLB reduced the overall number of ESEA pro-
grams at the U.S. Department of Education from fifty-
THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND ACT five to forty-five. Up to 50% of the federal dollars school
On January 8, 2002, President George W. Bush districts receive can be transferred among several educa-
signed into law the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB; tion programs without separate approval. All fifty states
P.L. 107-110), a major reform of the Elementary and Sec- can transfer up to 50% of the federal non–Title I state
ondary Education Act of 1965. NCLB focuses on increas- activity funds among ESEA programs without advance
ing accountability for results, implementing programs that approval. Local school officials serving rural schools
are based on scientific research, expanding parental were also given more flexibility in how federal funds
options, and increasing local control and flexibility. are used in their districts.
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 6. Now, here are a few
Respondents were asked about the likelihood of hav-
questions about the No Child Left Behind Act. How much, if anything, ing highly qualified teachers in every classroom at
would you say you know about the No Child Left Behind Act—the federal schools in their community by 2005–06. More than half
education bill that was passed by Congress in 2001—a great deal, a fair
amount, very little, or nothing at all?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta (56%) believed that accomplishment of this goal was
Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” very likely or somewhat likely, and 42% believed that it
Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission. was not very likely or not at all likely. (See Table 5.7.)
In 2004 the public was asked how much NCLB
would help to improve student achievement at public
The majority (83%) replied that the test should include schools in their community. Slightly more than half
other subjects, while 16% believed that a test covering (51%) responded that NCLB would help a great deal
English and math would provide an adequate picture of or a fair amount, slightly less than one-third believed
school performance. (See Table 5.4.) that NCLB would not help very much or would not help
In 2004 most (80%) of those surveyed responded that at all, and the remaining 17% said that they did not
they would prefer to have additional efforts made in their know how much NCLB would help to improve student
child’s present school if the school was identified as being achievement at public schools in their community.
in need of improvement, rather than transferring the child to (See Table 5.8.)
TABLE 5.2
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 7. From what you know about the No Child Left Behind Act, do you have a very favorable, some what
favorable, somewhat unfavorable, or very unfavorable opinion of the act—or don’t you know enough about it to say?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/
Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Public opinion on whether a single standardized test provides a fair picture of schools needing improvement, 2004
ACCORDING TO THE NCLB ACT, DETERMINING WHETHER A PUBLIC SCHOOL IS OR IS NOT IN NEED OF IMPROVEMENT WILL BE BASED ON THE PERFORMANCE OF ITS STUDENTS
ON A SINGLE STATEWIDE TEST. IN YOUR OPINION, WILL A SINGLE TEST PROVIDE A FAIR PICTURE OF WHETHER OR NOT A SCHOOL NEEDS IMPROVEMENT?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 8. According to the NCLB Act, determining whether a public school is or is not in need of improvement
will be based on the performance of its students on a single statewide test. In your opinion, will a single test provide a fair picture of whether or not a school
needs improvement?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September
2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 5.4
Public opinion on whether tests to determine which schools are in need of improvement should be based only on English and math, or on
other subjects, 2004
ACCORDING TO THE NCLB ACT, THE STATEWIDE TESTS OF STUDENTS’ PERFORMANCE WILL BE DEVOTED TO ENGLISH AND MATH ONLY. DO YOU THINK A TEST COVERING ONLY
ENGLISH AND MATH WOULD PROVIDE A FAIR PICTURE OF WHETHER A SCHOOL IN YOUR COMMUNITY IS OR IS NOT IN NEED OF IMPROVEMENT, OR SHOULD THE TEST BE
BASED ON OTHER SUBJECTS ALSO?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 9. According to the NCLB Act, the statewide tests of students’ performance will be devoted to English
and math only. Do you think a test covering only English and math would provide a fair picture of whether a school in your community is or is not in need of
improvement, or should the test be based on other subjects also?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the
Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 5.5
Public opinion on whether parents prefer to transfer children who attend schools in need of improvement, or to have additional efforts
made at the children’s present school, 2004
ASSUME YOU HAD A CHILD ATTENDING A SCHOOL IDENTIFIED AS IN NEED OF IMPROVEMENT BY THE NCLB ACT. WHICH WOULD YOU PREFER, TO TRANSFER YOUR CHILD TO A
SCHOOL IDENTIFIED AS NOT IN NEED OF IMPROVEMENT OR TO HAVE ADDITIONAL EFFORTS MADE IN YOUR CHILD’S PRESENT SCHOOL TO HELP HIM OR HER ACHIEVE?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 12. Assume you had a child attending a school identified as in need of improvement by the NCLB Act.
Which would you prefer, to transfer your child to a school identified as NOT in need of improvement or to have additional efforts made in your child’s present
school to help him or her achieve?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan,
September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Public opinion on whether special education students’ scores on Public opinion on whether the No Child Left Behind Act will
standardized tests should be included when determining which improve student achievement, 2004
schools are in need of improvement, 2004 FROM WHAT YOU HAVE SEEN OR HEARD ABOUT THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND ACT,
IN YOUR OPINION, SHOULD THE STANDARDIZED TEST SCORES OF SPECIAL HOW MUCH DO YOU THINK IT WILL HELP TO IMPROVE STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT IN
EDUCATION STUDENTS BE INCLUDED WITH THE TEST SCORES OF ALL OTHER THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN YOUR COMMUNITY?
STUDENTS IN DETERMINING WHETHER A SCHOOL IS IN NEED OF IMPROVEMENT
UNDER NCLB OR NOT?
No Public Those knowing Those knowing
National children school great deal/ very little/
National No children Public school totals in school parents fair amount nothing at all
totals in school parents % % % % %
% % % Great deal ⫹ fair
Yes, should 39 40 40 amount 51 49 57 53 51
No, should not 57 56 57 A great deal 21 19 25 20 21
Don’t know 4 4 3 A fair amount 30 30 32 33 30
Not very much 23 23 21 32 19
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 16. In your opinion, Not at all 9 11 7 13 8
should the standardized test scores of special education students be included Don’t know 17 17 15 2 22
with the test scores of all other students in determining whether a school Not very much ⫹
is in need of improvement under NCLB or not?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi not at all 32 34 28 45 27
Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 19. From what you
Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission. have seen or heard about the No Child Left Behind Act, how much do you
think it will help to improve student achievement in the public schools in
your community?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of
the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan,
September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 5.7
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 18. NCLB requires that
there be a highly qualified teacher in each classroom by the end of the
2005–06 school year. What do you think is the likelihood of this happening
in the public schools in your community by that time?,” in “The 36th Annual
Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public
Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
WHAT DOES ‘‘AT RISK’’ MEAN? 15.9% for households headed by a single male and 38.9%
In America’s Children at Risk (September 1997), the for female-headed households.
U.S. Bureau of the Census identified six indicators of risk At-risk students with language barriers are classified
to children’s welfare. These included poverty, welfare as Linguistically Isolated (LI), Limited English Proficient
dependence, absent parents, single-parent families, (LEP), or English Language Learners (ELL). LI students
unwed mothers, and parents who have not completed are those in homes where no person over thirteen years of
high school. Children who grow up with one or more of age speaks proficient English. LEP indicates those who
these conditions may be statistically at greater risk of have difficulty reading, writing, or understanding English.
dropping out of school, being unemployed, or, for girls, The majority of LEP students are Hispanic.
becoming teenage mothers.
Parents, educators, and government officials gener-
ally agree that disadvantaged children often need special
AT-RISK CHILDREN help to prepare them for school, and both public and
In school at-risk children are those who face signifi- private services are available. Title I grants are allocated
cant obstacles, such as poverty or cultural and language to states and school districts on the basis of their numbers
barriers, that make it difficult for them to succeed acade- of children from low-income families. According to the
mically. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 2004 the U.S. Government Accountability Office in Title I Fund-
poverty threshold for a family of four was $19,307. The ing: Poor Children Benefit Though Funding Per Poor
poverty rate for children under age eighteen was 17.8% in Child Differs (January 2002), about half of the nation’s
2004. The proportion of poor varied by race and ethnicity. 7,174 small school districts (those with fewer than 1,000
In 2004 the percentage of African-American children who children enrolled) had 35% of their school population
were living in poverty was 33.6%, and the percentage of eligible for free or reduced-price meals in 2000. A full
Hispanic children living in poverty was 28.9%. By com- 9% of both small and large school districts (those having
parison, 10.5% of white children were living in poverty a student enrollment of at least 20,000) had between 75%
in 2004. and 100% of students eligible for assistance. About 60%
of the 7,121 medium-sized districts in the United States
Families headed by only one parent were more likely
(those having an enrollment between 1,000 and 20,000)
to be living below the poverty level in 2004. While 5.5%
had up to one-third of their students eligible for free or
of American households headed by married couples lived
reduced-price meals.
below the poverty level in 2004, 13.5% of households
headed by fathers alone and 28.4% of households headed Alternative schools and programs serve students who
by mothers alone lived in poverty. Among whites, 3.9% are at risk of dropping out of school. According to the
of married-couple families lived in poverty, compared to National Center for Education Statistics, in 2000–01
10.6% of families headed by a single father and 20.9% of nearly 40% of public school districts had alternative
households headed by single mothers. For African- schools and programs. Programs were more common in
Americans, the percentages were 9.1% for married- large districts, where 95% had them, than in smaller
couple families, 21% for male-headed households, and districts, where only 26% had them. Urban schools were
37.6% for female-headed households; for Hispanics, the more likely to have an alternative program than rural
proportions were 14.7 % for married-couple households, districts, with 66% of urban schools having them versus
Education 93
35% of rural schools. Alternative schools were more curriculum, equitable and excellent instruction, preparation
common in the Southeast (80% of Southeastern schools and support of expert teachers, schools organized into small
had them) than in any other region. units and instructional teams, democratic governance, a
healthy learning environment, and schools linked with par-
ents and communities. According to the National Forum to
MIDDLE SCHOOL AND JUNIOR HIGH—
HIGH-RISK YEARS Accelerate Middle Grades Reform, in 2005 seventy-one
schools in thirteen states (California, Colorado, Florida,
Schools vary in how they define a ‘‘middle’’ student,
Idaho, Illinois, Massachusetts, Missouri, New York, North
but generally a middle school or junior high can include
Carolina, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and
any grades from five through eight. Although there is no
Wisconsin) were implementing the Turning Points model.
exact definition, middle schools usually serve students in
either grades five or six through grade eight. Some districts The National Forum to Accelerate Middle School
have junior high schools instead of middle schools. Junior Reform reports that in Illinois there was a rise in student
high school most often encompasses grades seven and eight. achievement and fewer student behavior problems, and in
The Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development Massachusetts middle schools the Turning Points schools
published Turning Points (Report of the Task Force on demonstrated gains in the Massachusetts Educational
Education and Youth Adolescents, New York) in 1989, Assessment Program.
which highlighted the importance of children’s transition According to the RAND corporation (Rand Education,
during the middle grades. The report sparked debate and ‘‘Problems and Promise of the American Middle School,’’
additional research on the middle school years, including Rand Research Brief, Santa Monica, California, 2004), in
Great Transitions: Preparing Adolescents for a New spite of these reform efforts, middle schools continue to
Century (Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development, face challenges. The transitions required of young people
New York, 1995). These publications and other research by a separate middle school may cause problems that
pointed out that the organization and curriculum of mid- affect students’ development and academic achievement.
dle and junior high schools are often inconsistent with RAND recommends that states and school districts con-
students’ intellectual, emotional, and interpersonal needs. sider alternatives to the grades six-to-eight structure.
For many young people, starting middle school or junior
high means leaving the neighborhood elementary school According to Programs and Practices in K–8
to be thrust into a much larger, usually more impersonal, Schools: Do They Meet the Educational Needs of Young
environment some distance from home. Adolescents? (C. Kenneth McEwin, Thomas S. Dickinson,
The Carnegie Council’s research concluded that and Michael G. Jacobson, National Middle School
the middle school curriculum does not encourage critical, Association, Westerville, Ohio, 2004), Cincinnati and
complex thinking. To help remedy this, the Council Cleveland, Ohio; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Philadelphia,
encourages the creation of learning teams, a core Pennsylvania; Memphis, Tennessee; Baltimore, Maryland;
academic curriculum, the elimination of tracking (sorting and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, all have plans to transition
students according to their ability level into homoge- students from middle schools to K–8 schools. There is
neous classes, rather than placing them in classes contain- no data yet on whether students in K–8 schools perform
ing a mixture of ability levels), and the hiring of teachers better than those in middle schools.
who have been specifically trained to teach in the middle
grades. In 1998 the Center for Collaborative Education in DROPPING OUT
Boston (CCE) began to develop a school reform design Trends in Dropout Rates
that would be based on the research and work of the
preceding nine years. In 1999 the U.S. Department of According to the National Center for Education Sta-
Education awarded grants to seven organizations to tistics, in general, high school dropout rates have declined
develop models of school reform. This support, along since 1960. The total status dropout rate for people sixteen
with funding from private foundations, meant research through twenty-four years of age was 27.2% in 1960,
continued on the issue. In Turning Points 2000 14.1% in 1980, 12.1% in 1990, and 10.7% in 2001. (Status
(Teacher’s College Press, New York, 2000), Anthony dropouts are people who are not enrolled in school and
Jackson and Gayle Davis examined the progress being who are not high school graduates or holders of General
made and the experiences of middle school teachers and Educational Development [GED] diplomas.)
administrators. Turning Points 2000 builds on the origi- Historically, Hispanic students have had signifi-
nal Turning Points, with added emphasis on improving cantly higher dropout rates than either whites or
curriculum, assessment, and instruction. African-Americans. In 1980 white students had a
The Turning Points model includes seven points dropout rate of 11.4%; African-American students,
for middle-grades school reform: rigorous standards and 19.1%; and Hispanic students, 35.2%. By 2001 the
TABLE 6.1
Unemployment rate of persons age 16 and over, by demographic characteristics, 2000–2002 [CONTINUED]
— Not available.
a
The unemployment rate is the percent of individuals in the labor force who are not working and who made specific efforts to find employment sometime during the prior 4 weeks. The
labor force includes both employed and unemployed persons.
b
Excludes persons enrolled in school.
c
Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
Note: Some data have been revised from previously published figures.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 380. Unemployment Rate of Persons 16 Years Old and Over, by Age, Sex,
Race/Ethnicity, and Educational Attainment, 2000, 2001, and 2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt380.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Minority students who drop out are at even higher Factors Related to Dropping Out
economic risk. In 2002 the proportion of African-American Prepared by the National Center for Education Sta-
high school dropouts ages sixteen to twenty-four who were tistics, the National Education Longitudinal Study of
unemployed was 35%, while 16.7% of Hispanic dropouts 1988 (NELS:88) studied students from the eighth grade
ages sixteen to twenty-four were unemployed. In compar- through their high school years and beyond. Follow-up
ison, 15.6% of white dropouts in the same age range were surveys were done in 1990, 1992, 1994, and 2000.
unemployed in 2002. (See Table 6.1.)
The earlier studies found that school-related reasons
People without high school diplomas tend to earn were usually given for dropping out, such as ‘‘did not
considerably less than those with more education. like school,’’ ‘‘failing in school,’’ ‘‘could not get along
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, with teachers,’’ or ‘‘school expulsion and suspension.’’
in 2000 the median income (half earned more; half Other reasons the students gave were family or job-
earned less) of males ages twenty-five and over who related, such as ‘‘pregnancy or became a parent,’’ ‘‘got
attended high school but did not graduate was $21,365, married,’’ or ‘‘found a job.’’ The U.S. Department of
which is 70% of the annual median earnings of male high Education, in Dropout Rates in the United States: 1992,
school graduates ($30,665). Females with less than a high states that ‘‘dropping out is a process, not an event’’
school education earned $12,753, 69% of the earnings of and the reasons given by students ‘‘may not be the true
females who finished high school ($18,393). causes but rationalizations or simplifications of more
complex circumstances.’’
Many significant consequences of dropping out of
school cannot be measured statistically. Some of those In a 2002 report based on the NELS, Coming of Age in
who drop out may experience lifelong poverty. Some the 1990s: The Eighth-Grade Class of 1988 Twelve Years
who are poorly prepared to compete in society may turn Later, the National Center for Education Statistics found
to crime or substance abuse. Some become teenage par- that the decision to drop out of high school was related to
ents without the ability to offer their children more than educational experiences before high school, in addition to
they had, possibly contributing to a cycle of dependence. personal and family background characteristics. Students
Furthermore, the U.S. economy is deprived of the literate, who exhibited high mathematics achievement, attended a
technically trained, and dedicated workers it needs to private school, or participated in extracurricular activities
compete internationally. Finally, those without a high in eighth grade were more likely to complete high school
school diploma generally do not have the opportunities than students who lacked those academic characteristics.
available to the more highly educated. Students from disadvantaged backgrounds (low income,
Percent
academically rigorous school environments. 30
‘‘DETACHED YOUTH’’ 20
three times as likely to be detached from these activities “Table ED6. Percentage of Youth Ages 16–19 Neither Enrolled in
School Nor Working, by Gender, Race, and Hispanic Origin, 1984–
as youth ages sixteen to seventeen. In 2004, 13% of youth 2004,” in America’s Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being,
ages eighteen to nineteen were neither enrolled in school 2005, Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics,
nor working compared with 3% of youth ages sixteen to Washington, DC, July 2005, http://www.childstats.gov/americaschildren/
edu6.asp (accessed August 10, 2005)
seventeen.
Percent
16.1
16
On the other hand, adolescents who felt strongly
connected to family and school were protected to some
14
extent against health-risk behaviors. Parental disap-
proval of early sexual activity was associated with later
onset of sexual activity, and parental expectations of 12
suicide attempts. Feeling ‘‘connected’’ at school also SOURCE: Lloyd D. Johnston, Patrick M. O’Malley, Jerald G. Bachman,
and John E. Schulenberg, “Percent of Students Reporting Any Illicit
was associated with lower levels of these behaviors. Drug Use has Decreased,” in 2004 Monitoring the Future Fact Sheet,
National Institute on Drug Abuse, Bethesda, MD, August 2003, http://
www.nida.nih.gov/Newsroom/04/2004MTFFactSheets.pdf (accessed
MONITORING THE FUTURE AND YOUTH RISK July 26, 2005) Source: University of Michigan, “Monitoring the Future
BEHAVIOR SURVEILLANCE STUDIES Study, 2004.”
Percentage of high school students who used tobacco and drank alcohol on school property, by sex, race/ethnicity, and grade, 2003
Smokeless
Cigarette use on school propertya tobacco use on school propertyb Alcohol use on school propertyc
Female Male Total Female Male Total Female Male Total
Category % % % % % % % % %
Race/ethnicity
Whited 9.6 8.2 8.9 3.3 9.9 6.7 3.2 4.5 3.9
Blackd 3.5 8.4 5.9 1.8 3.2 2.5 3.8 7.9 5.8
Hispanic 5.8 6.2 6.O 2.6 4.6 3.6 7.9 7.4 7.6
Grade
9 7.7 7.3 7.5 4.4 6.0 5.2 5.2 5.1 5.1
10 8.0 7.5 7.7 2.6 7.7 5.2 5.0 6.1 5.6
11 8.4 8.1 8.2 3.2 10.8 7.1 3.5 6.4 5.0
12 5.9 10.5 8.3 2.3 10.1 6.3 2.6 6.5 4.5
Total 7.6 8.2 8.0 3.3 8.5 5.9 4.2 6.0 5.2
a
Smoked cigarettes on ⱖ1 of the 30 days preceding the survey.
b
Used chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip ⱖ1 of the 30 days preceding the survey.
c
Drank one or more drinks of alcohol on ⱖ1 of the 30 days preceding the survey.
d
Non-Hispanic.
SOURCE: Jo Anne Grunbaum, Laura Kann, Steve Kinchen, James Ross, Joseph Hawkins, Richard Lowry, William A. Harris, Tim McManus, David Chyen,
and Janet Collins, “Table 38. Percentage of High School Students Who Used Tobacco and Drank Alcohol on School Property, by Sex, Race/Ethnicity, and
Grade—United States, Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 2003,” in “Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance—United States, 2003,” Surveillance Summaries, MMWR,
vol. 53, no.SS-02, May 21, 2004, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5302a1.htm#tab38 (accessed July 26, 2005)
In 2004 white eighth graders (10%), tenth graders proportion of females who reported that they had had
(18.7%), and twelfth graders (28.2%) and Hispanic four or more sexual partners was 11.2%; the proportion
eighth graders (10.1%), tenth graders (13.9%), and of males, was 17.5%. Older students tended to be more
seniors (18.5%) were more likely than African-American sexually active than younger students, with 48.9% of
eighth graders (6.9%), tenth graders (9.2%), and twelfth high school seniors stating that they were currently sexu-
graders (10.1%) to have smoked cigarettes at least once ally active. African-American students (49.8%) were
in the thirty days preceding the MTF survey. more likely than white (30.8%) or Hispanic (37.1%)
students to be sexually active.
Not surprisingly, in 2004 seniors were more likely to
be daily (15.6%) smokers than were eighth graders (4.4%). TEENAGE PREGNANCY. From 1960 through 1986, the
Females in grade eight were more likely to have smoked in number of live births per 1,000 females ages fifteen to
the past month (9.9%) than males (8.3%), but in tenth and seventeen generally declined. The rate increased during
twelfth grades females were slightly less likely than males the late 1980s and early 1990s before starting to decline
to have smoked in the past thirty days. Among tenth again after 1995. Child Trends reported that in 2003 there
graders, 15.7% of females had smoked in the past month, were 22.4 live births per 1,000 females ages fifteen to
compared to 16.2% of males. Just over 24% of females seventeen. (See Table 6.3.)
who were seniors had smoked in the prior thirty days, In 2003 mothers under age twenty accounted for
while 25.3% of males had smoked during that time. a total of 421,626 live births. Teenagers had a birth rate
of 41.7 births per 1,000 females ages fifteen to nineteen.
Sexual Activity The birthrate was higher among teenagers ages eighteen
Great Transitions: Preparing Adolescents for a New and nineteen (70.8 per 1,000) than for those ages fifteen
Century (Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development, to seventeen. (See Table 6.3.) In 2003 the teen birth rate
New York, 1995) pointed out that the age of first inter- for white teens was 27.5, for African-American teens it
course declined during the years between 1965 and 1995. was 64.8, and for Hispanic teens it was 82.2.
Since that time the proportion of students who reported
Most teenage mothers are unmarried and lack the
having initiated sexual intercourse before thirteen years
resources to give their children adequate care. The National
of age has declined from 9% in 1995 to 6.6% in 2001. In
Center for Health Statistics reported that in 2003 about 82%
its 2003 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance, the CDC
of all teen births occurred outside of marriage.
reported that 4.2% of females and 10.4% of males had
first experienced sexual intercourse before age thirteen. AIDS AND OTHER SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED
About one-third (34.3%) of both high school females and DISEASES. The CDC identifies certain diseases as ‘‘notifi-
males claimed they were currently sexually active. The able,’’ meaning that state and local medical authorities must
Ages 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1986 1990 1991 1995 2000 2002 2003
15–19 54.1 81.6 89.1 68.3 53.0 50.2 59.9 61.8 56.0 47.7 43.0 41.7
15–17 — — 43.9 38.8 32.5 30.5 37.5 38.6 35.5 26.9 23.2 22.4
18–19 — — 166.7 114.7 82.1 79.6 88.6 94.0 87.7 78.1 72.8 70.8
SOURCE: Kerry Franzetta, Erum Ikramullah, Jennifer Manlove, Kristin Anderson Moore, and Elizabeth Terry-Humen, “Teen Birth Rate (Births Per 1,000
Females Ages 15–19, 15–17, and 18–19),” in Facts at a Glance, Child Trends, Inc., Washington, DC, March 2005, http://www.childtrends.org/Files/Facts_2005
.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005). Reproduced with permission.
Estimated number of persons living with AIDS, by year and selected characteristics, 1999 – 2003
Note: These numbers do not represent reported case counts. Rather, these numbers are point estimates, which result from adjustments of reported case counts. The reported case
counts are adjusted for reporting delays and for redistribution of cases in persons initially reported without an identified risk factor. The estimates do not include adjustment for
incomplete reporting.
a
Includes hemophilia, blood transfusion, perinatal, and risk factor not reported or not identified.
b
Includes hemophilia, blood transfusion, and risk factor not reported or not identified.
c
Includes persons of unknown race or multiple races and persons of unknown sex. Because column totals were calculated independently of the values for the subpopulations, the values
in each column may not sum to the column total.
SOURCE: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Table 10. Estimated Number of Persons Living with AIDS, by Year and Selected Characteristics,
1999–2003—United States,” in HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, vol. 15, 2003, http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/stats/2003SurveillanceReport/table10.htm (accessed July
26, 2005)
CARRYING A WEAPON. Weapons commonly brought proportion of high school students who reported carrying a
to school include guns, knives, clubs, brass knuckles, weapon to school on one or more days during the previous
razor blades, spiked jewelry, and other objects capable month. Theft, vandalism, and physical fighting that did not
of inflicting harm. The 2003 Youth Risk Behavior Sur- involve a weapon were more common in schools than
veillance found that 6.1% of students reported carrying a were more serious incidents.
weapon of some type on school property during the thirty
Juvenile Victims
days before the survey. Males (8.9%) were more likely
than females (3.1%) to carry weapons at school. According to the National Center for Education
Statistics and the Bureau of Justice Statistics in
The U.S. Departments of Education and Justice report Indicators of School Crime and Safety: 2004 (National
that during the late 1990s there was a steady decline in the Center for Education Statistics, http://www.nces.ed.gov/
Rate of nonfatal crime against students ages 12–18 at school Percentage of students ages 12–18 who reported being
or on the way to or from school, by type of crime, 1992–2002 bullied at school during the previous 6 months, by sex, 1991,
[Per 1,000 students] 2001, and 2003
Theft Serious violent crime All violent crime 1999 2001 2003
100 25
80 20
Percent
60 15
Rate
40 9
10 8 8
7 7 7
20 5 5 5
5
0
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 0
Total Male Female
Year
Sex
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar,
Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Trends in Note: In the 1999 survey, “at school” was defined as in the school building, on the
Victimization: Rate of Nonfatal Crime Against Students Ages 12–18 at school grounds, or on a school bus. In the 2001 and 2003 surveys, “at school” was
defined as in the school building, on school property, on a school bus, or going to
School or On the Way To or From School per 1,000 Students, by Type
and from school. Cognitive interview results suggest that modifications to the
of Crime: 1992–2002,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES definition of “at school” do not have substantial impact on the estimates.
2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/ SOURCE: Jill F. DeVoe, Katharin Peter, Phillip Kaufman, Sally A. Ruddy,
pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005) Amanda Miller, Margaret Noonan, Thomas D. Snyder, and
Katrina Baum, “Figure 6.1. Percentage of Students Ages 12–18 Who
Reported Being Bullied at School During the Previous 6 Months, by
Sex: 1991, 2001, and 2003,” in Indicators of School Crime and Safety:
pubs2005/2005002.pdf, November 2004), in 2003, 5% 2004, NCES 2005-02/NCJ 205290, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics and U.S. Department of Justice,
of students ages twelve to eighteen reported nonfatal crim- Bureau of Justice Statistics, Washington, DC, November 2004,
inal victimization at school during the prior six months. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005002.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
More students reported theft (4%) than violent crimes (1%).
Students in grades seven and nine reported more incidents
of criminal victimization than students in other grades.
According to the CDC Youth Risk Behavior Surveil-
According to the National Center for Education
lance, in 2003 nearly 9.2% of the students surveyed reported
Statistics and the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the per-
that they had been threatened or injured with a weapon at
school one or more times in the past twelve months. Males centage of students ages twelve to eighteen who
(11.6%) were more likely than females (6.5%) to report this reported being bullied at school during the previous
behavior. More ninth graders (12.1%) than tenth graders six months increased from 1999 to 2003. About 5%
(9.2%), eleventh graders (7.3%), or twelfth graders (6.3%) reported being bullied at school in 1999 and 7% in
reported threats and injuries with weapons. 2003. More males (8%) than females (7%) reported
being bullied at school in 2003. (See Figure 6.5.) Sixth
According to the National Center for Education Sta-
tistics, the percentage of students ages twelve to eighteen graders were most likely to report being bullied in
who report criminal victimization at school or on the way 2003. The proportion of students in grade six who
to or from school declined from 1992 to 2002. The crime reported being bullied at school was 14% in 2003, up
rates against students at school declined by 58% for theft, from 11% in 1999. In 2003 more public school students
50% for all violent crime, and 70% for serious violent (7%) than private school students (5%) reported being
crime. (See Figure 6.4.) bullied.
Schools, like other institutions, face various issues as (National Commission on Excellence in Education,
they grow and attempt to meet the needs of an ever- Washington, DC, 1983), a report on education in the
changing population. In the nineteenth century the com- United States. The report claimed that, instead of
mon school movement sought to establish education for responding to the 1957 challenge to raise standards,
all that would be paid for by property taxes. In the early American education had produced students who actually
twentieth century school advocates debated questions of were scoring lower on performance tests than in 1957.
whether school should be compulsory, whether teachers The writers of the report feared that the nation would
should use corporal punishment, the best way to train become less competitive in world markets, causing the
teachers, and school centralization. During the post– economy to suffer.
World War II ‘‘baby boom,’’ concerns included building
The report recommended that American education,
enough schools and educating enough teachers to fill the
especially in high school, should primarily focus on aca-
need. During the 1960s and beyond, schools faced the
demic achievement, with students spending more time in
challenges of integration and busing. Later came sex and
school and working on homework. As a result, most
drug education, the role of religion in the classroom, and
states raised graduation requirements, revised testing
using ideas from business organizations to restructure
and evaluation programs, and improved teacher prepara-
schools.
tion standards.
In the twenty-first century American schools con- Demands for reform continued in 1986 with eight
tinue to face enduring problems and new challenges. new reports on the state of American education, includ-
Some of the topics under discussion are diversity, ing Time for Results (National Governors’ Association,
higher standards, assessment, accountability, school- Washington, DC), A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the
choice programs, school funding, safety, discipline, 21st Century (Carnegie Forum on Education and the
school and classroom size, parental involvement, home- Economy, Washington, DC), and What Next? More
schooling, the achievement gap between demographic Leverage for Teachers (Education Commission of the
groups, and the role of educational technology. There is States, Denver, CO). These publications focused on
no clear consensus on how to approach these and other strategies to improve education, including teacher train-
issues, but the passion with which they are debated in ing and higher salaries, state initiatives to reform educa-
contemporary American society gives evidence of their tion, and school choice. The states followed many of the
importance. recommendations issued in the reports, especially in the
areas of recruiting and preparing teachers, and in
SCHOOL REFORM MOVEMENTS restructuring the organization and management of
school systems.
In 1957 the ‘‘space race’’ began when the Soviet
Union launched Sputnik I, the first satellite sent into At the Education Summit held in Charlottesville,
space. To prevent the nation from falling behind in the Virginia, in 1989, President George H. W. Bush and the
technology competition, American leaders called for state governors established six National Education Goals
improved educational techniques and student perfor- to be met by the year 2000. These goals presented a broad
mance. More than two decades later, the administration approach to education reform, including providing pre-
of President Ronald Reagan released A Nation at Risk school children sufficient nutrition and health care so
Education 105
they are ready to learn by the time they start school; charter schools was first suggested in the 1970s. Albert
greater levels of high school completion and student Shanker, former president of the American Federation of
achievement; ensuring that U.S. students are first in the Teachers (AFT), helped promote the idea. In the 1980s
world in mathematics and science; safe, disciplined, and Philadelphia piloted several model schools, calling them
alcohol- and drug-free schools; and improved adult edu- ‘‘charters.’’ In the 1990s Minnesota developed charter
cation. In 1994 Congress passed the Goals 2000: Educate schools based on three values: choice, opportunity, and
America Act (P.L. 103-227), reemphasizing the National accountability for results.
Education Goals and adding goals calling for increasing
In charter schools teachers, parents, administrators,
the involvement of parents in schools and providing
community groups, or private corporations design and
further professional development for teachers. Progress
operate a local school under charter (written contract)
toward the goals was slow, and in 2002 Congress dis-
from a school district, state education agency, or other
solved the National Education Goals Panel.
public institution. These local schools often have a spe-
Congress passed the Charter School Expansion Act cific focus, such as mathematics, arts, or science. In some
of 1998 (P.L. 105-278), which authorizes State Educa- cases charter schools are nearly autonomous (self-direct-
tional Agencies (SEAs) to use federal funds for planning, ing) and are exempt from many state and district educa-
designing, and implementing public charter schools and tion rules. In other cases the schools operate much like
requires Local Education Agencies (LEAs) to use inno- traditional public schools and must apply for certain
vative assistance funds for the same purpose. Funding exemptions, which they may or may not be granted.
priorities are based on a state’s progress toward increas-
Many states find charter schools appealing. Common
ing its number of high-quality charter schools.
reasons given for considering alternatives such as charter
The Education Flexibility Partnership Act of 1999 schools are problems associated with regular public
(P.L. 106-25) gives states more freedom in how they spend schools, including overcrowded classrooms, district mis-
federal education dollars. To participate in the Ed-Flex management or disorganization, low scores on standar-
Partnership program, states must apply to the Secretary dized tests, and a high number of students at risk of
of Education for a waiver from the normal requirements dropping out of school.
for obtaining federal funds. They may then set up their In 1991 only one charter school existed in the United
own programs under which they are held accountable for States. According to the State of the Charter Movement
improved educational results in order to receive continued 2005 (Gregg Vanourek, Charter School Leadership
funding. For example, schools can use federal money Council, May 2005), in 2005 forty states and the District
intended for science and mathematics teachers on reading of Columbia had authorized charter schools, and there
programs to boost progress in that area. were an estimated 3,400 charter schools in the country,
The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) was signed serving approximately one million students, or about 2%
into law by President George W. Bush in January 2002. of all students in the nation.
The new authorization was a major reform to the Ele- In 2005 more than two-fifths (42%) of charter
mentary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965. schools were concentrated in three states (Arizona,
NCLB focuses on increasing accountability for results, California, and Florida), and more than half (54%) of
implementing programs that are based on scientific the charter school growth since 2000 had occurred in
research, expanding parental options, and increasing the those three states plus Michigan and Texas.
control and flexibility of local school officials. NCLB
especially promotes assessment, reading/literacy, teacher According to the National Center for Education Sta-
quality, school choice, and innovative programs. tistics, in 2003 most public charter schools (41.2%) were
located in the West. About one-quarter each were in the
The following sections describe some of the Southeast (24.3%) and Central United States (24.1%).
approaches developed in recent years in response to the Only 10.4% of charter school students attended schools
above policy initiatives intended to improve education. located in the Northeast. More than half (51.4%) of
charter school students attended schools located in
CHARTER SCHOOLS central cities in 2003. (See Table 7.1.)
Charter schools are one element of the school choice Charter schools tend to be smaller than regular public
movement. They are nonsectarian (not affiliated with any schools. According to State of the Charter Movement 2005,
religious groups) public schools that may be exempt from in 2004 median enrollment at charter schools was 250
some regulations that apply to regular public schools. students. According to the National Center for Education
Charter schools are related to other aspects of educational Statistics, in 2003 more than a quarter (28.5%) of students
reform, including privatization, site-based management, in charter schools attended schools with enrollment of one
magnet schools, and parental involvement. The idea of to 299 students, about one-fifth attended schools with
— Not available.
*Rounds to zero.
a
Interpret data with caution (estimates are unstable).
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Table 28–2. Percentage Distribution
of Students Attending Public Charter Schools by Type of School, Entity Granting School Charter, Origin of School, and Selected School Characteristics: 2003,”
in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005,
http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2005/section4/table.asp?tableID=288 (accessed July 26, 2005)
enrollment of 300 to 499 students, more than one-third CPRE Policy Briefs, University of Pennsylvania, April
(35.2%) attended schools that enrolled 500 to 699 students, 2002), about half of charter schools have grade config-
and 15.9% of students attended charter schools with 700 or urations that differ from traditional elementary, middle,
more students. (See Table 7.1.) and secondary grade organizations. According to Gregg
Vanourek in State of the Charter Movement 2005, charter
The National Center for Education Statistics con-
school teachers are less likely to be certified than tea-
ducted a pilot study of students in grade four at a sample
chers in other public schools, and are more likely to hold
of charter schools. The study found that in 2003, 48% of
master’s degrees in such fields as business, arts, and
fourth-grade charter students were male, and 52% were
science, as opposed to education. The impact of charter
female. For students in grade four in other public schools,
schools on student achievement is uncertain; charter
the proportions were 51% and 49%, respectively. Nearly a
schools as a whole are too new to have established track
third (31%) of the charter students were African-Ameri-
records. However, parents of students in charter schools,
can, 45% were white, and 20% were Hispanic. In 2003
the teachers that work in them, and students who attend
more than two-fifths (42%) of charter school students were
them generally are satisfied.
eligible for a free or reduced-price lunch. (See Figure 7.1.)
Funding for charter schools varies widely, ranging
Charter schools that target special populations such as
from direct state funding to funding through the local
at-risk students are increasingly popular. These schools
school district. Since 1994, the U.S. Department of
may focus on nontraditional teaching and learning experi-
Education has provided grants to support states’ char-
ences, such as combining academics with work experience
ter school efforts, starting with $6 million in fiscal
or changing the class structure. Some states require a
year 1995. In fiscal year 1998 the federal budget
specific number of charter schools to serve this special
appropriated $80 million for charter schools. Accord-
population.
ing to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2005
According to A Decade of Charter Schools: From funding for charter schools and choice options was
Theory to Practice (Katrina Bulkley and Jennifer Fisler, $504 million.
Public opinion on allowing students to attend a private school at Public opinion on choosing a public, private, or church-related
public expense, 2004 school, if vouchers covered half the price of tuition, 2004
DO YOU FAVOR OR OPPOSE ALLOWING STUDENTS AND PARENTS TO CHOOSE A WHAT IF THE VOUCHER COVERED ONLY HALF OF THE TUITION, WHICH DO YOU
PRIVATE SCHOOL TO ATTEND AT PUBLIC EXPENSE? THINK YOU WOULD CHOOSE?
Number and distribution of school-age children who were homeschooled, by amount of time spent in schools, 1999 and 2003
1999 2003
Percentage Home-schooling Percentage Home-schooling
Characteristic Number distribution ratea Number distribution ratea
Total 850,000 100.0 1.7 1,096,000 100.0 2.2
Homeschooled entirely 697,000 82.0 100.0 898,000 82.0 100.0
Homeschooled and enrolled
in school part time 153,000 18.0 100.0 198,000 18.0 100.0
Enrolled in school less than
9 hours per week 107,000 12.6 100.0 137,000 12.5 100.0
Enrolled in school 9–25 hours
per week 46,000 5.4 100.0 61,000 5.6 100.0
Race/ethnicityb
Black 84,000 9.9 1.0 103,000 9.4 1.3
White 640,000 75.3 2.0 843,000 77.0 2.7
Other 49,000 5.8 1.9 91,000 8.3 3.0
Hispanic 77,000 9.1 1.1 59,000 5.3 0.7
Sex
Male 417,000 49.0 1.6 569,000 51.9 2.2
Female 434,000 51.0 1.8 527,000 48.1 2.1
Number of children in the household
One child 120,000 14.1 1.5 110,000 10.1 1.4
Two children 207,000 24.4 1.0 306,000 28.0 1.5
Three or more children 523,000 61.6 2.4 679,000 62.0 3.1
Number of parents in the household
Two parents 683,000 80.4 2.1 886,000 80.8 2.5
One parent 142,000 16.7 0.9 196,000 17.9 1.5
Nonparental guardians 25,000 2.9 1.4 14,000 1.3 0.9
Parents’ participation in the labor force
Two parents, one in labor force 444,000 52.2 4.6 594,000 54.2 5.6
Two parents, both in labor force 237,000 27.9 1.0 274,000 25.0 1.1
One parent in labor force 98,000 11.6 0.7 174,000 15.9 1.4
No parent in labor force 71,000 8.3 1.9 54,000 4.9 1.8
Household income
$25,000 or less 262,000 30.9 1.6 283,000 25.8 2.3
$25,001–50,000 278,000 32.7 1.8 311,000 28.4 2.4
$50,001–75,000 162,000 19.1 1.9 264,000 24.1 2.4
$75,001 or more 148,000 17.4 1.5 238,000 21.7 1.7
Parents’ education
High school diploma or less 160,000 18.9 0.9 269,000 24.5 1.7
Some college or vocational/
technical 287,000 33.7 1.9 338,000 30.8 2.1
Bachelor’s degree 213,000 25.1 2.6 274,000 25.0 2.8
Graduate/professional degree 190,000 22.3 2.3 215,000 19.6 2.5
a
The homeschooling rate is the percentage of the total subgroup that is homeschooled. For example, in 2003, 2.2 percent of all males were homeschooled.
b
Black includes African American and Hispanic includes Latino. Race categories exclude Hispanic unless specified.
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Homeschooled children are those ages 5–17 educated by their parents full or part time who are in a grade equivalent to
kindergarten through 12th grade. Excludes students who were enrolled in public or private school more than 25 hours per week and students who were homeschooled only because
of temporary illness.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Homeschooled Students: Number and
Distribution of School-Age Children Who Were Homeschooled, by Amount of Time Spent in Schools: 1999 and 2003,” in The Condition of Education, 2005,
NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094
.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Number and percentage of school-age children who were homeschooled, by parents’ reasons given for homeschooling, 2003
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Table 3–2. Number and Percentage of
School-Age Children Who Were Homeschooled, by Parents’ Reasons Given as Important and Most Important for Homeschooling: 2003,” in The Condition of
Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/
programs/coe/2005/section1/table.asp?tableID=228 (accessed July 26, 2005)
NEW YORK. New York has established extensive spelling, grammar, mathematics, and good citizenship.
requirements for homeschools. Elementary-age students Texas does not award diplomas to students who are
must spend 900 hours per year in class, and those in homeschooled.
grades seven through twelve must be in class 990 hours
per year. The teacher must be ‘‘competent’’ (no specific RELIGION IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
credentials required), and each year the superintendent of
The separation of church and state as outlined in the
local schools must receive advance notice of the intent to
U.S. Constitution is one of the most widely debated
homeschool. Records of attendance and assessment
constitutional issues. During the past two decades, con-
(including standardized tests) must be filed with the
troversy has swirled around school prayer, religious bac-
superintendent at specified times. Curriculum is specified
calaureate services, and other exercises of religious belief
by grade level and includes the basics, plus eight other
within public schools.
subjects, such as American and New York history, music
and art, health, and physical education. Students The church/state separation clause in the First Amend-
instructed at home are not awarded high school diplomas. ment was intended to prohibit the establishment of a state
religion or the coercion of citizens to belong to a particular
OHIO. Ohio requires students to spend 900 hours per group, either religious or antireligious. Contrary to popular
year in class, and the homeschool teacher must have a belief, the Supreme Court’s interpretations of First
high school diploma or equivalent. Each year, advance Amendment rights do not prohibit the private expression
notice of intent to homeschool and assessment of student of religion in the public school. They do not prevent
performance must be filed with the superintendent of students from praying at school or in the classroom so
schools. The assessment can be standardized test scores, long as these activities do not disrupt the school’s normal
a written description of progress, or another approved order or instruction. A student may pray either silently or
form of assessment. No attendance records are required. quietly aloud whenever he or she is not actively participat-
The state specifies which subjects must be taught, includ- ing in school activities, such as recitation in class. For
ing the basics and other topics, such as first aid, fine arts, example, students may not decide to pray aloud just as
health, and government. Ohio does not award diplomas to the teacher calls on them for an answer in class.
students who are homeschooled.
On the other hand, a student may not attempt to turn a
TEXAS. Texas has very few requirements for home- class or meeting into a captive audience for a religious
schools, considering them private schools (which are not service. Public school officials may not legally require
regulated by the state). The state requires no teacher prayers during the school day, make them a part of gradua-
certification, no advance notice, and no testing or atten- tion exercises, or organize religious baccalaureate services.
dance records. The only specified subjects are reading, Teachers and school administrators may not participate in,
ing schools. Federal funds may not be used to support Female 28,269 91 61
Male 30,005 91 58
religious practices, such as religious instruction, worship, Race/ethnicityb
or prayer. Supported activities include extra help before White, non-Hispanic 35,145 93 67
school, after school, on weekends, or during the summer, Hispanic 10,215 85 44
Black, non-Hispanic 8,875 86 47
in reading, language arts, and mathematics. Asian or Pacific Islander,
non-Hispanic 2,116 91 58
American Indian, Aleut, or
Eskimo, non-Hispanic 522 88 50
TECHNOLOGY IN AMERICAN SCHOOLS More than one race, non-Hispanic 1,400 92 65
Computer use has become common in American Disability status
schools. According to the National Center for Education Disabled 646 82 49
Not disabled 47,949 91 61
Statistics, 91% of students in nursery school through
Family and household characteristics
grade twelve used computers in 2003. Nearly all
Parent educational attainmentc
(97%) students in high school, 95% of students in Less than high school credential 5,691 82 37
middle school, 91% of students in elementary school, High school credential 13,804 89 54
Some college 16,548 93 63
80% of children in kindergarten, and 67% of children in Bachelor’s degree 8,590 92 67
nursery school used computers. Equal proportions (91% Some graduate education 10,713 95 73
each) of males and females used computers. Computer Household language
use was higher among white students (93%) than Spanish-only 2,840 80 28
Not Spanish-only 55,434 91 61
African-American (86%) or Hispanic students (85%). Poverty statusd
More nondisabled (91%) than disabled students (82%) In poverty 10,173 84 40
used computers. (See Table 7.7.) Not in poverty 39,016 93 66
Number of schools in the nation, and number of schools with students enrolled in distance education courses, by instructional level and district characteristics, 2002–03
Number of schools Number of schools with students enrolled in distance education courses
All instructional Elementary Middle or junior High Combined or All instructional Elementary Middle or junior Combined or
District characteristic levels schools high schools schools ungraded schoolsa levels schools high schools High schools ungraded schoolsa
All public school
districts 89,310 50,880 15,520 16,610 6,310 8,210 130 580 6,250 1,250
District enrollment size
Less than 2,500 30,580 14,300 5,310 7,490 3,480 4,520 40* 190 3,300 990
2,500 to 9,999 26,310 16,130 4,620 4,350 1,200 1,670 20 160 1,360 130
10,000 or more 32,390 20,440 5,590 4,760 1,610 2,020 60 240 1,590 120
Metropolitan status
Urban 20,400 12,700 3,240 3,090 1,380 960 50* 90 760 60
Suburban 40,430 23,870 7,480 7,010 2,060 2,980 30 280 2,400 270
Rural 28,480 14,310 4,790 6,510 2,870 4,260 40* 210 3,090 920
Region
Northeast 16,460 10,230 2,750 2,620 860 820 30* 30* 670 100
Southeast 18,840 10,620 3,550 3,390 1,290 1,960 40* 220 1,520 170
Central 25,620 14,410 4,440 4,970 1,810 3,010 40* 150 2,320 510
West 28,390 15,620 4,790 5,630 2,360 2,410 20* 180 1,750 460
Poverty concentration
Less than 10 percent 27,910 16,720 5,300 4,750 1,140 2,260 30* 200 1,700 330
10 to 19 percent 33,230 18,630 5,980 6,380 2,240 3,390 70* 240 2,560 520
20 percent or more 26,090 15,060 4,080 4,770 2,180 2,420 30 150 1,900 350
*Interpret data with caution. The coefficient of variation is greater than 50 percent.
a
Combined or ungraded schools are those in which the grades offered in the school span both elementary and secondary grades or that are not divided into grade levels.
Note: Percentages are based on unrounded numbers. There were 3 cases for which district enrollment size was missing and 112 cases for which poverty concentration was missing. Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding or missing data.
SOURCE: J. Carl Setzer, Laurie Lewis, and Bernard Greene, “Table 2. Number of Schools in the Nation, and Number of Schools with Students Enrolled in Distance Education Courses, by Instructional Level and District
Characteristics: 2002–03,” in Distance Education Courses for Public Elementary and Secondary School Students: 2002–03, NCES 2005-010, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Institute of Education Sciences, Washington, DC, March 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005010.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Issues in Education
117
FIGURE 7.2
Percentage of 5- to 17-year-olds who spoke a language other than English at home and who spoke English with difficulty, various
years, 1979–2003
40
30
Percent
20 19 19 19
18
17
14
13
12
10 9
6
5 5 5 5 5 5
4
3
0
1979 1989 1992 1995 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Year
Note: Respondents were asked if each child in the household spoke a language other than English at home. If they answered “yes,” they were asked how well each could speak
English. Categories used for reporting were “very well,” “well,” “not well,” and “not at all.” All those who reported speaking English less than “very well” were considered to have
difficulty speaking English. In 1994, the survey methodology for the Current Population Survey (CPS) was changed and weights were adjusted. Spanish-language versions of both
the CPS and the American Community Survey (ACS) were available to respondents.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Language Minority: Percentage
of 5- to 17-Year-Olds Who Spoke a Language Other Than English at Home and Who Spoke English with Difficulty: Various Years, 1979–2003,” in
The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005,
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
significant problem in education, and that eliminating schools grew. In 1939–40 public schools enrolled 25.4
it should be a top priority. He favored the establish- million students, and in 2001–02 enrollment was 47.9
ment of larger, comprehensive high schools. This book million. In 2001–02 the average enrollment at public
was influential in reforming schools, and it helped to schools was 520 students per school—477 in elementary
fuel the consolidation movement. However, the mod- schools and 718 in secondary schools. Most (70.4%)
ern high school became considerably larger than Con- public school students attended schools with enrollments
ant advocated; he encouraged creating schools with of 500 students or more.
enrollments of 300 or 400, which would be small by
The justification for large schools was that they could
current standards.
offer more resources and a better curriculum to students
According to the National Center for Education Sta- at less cost per student. However, proponents of smaller
tistics, in 1937–38 there were 119,001 public school schools argue that large schools and high enrollment
districts and 229,394 schools. By 2001–02 the number create rigid, impersonal environments that alienate stu-
of districts and schools had decreased to 14,559 and dents. They assert that large schools contribute to the
94,112, respectively. At the same time, enrollments in high school dropout problem.
Teachers are the foundation of the education process. reform efforts. The American Federation of Teachers (AFT)
A well-designed, challenging curriculum, a first-class reported in Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends
facility, and state-of-the-art equipment need motivated 2002 (F. Howard Nelson and Rachel Drown, Washington,
and well-trained teachers to complete the equation. Tea- DC, 2003) that in general fewer school districts were experi-
chers are usually the first to come under fire when test encing considerable shortages than in the past.
scores and achievement do not meet expectations, and are
According to Is There Really a Teacher Shortage?,
among the last to be rewarded when things go well.
teacher turnover has been an important factor that impacts
Overall their salaries are considerably lower than those
the perception of shortages. Between 40% and 50% of new
of similarly educated professionals.
teachers leave the field after five years. Turnover also
A growing number of teachers face situations that varies based on the subject. Mathematics, science, and
would have been inconceivable a generation ago, ranging elementary special education teachers have higher rates
from lack of respect from students to outright physical of turnover than do English and social studies teachers.
attacks. Teachers in inner-city schools particularly bear The type of school impacts turnover as well. Schools with
the brunt of many ‘‘school’’ problems that are often a high proportions of impoverished students have higher
reflection of society’s problems. Despite these challenges, teacher turnover rates than do schools in wealthier dis-
however, the number of teachers is increasing, and a clear tricts. Urban schools have more teacher turnover than
majority of teachers are pleased with what they do. suburban or rural schools, and private schools experience
more turnover than public schools.
TRENDS IN TEACHER SUPPLY AND DEMAND
One consequence of teacher shortages is the
According to Is There Really a Teacher Shortage? increased hiring of teachers who are not certified to
(Richard M. Ingersoll, Center for the Study of Teaching teach the subject they are assigned. According to Out-
and Policy, Seattle, WA, September 2003), in 2002 tea- of-Field Teaching and the Limits of Teacher Policy
chers made up about 4% of the civilian workforce in the (Richard M. Ingersoll, Center for the Study of Teach-
United States. According to the National Center for Educa- ing and Policy, Seattle, WA, September 2003), in
tion Statistics, the number of classroom teachers in elemen- 1999–2000 about 38% of seventh- to twelfth-grade
tary and secondary schools has increased steadily, reaching mathematics teachers did not have a college major in
3.4 million in 2001, an increase of 36% from 1980. There mathematics, mathematics education, or a related dis-
were nearly three million teachers in public schools in cipline. About one-third of all secondary school Eng-
2001, and 390,000 private school teachers. By 2013 the lish teachers did not have a major or minor in English
National Center for Education Statistics projects the num- or a related subject, and more than one-quarter of
ber of classroom teachers to increase to 3.6 million—3.2 science teachers did not have a major or minor in
million public and 411,000 private school teachers. one of the sciences or science education.
A Teacher Shortage? Most public elementary and secondary teachers
Impacts on teacher supply and demand include: teacher (94%) have state-approved teaching certificates. High-
retirement, the region of the country, student enrollment, poverty schools have fewer certified teachers (90%) than
class size, subject area shortages, turnover rates, the reserve low-poverty schools (96%). Schools with higher levels of
pool of teachers who have already been trained, and school minority enrollment have fewer certified teachers (89%)
Education 121
than schools with low-minority enrollment (96%), and elementary and secondary teachers reach retirement age.
urban schools have fewer certified teachers (92%) than The BLS noted that secondary teachers will be particularly
suburban (96%) or rural (95%) schools. Schools that are in demand, and opportunities at all levels will be plentiful
poor and urban with high minority enrollment have fewer in states with fast-growing populations, including
certified teachers (85%) than those that are suburban, California, Texas, Georgia, Idaho, Hawaii, Alaska, and
serve white students, and are not poor (96%). New Mexico. According to the BLS, many urban school
districts offer good prospects for teachers because of the
According to Out-of-Field Teaching and the Limits of
high turnover experienced in districts with high rates of
Teacher Policy, small schools have more out-of-field
poverty and overcrowded classrooms. However, rural
teaching than larger schools, and there are more grade
areas, too, experience high turnover due to their remote
seven and eight teachers who are assigned to teach out of
locations and low salaries, and offer numerous opportu-
field than teachers in grades nine through twelve.
nities for teaching professionals. Subject areas that are
Reasons for Teacher Turnover considered promising for new teachers include mathe-
Teachers who move to other schools do not represent matics, chemistry, physics, bilingual education, and foreign
a loss to the profession, but they are a loss to the schools languages. In most states, teachers are unionized and have
from which they move. Their departures often require that relatively good job security through state tenure laws. Tea-
a replacement be found to fulfill set staffing levels. Overall, chers who satisfactorily complete a probationary period are
Ingersoll found that teachers leave for a variety of reasons, eligible for tenure, which protects them from being fired
including personal issues (such as caring for family mem- without a full investigation and due process procedures.
bers), school staffing actions (layoffs, school closings, and
reorganization), dissatisfaction with teaching, job change TEACHER EXPERIENCE
(to nonteaching jobs in education or to jobs outside the The National Center for Education Statistics’ Schools
field of education), and retirement. and Staffing Survey (SASS) collected cycles of data
Personal reasons, such as departures for family moves, starting in 1987–88, and then in 1990–91, 1993–94,
pregnancy and child rearing, or health problems, accounted and 1999–2000. In the 2003 Condition of Education
for 36% of migration (that is, ‘‘movers’’ leaving a teaching (U.S Department of Education, National Center for Edu-
job at one school for another) and 44% of attrition (‘‘lea- cation Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2003), the 1999–
vers’’ giving up the teaching profession entirely). 2000 SASS data was used. During the 1999–2000 school
year, 16% of public school teachers had three or fewer
Pupil-Teacher Ratio years of experience. Nearly one-quarter (23%) of tea-
Educators prefer a low ratio of students per teacher, chers in private schools had three or fewer years of
which allows teachers to spend more time with each experience. At public schools with more than 75% min-
pupil. According to the National Center for Education ority enrollment, 21% of the teachers had three or fewer
Statistics, from 1980 to 2001 the pupil-teacher ratio in years of experience. At public schools with less than 10%
elementary and secondary schools declined from 18.6 to minority enrollment, 14% of teachers had three or fewer
15.8 students per teacher. For public schools, the ratios years of experience. More than one-quarter (28%) of
were 18.7 in 1980 and 15.9 in 2001; in private schools, teachers had three or fewer years of experience at private
the ratios were 17.7 and 15.2, respectively. Thus the schools with more than 75% minority enrollment. For
overall supply of teachers relative to the number of private schools with less than 10% minority enrollment,
students increased during that time period. This does 20% of teachers had three or fewer years of experience.
not mean, however, that all schools were able to find as
many well-qualified teachers as they needed. SALARIES
In fall 2000 Maine, Vermont, and Virginia reported Since the mid-1980s there have been great fluctuations
the lowest average pupil-teacher ratio (12.5, 12.1, and in teachers’ salaries. As school enrollments fell in the late
12.5, respectively), while Utah and California reported 1970s and early 1980s, average teachers’ salaries (in con-
the highest (21.9 and 20.6, respectively). Some states stant 2002–03 dollars, adjusted for inflation) also declined.
have laws limiting class sizes, especially in elementary According to the National Center for Education Statistics,
schools. Several other states are involved in developing in 1980–81, teachers’ salaries averaged $37,094. From
or are considering similar laws. 1982–83 to 1990–91, salaries rose steadily to $44,992, a
21% increase. From 1990–91 to 2002–03, salaries
remained comparatively stable. In 2002–03 the average
CAREER OUTLOOK FOR TEACHERS teacher salary was $45,822, a 48% increase over 1959–60
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) in (in constant dollars). Elementary teachers earn slightly less
Occupational Outlook 2004–05, excellent job opportunities than secondary teachers. (See Table 8.1.) Private schools
will be available over the next decade as many current tend to pay their teachers less than public schools.
Estimated average annual salary of teachers in public elementary and secondary schools, 1959–60 to 2002–03
Current dollars
Ratio of average Constant 2002–03 dollars
Earnings per full-time teachers’ salary to
All Elementary Secondary employee working earnings per full-time Elementary Secondary
School year teachers teachers teachers for wages or salary* employee All teachers teachers teachers
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1959–60 $4,995 $4,815 $5,276 $4,632 1.08 $30,959 $29,844 $32,701
1961–62 5,515 5,340 5,775 4,928 1.12 33,415 32,354 34,990
1963–64 5,995 5,805 6,266 5,373 1.12 35,399 34,278 37,000
1965–66 6,485 6,279 6,761 5,838 1.11 37,013 35,838 38,589
1967–68 7,423 7,208 7,692 6,444 1.15 39,751 38,600 41,192
1969–70 8,626 8,412 8,891 7,334 1.18 41,587 40,555 42,864
1970–71 9,268 9,021 9,568 7,815 1.19 42,489 41,356 43,864
1971–72 9,705 9,424 10,031 8,334 1.16 42,951 41,708 44,394
1972–73 10,174 9,893 10,507 8,858 1.15 43,283 42,087 44,700
1973–74 10,770 10,507 11,077 9,647 1.12 42,067 41,040 43,267
1974–75 11,641 11,334 12,000 10,420 1.12 40,933 39,854 42,196
1975–76 12,600 12,280 12,937 11,218 1.12 41,377 40,326 42,483
1976–77 13,354 12,989 13,776 11,991 1.11 41,436 40,304 42,746
1977–78 14,198 13,845 14,602 12,823 1.11 41,283 40,257 42,458
1978–79 15,032 14,681 15,450 13,822 1.09 39,965 39,031 41,076
1979–80 15,970 15,569 16,459 15,086 1.06 37,463 36,523 38,611
1980–81 17,644 17,230 18,142 16,517 1.07 37,094 36,224 38,141
1981–82 19,274 18,853 19,805 17,863 1.08 37,299 36,484 38,326
1982–83 20,695 20,227 21,291 18,946 1.09 38,399 37,531 39,505
1983–84 21,935 21,487 22,554 19,874 1.10 39,248 38,446 40,355
1984–85 23,600 23,200 24,187 20,815 1.13 40,636 39,947 41,647
1985–86 25,199 24,718 25,846 21,727 1.16 42,173 41,368 43,256
1986–87 26,569 26,057 27,244 22,642 1.17 43,500 42,662 44,605
1987–88 28,034 27,519 28,798 23,698 1.18 44,073 43,263 45,274
1988–89 29,564 29,022 30,218 24,651 1.20 44,426 43,612 45,409
1989–90 31,367 30,832 32,049 25,643 1.22 44,989 44,221 45,967
1990–91 33,084 32,490 33,896 26,791 1.23 44,992 44,184 46,096
1991–92 34,063 33,479 34,827 27,990 1.22 44,885 44,115 45,892
1992–93 35,029 34,350 35,880 29,036 1.21 44,760 43,892 45,847
1993–94 35,737 35,233 36,566 29,778 1.20 44,511 43,884 45,544
1994–95 36,675 36,088 37,523 30,568 1.20 44,407 43,696 45,434
1995–96 37,642 37,138 38,397 31,518 1.19 44,370 43,776 45,260
1996–97 38,443 38,039 39,184 32,735 1.17 44,058 43,595 44,907
1997–98 39,351 39,008 39,945 34,269 1.15 44,308 43,922 44,977
1998–99 40,550 40,097 41,303 35,893 1.13 44,881 44,380 45,715
1999–2000 41,827 41,326 42,571 37,718 1.11 44,996 44,457 45,796
2000–01 43,400 42,937 44,028 39,272 1.11 45,141 44,660 45,794
2001–02 44,683 44,308 45,246 — — 45,667 45,284 46,243
2002–03 45,822 45,658 46,119 — — 45,822 45,658 46,119
— Not available.
*Calendar-year data from the U.S. Department of Commerce have been converted to a school-year basis by averaging the two appropriate calendar years in each case. Beginning in
1992–93, data are wage and salary accruals per full-time-equivalent employee.
Note: Constant 2002–03 dollars based on the Consumer Price Index, prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor. Some data have been revised from previously
published figures.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 77. Estimated Average Annual Salary of Teachers in Public Elementary and
Secondary Schools: 1959–60 to 2002–03,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt077.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
According to the American Federation of Teachers, and California ($34,805). Montana had the lowest aver-
California had the highest average teachers’ salary in age beginning salary ($23,052), followed by Maine
2002–03, at $55,693, followed by Michigan ($54,020), ($24,631), South Dakota ($24,311), North Dakota
Connecticut ($53,962), New Jersey ($53,872) and the ($23,591) and Arizona ($23,548).
District of Columbia ($53,194). In 2002–03 South
Dakota had the lowest average salary ($32,414), fol- Comparisons to Selected Other Professionals
lowed by Montana ($35,754), Mississippi ($35,135),
North Dakota ($33,869) and Oklahoma ($33,277). According to the BLS in National Compensation Sur-
vey: Occupational Wages in the United States, 2004 (http://
Alaska had the highest average beginning salary in www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/ncbl0727.pdf), the mean hourly
2002–03 ($37,401), followed by New Jersey ($35,673), earnings (half earned more and half earned less) of full-
the District of Columbia ($35,260), New York ($35,259), time elementary school teachers was $32.53, a penny more
Public opinion on whether teachers’ abilities should be measured Average annual rate of nonfatal crimes against teachers at
by how their students perform on standardarized tests, 2004 school, by type of crime and selected teacher and school
IN YOUR OPINION, SHOULD ONE OF THE MEASUREMENTS OF A TEACHER’S ABILITY characteristics, 1998–2002
BE BASED ON HOW WELL HIS OR HER STUDENTS PERFORM ON STANDARDIZED
TESTS OR NOT? [Per 1,000 teachers]
Sex
National No children Public school
totals in school parents
150 Male Female
% % %
Yes, should 49 50 49
No, should not 47 45 49
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 22. In your opinion, 58
should one of the measurements of a teacher’s ability be based on how well 49
50
his or her students perform on standardized tests or not?,” in “The 36th 34 34
23
Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the 15
Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with 0
permission. Total Theft Violent
Type of crime
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 23. How about school 150 Urban Suburban Rural
principals? In your opinion, should one of the measurements of a principal’s
quality be based on how well the students in his or her school perform on
standardized tests or not?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup
Rate per 1,000
100
Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan,
September 2004. Reproduced with permission. 64
50 42
34 35 30 28
22
12 12
years, multiplied by 1,000. From 1998 to 2002, male 0
teachers were more often the victims of violent crimes, Total Theft Violent
with thirty-four violent crimes per 1,000 male teachers Type of crime
and fifteen violent crimes per 1,000 female teachers. Note: Violent crimes include rape, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and
Female teachers were more often the victims of theft, simple assault. Total crimes include violent crimes and theft. “At school” includes
inside the school building, on school property, at the work site, or while working.
with thirty-four incidents of theft per 1,000 female tea- For thefts, “while working” is not considered, since thefts of teachers’ property kept
chers and twenty-three incidents of theft per 1,000 male at school can occur when teachers are not present. The data are aggregated from
1998–2002 due to the small number of teachers in each year’s sample. Detail may
teachers. Crimes were more common in middle/junior not sum to totals because of rounding.
high schools and high schools than in elementary SOURCE: Jill F. DeVoe, Katharin Peter, Phillip Kaufman, Sally A. Ruddy,
schools. The average annual crime rate was fifty-nine Amanda Miller, Margaret Noonan, Thomas D. Snyder, and Katrina
Baum, “Figure 9.1. Average Annual Rate of Nonfatal Crimes Against
crimes per 1,000 teachers in middle/junior high school, Teachers at School Per 1,000 Teachers, by Type of Crime and Selected
seventy-one crimes per 1,000 teachers in high school, Teacher and School Characteristics: 1998–2002,” in Indicators of
and thirty-eight crimes per 1,000 teachers in elementary School Crime and Safety: 2004, NCES 2005-02/NCJ 205290, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics and
school. More crimes occurred in urban schools (sixty- U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Washington,
four crimes per 1,000 teachers) than in suburban schools DC, November 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005002.pdf
(forty-two crimes per 1,000 teachers). The fewest (accessed July 26, 2005)
crimes occurred in rural schools (thirty-four crimes per
1,000 teachers). (See Figure 8.1.)
Education 127
FIGURE 9.1 19% and the number of African-American students by
79%. Other minority groups increased by even higher
Enrollment in degree-granting institutions, by age, proportions: Native American enrollment more than
Fall 1970–Fall 2013 doubled, while more than four times as many Hispanics
and more than five times as many Asians/Pacific Islanders
enrolled. Note that prior to 1995 data were collected
Under 22 years old 25 to 29 years old
for higher education institutions, and they were defined
22 to 24 years old 30 years old and over
as agencies or associations that were recognized by the
14
U.S. Department of Education. In 1996 the definition was
changed slightly, to be four- and two-year degree-granting
Enrollment in millions
12
10 higher education institutions that participate in Title IV
Projected
8 federal financial aid programs.
6
4 According to the NCES, in 2002 African-American
2 students were more than twice as likely as Hispanic
0 students to attend an institution where they made up at
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013
least 80% of the total enrollment. During fall 2002, 29%
School year
of students at degree-granting institutions were minori-
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M.
Hoffman, “Figure 14. Enrollment in Degree-Granting Institutions, by
ties. The proportion of minority enrollment was higher at
Age: Fall 1970 to Fall 2013,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, two-year colleges (36%) than at doctoral institutions
NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for (24%). (See Figure 9.3.)
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed
.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_14.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed The NCES defines institutions as having low-
July 26, 2005)
minority enrollments if the proportion of minority
students is 20% or less, and institutions as having
high-minority enrollments if the proportion of minor-
FIGURE 9.2
ity students enrolled is 80% or more. In fall 2002 more
minority students attended degree-granting institutions
Highest level of education attained by persons age 25 and with low-minority enrollments than attended high-
older, March 2002
minority institutions (17% and 13%, respectively).
Nearly one-third (31%) of minority students attended
four-year degree-granting institutions with high-minority
enrollments, while only 4% of minority students attended
Doctor’s
1.2%
Not high school doctoral degree-granting institutions with high-minority
graduate enrollments. One-quarter attended doctoral institutions
15.9%
Professional High school graduate with low-minority enrollments. (See Figure 9.3.)
1.5% 32.2%
Master’s
6.3% International Students
According to the Institute of International Education
Bachelor’s (IIE) in Open Doors 2005 (http://opendoors.iienetwork.org/
17.8% Some college ?p=69736), 565,039 international students were enrolled
17.1%
at institutions of higher learning in the United States
Associate
8.3% during the 2004–05 school year. This represented a
decline of about 1.3% from the previous year’s total of
Total persons age 25 and over 181.6 million
572,509. About 14% of international students were from
India (80,466); 11% from China (62,523); 9% from
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M.
Hoffman, “Figure 5. Highest Level of Education Attained by Persons 25 Korea (53,358); 7% from Japan (42,215); and 5% of
Years of Age and Older: March 2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, international students were from Canada (28,140).
2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center Another 4.6% were from Taiwan (25,914), and 2.3%
for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces
.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_05.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed were from Mexico (13,063).
July 26, 2005)
Open Doors 2005 also reported that California hosted
the largest number of international students (75,032) in
2004–05 and that the University of Southern California,
were 9.8%; Asians or Pacific Islanders were 6.4%; and with 6,846 foreign students, had the largest international
Native Americans were 1%. (See Table 9.2.) Between student population of any college or university in the
1976 and 2001 the number of white students grew by United States. Business (18% of students) and engineering
Total enrollment in degree-granting institutions, by sex, attendance status, and control of institution, with alternative projections,
Fall 1988–Fall 2013
[In thousands]
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Data for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures.
SOURCE: Debra E. Gerald and William J. Hussar, “Table 10. Total Enrollment in Degree-Granting Institutions, by Sex, Attendance Status, and Control of
Institution, with Alternative Projections: Fall 1988 to Fall 2013,” in Projections of Education Statistics to 2013, NCES 2004-013, U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, October 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/projections/tables/table_10.asp (accessed July
26, 2005)
130
Total fall enrollment in degree-granting institutions, by demographic characteristics, selected years, 1976–2001
Education
TABLE 9.2
Total fall enrollment in degree-granting institutions, by demographic characteristics, selected years, 1976–2001 [CONTINUED]
Education
Percentage distribution of students
Institutions of higher
education, in thousandsa Degree-granting institutions, in thousandsb Institutions of higher educationa Degree-granting institutionsb
Level of study, sex, and
race/ethnicity of student 1976 1980 1990 1996 1998 1999 2000 2001 1976 1980 1990 1996 1998 1999 2000 2001
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Undergraduate
Total 9,419.0 10,469.1 11,959.1 12,326.9 12,436.9 12,681.2 13,155.4 13,715.6 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
White, non-Hispanic 7,740.5 8,480.7 9,272.6 8,769.5 8,703.6 8,805.7 8,983.5 9,278.7 82.2 81.0 77.5 71.1 70.0 69.4 68.3 67.7
Total minority 1,535.3 1,778.5 2,467.7 3,282.1 3,492.1 3,605.3 3,884.0 4,130.2 16.3 17.0 20.6 26.6 28.1 28.4 29.5 30.1
Black, non-Hispanic 943.4 1,018.8 1,147.2 1,358.6 1,421.7 1,471.9 1,548.9 1,657.1 10.0 9.7 9.6 11.0 11.4 11.6 11.8 12.1
Hispanic 352.9 433.1 724.6 1,079.4 1,159.8 1,214.0 1,351.0 1,444.4 3.7 4.1 6.1 8.8 9.3 9.6 10.3 10.5
Asian or Pacific Islander 169.3 248.7 500.5 717.6 778.3 786.0 845.5 883.9 1.8 2.4 4.2 5.8 6.3 6.2 6.4 6.4
American Indian/
Alaska Native 69.7 77.9 95.5 126.5 132.2 133.4 138.5 144.8 0.7 0.7 0.8 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
Nonresident alien 143.2 209.9 218.7 275.3 241.3 270.3 288.0 306.7 1.5 2.0 1.8 2.2 1.9 2.1 2.2 2.2
Men 4,896.8 4,997.4 5,379.8 5,420.7 5,446.1 5,559.5 5,778.3 6,004.4 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
White, non-Hispanic 4,052.2 4,054.9 4,184.4 3,890.8 3,861.8 3,919.7 4,010.1 4,139.6 82.8 81.1 77.8 71.8 70.9 70.5 69.4 68.9
Total minority 748.2 802.7 1,069.3 1,384.1 1,455.5 1,498.0 1,618.0 1,705.9 15.3 16.1 19.9 25.5 26.7 26.9 28.0 28.4
Black, non-Hispanic 430.7 428.2 448.0 513.6 530.2 548.4 577.0 611.7 8.8 8.6 8.3 9.5 9.7 9.9 10.0 10.2
Hispanic 191.7 211.2 326.9 469.2 498.2 520.6 582.6 618.5 3.9 4.2 6.1 8.7 9.1 9.4 10.1 10.3
Asian or Pacific Islander 91.1 128.5 254.5 348.8 373.0 375.0 401.9 417.2 1.9 2.6 4.7 6.4 6.8 6.7 7.0 6.9
American Indian/
Alaska Native 34.8 34.8 39.9 52.4 54.2 53.9 56.4 58.5 0.7 0.7 0.7 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
Nonresident alien 96.4 139.8 126.1 145.8 128.8 141.8 150.2 158.9 2.0 2.8 2.3 2.7 2.4 2.6 2.6 2.6
Women 4,522.1 5,471.7 6,579.3 6,906.3 6,990.8 7,121.8 7,377.1 7,711.2 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
White, non-Hispanic 3,688.3 4,425.8 5,088.2 4,878.7 4,841.8 4,886.0 4,973.3 5,139.0 81.6 80.9 77.3 70.6 69.3 68.6 67.4 66.6
Total minority 787.0 975.8 1,398.5 1,898.1 2,036.5 2,107.4 2,266.0 2,424.4 17.4 17.8 21.3 27.5 29.1 29.6 30.7 31.4
Black, non-Hispanic 512.7 590.6 699.2 845.0 891.5 923.5 971.9 1,045.4 11.3 10.8 10.6 12.2 12.8 13.0 13.2 13.6
Hispanic 161.2 221.8 397.6 610.1 661.6 693.4 768.4 825.9 3.6 4.1 6.0 8.8 9.5 9.7 10.4 10.7
Asian or Pacific Islander 78.2 120.2 246.0 368.8 405.3 411.0 443.6 466.7 1.7 2.2 3.7 5.3 5.8 5.8 6.0 6.1
American Indian/
Alaska Native 34.9 43.1 55.5 74.1 78.1 79.5 82.1 86.3 0.8 0.8 0.8 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
Nonresident alien 46.8 70.1 92.6 129.5 112.5 128.4 137.8 147.8 1.0 1.3 1.4 1.9 1.6 1.8 1.9 1.9
Graduate
Total 1,322.5 1,340.9 1,586.2 1,742.3 1,767.6 1,806.8 1,850.3 1,903.7 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
White, non-Hispanic 1,115.6 1,104.7 1,228.4 1,272.6 1,254.3 1,256.5 1,258.5 1,275.1 84.4 82.4 77.4 73.0 71.0 69.5 68.0 67.0
Total minority 134.5 144.0 190.5 286.3 318.5 339.8 359.4 378.5 10.2 10.7 12.0 16.4 18.0 18.8 19.4 19.9
Black, non-Hispanic 78.5 75.1 83.9 125.5 138.7 148.7 157.9 169.4 5.9 5.6 5.3 7.2 7.8 8.2 8.5 8.9
Hispanic 26.4 32.1 47.2 72.8 82.9 90.4 95.4 100.5 2.0 2.4 3.0 4.2 4.7 5.0 5.2 5.3
Asian or Pacific Islander 24.5 31.6 53.2 79.1 87.0 90.7 95.8 97.4 1.9 2.4 3.4 4.5 4.9 5.0 5.2 5.1
American Indian/
Alaska Native 5.1 5.2 6.2 8.9 9.8 10.0 10.3 11.2 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6
Nonresident alien 72.4 92.2 167.3 183.3 194.8 210.6 232.3 250.1 5.5 6.9 10.5 10.5 11.0 11.7 12.6 13.1
Men 707.9 672.2 737.4 759.4 754.3 766.1 779.6 795.7 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
White, non-Hispanic 589.1 538.5 538.8 529.0 510.4 507.4 502.6 503.4 83.2 80.1 73.1 69.7 67.7 66.2 64.5 63.3
Total minority 63.7 65.0 82.1 114.0 122.8 129.3 135.1 138.9 9.0 9.7 11.1 15.0 16.3 16.9 17.3 17.5
Black, non-Hispanic 32.0 28.2 29.3 41.2 44.2 46.7 48.9 51.5 4.5 4.2 4.0 5.4 5.9 6.1 6.3 6.5
Hispanic 14.6 15.7 20.6 29.6 32.6 35.2 36.5 37.8 2.1 2.3 2.8 3.9 4.3 4.6 4.7 4.7
131
132
TABLE 9.2
Total fall enrollment in degree-granting institutions, by demographic characteristics, selected years, 1976–2001 [CONTINUED]
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 209. Total Fall Enrollment in Degree-Granting Institutions, by Race/Ethnicity, Sex, Attendance Status, and Level of Study: Selected
Years, 1976 to 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/
digest/d03/tables/dt209.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Education
FIGURE 9.3
Percentage of minority students at all degree-granting institutions with low and high percentages of minorities, by type of
institution, Fall 2002
100 100
80 80
60 60
Percent
Percent
40 36 40
29 31
24 26 26 25
22 21
20 20 17 15
13 14
10
4
0 0
All institutions Low High
(less than 20 percent) (80 percent or more)
Minority enrollment
Note: Data are for 4- and 2-year degree-granting institutions that were participating in Title IV federal financial aid programs in fall 2002.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Minority Enrollment: Percentage
of Students Who Were Minorities at All Degree-Granting Institutions with Low and High Percentages of Minorities, by Type of Institution: Fall 2002,” in
The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2005,
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
(16%) were the leading areas of study for international Countries with the largest numbers of Americans
students. enrolled in institutions of higher learning during the
2003–04 school year included Britain (32,237), Italy
Studying Abroad (21,922), Spain (20,080), France (13,718), Australia
Many college students from the United States also (11,418), and Mexico (9,293). The largest number of
participate in study abroad programs. According to American students abroad were studying the social
research published in 2005 by the Institute of Interna- sciences (43,258, or 22.6% of U.S. students abroad),
tional Education (http://opendoors.iienetwork.org/), followed by business (33,473, or 17.6%), and humanities
the number of U.S. students studying abroad had (25,401, or 13.3%).
doubled since the early 1990s. The IIE estimated that
in 2003–04 there were 191,321 American students PERSISTENCE OF STUDENTS
studying abroad, which represented a 9.6% increase According to the National Center for Education Sta-
over the previous year (174,629) and the highest num- tistics, more high school graduates are entering college,
ber ever. The IIE, in Open Doors 2005 (http://open- and more are eventually graduating. In 1972, 55% of high
doors.iienetwork.org/?p=69702), further reported that school graduates entered a postsecondary institution. By
the number of Americans studying abroad had surged 1992 the number had jumped to 77%. Among the 1972
20% since 2000–01 and suggested that the increase high school graduates who earned more than ten college
might be due to a growing awareness among American credits (that is, they did not take one or two courses and
students of the importance of gaining an international drop out of college), 46% earned a bachelor’s degree
perspective. IIE president Allan E. Goodman noted, within 8.5 years of their high school graduation. For
‘‘Many U.S. campuses now include international 1992 high school graduates, 67% had earned a bachelor’s
education as part of their core educational mission, degree within 8.5 years of their high school graduation.
recognizing that increasing the global competence (See Figure 9.4.) Another way to measure college success
among the next generation is a national priority and is to consider only students who earned at least some of
an academic responsibility.’’ the initial ten credits at a four-year institution, because
Percentage of 1972, 1982, and 1992 12th-graders who Total number and percentage of adults taking work-related
entered postsecondary education, and among those who courses, by type of instructional providers, 2002–03
earned more than 10 credits from a 4-year institution,
percentage who earned a bachelor’s degree within 8.5 years Percentage of participants in
Instructional provider work-related courses
Total adults participating in work-related
courses (in thousands) 68,499
1972 1982 1992
Instructional provider
Business or industry 51
100 College/university, vocational/technical school 21
Government agency (federal, state, local) 19
Professional or labor association/organization 19
80 77 Other (religious or community organization,
67 tutor, etc.) 8
63 62 Elementary/secondary school 6
59
60 55
Percent
50 Note: Some adults took courses from more than one type of provider; therefore,
46 percentages sum to more than 100.
43
40 SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Stephen Provasnik, Patrick Rooney,
Anindita Sen, and Richard Tobin, “Table 7–2. Total Number (in Thousands)
and Percentage of Adults Taking Work-Related Courses, by Type of
20 Instructional Providers: 2002–03,” in The Condition of Education, 2004,
NCES 2004-077, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/
0 programs/coe/2004/section1/table.asp?tableID⫽99 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Entered at least Among those who Among those who
one postsecondary earned more than 10 earned more than
institution credits, earned 10 credits and any
a bachelor’s degree credits from a 4-year
institution, earned
a bachelor’s degree
ADULT EDUCATION
Note: The 8.5 years is relative to the modal high school graduation date (June) for According to the National Center for Education
the cohort, not the individual’s graduation date. For example, the end point for all
the 1992 graduates is the end of 2000. Statistics, in 2002–03, 68.5 million adults participated
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, in work-related courses. The majority (51%) took
Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Access and classes provided by business or industry, and more
Persistence: Percentage of 1972, 1982, and 1992 12th-Graders Who
Entered Postsecondary Education, and Among Those Who Earned
than two-fifths (21%) took classes at a college, uni-
More than 10 Credits or More Than 10 Credits and Any From a 4-Year versity, or vocational/technical school. Approximately
Institution, Percentage Who Earned a Bachelor’s Degree within 8.5 two-fifths (19%) took classes that were provided by a
Years,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
government agency, and another 19% took classes that
Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf were offered by a professional or labor organization.
(accessed July 26, 2005) Religious or community organizations provided the
classes to 8% of the participants, and 6% of adults
took them at an elementary or secondary school. (See
Table 9.3.)
this may signify that they intended to pursue a bachelor’s
degree as the goal. NUMBER OF SCHOOLS
According to the National Center for Education
SCHOOL SIZE Statistics, in 2002–03 there were 4,168 degree-granting
Most students go to large colleges and universities. institutions in the United States—1,712 public and
Although about 40% of higher education institutions have 2,456 private. About 56% (2,324) were four-year insti-
enrollments that are under 1,000 students, enrollment at tutions, and 44% (1,844) were two-year schools. While
small institutions accounts for less than 5% of total col- most four-year schools were private (1,713, compared
lege students in the United States. According to the to 611 public institutions), most two-year schools were
National Center for Education Statistics, there are 169 public (1,101, compared to 743 private schools). (See
higher education institutions that have enrollments over Table 9.4.)
20,000 students. In fall 2003 the schools with the largest
enrollments were Miami-Dade Community College COLLEGES THAT SERVE SPECIFIC
(54,926), the University of Texas at Austin (52,261), POPULATIONS
Ohio State University, Main Campus (49,676), Univer- Women’s Colleges
sity of Minnesota, Twin Cities (48,677), and University Women’s colleges are colleges that identify them-
of Phoenix, Online (48,085). selves as having an institutional mission primarily
related to promoting and expanding educational opportu- Most of the independent nonprofit women’s colleges
nities for women. Women’s colleges were founded that developed at that time were located in the Northeast.
during the late nineteenth century in response to a As educational opportunities in the South during the
need for advanced education for women at a time nineteenth century were limited to whites, some higher
when most institutions of higher education admitted education institutions for African-Americans were
only men. formed after the Civil War (1860–65). These institutions
SOURCE:Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 246. Degree-Granting Institutions, by Control and Type of Institution:
1949–50 to 2002–03,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt246.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
included a few colleges founded especially to serve and then became a college (Cheyney State College),
African-American women, two of which still survive: awarding its first baccalaureate degree in the 1930s,
Bennett College in Greensboro, North Carolina, and almost 100 years after its founding. Two HBCUs were
Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia. These are established in the 1850s: Lincoln University in Pennsyl-
the only African-American women’s colleges in the vania (1854) and Wilberforce College in Ohio (1856).
United States today. Various states also developed Both of these colleges were founded by African-
public higher education institutions open to all Americans to promote education among other African-
women in the state. Three of these colleges still exist: Americans.
Douglass College, a part of Rutgers University in New
Another institution whose beginnings go back to
Brunswick, New Jersey; Texas Women’s University
the 1850s is now known as the University of the
(with branches in Denton, Dallas, and Houston); and
District of Columbia. Miner Normal School was started
the Mississippi University for Women in Columbus,
in 1851 by Myrtilla Miner as a school to train African-
Mississippi.
American women as teachers. In 1955 this institution
Currently there are about eighty women’s colleges united with Wilson Normal School to become D.C.
in the United States, down from 200 in 1960. The Teachers College. In 1976 D.C. Teachers College,
majority of women’s colleges are private four-year insti- Federal City College, and Washington Technical Institute
tutions, most are independent nonprofit institutions or merged to form today’s University of the District of
affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church, and are Columbia.
located in the Northeast. Women’s colleges usually
Following the Civil War, educating freed slaves
have smaller enrollments than other institutions of higher
became a top priority of the federal government, the
education.
African-American community, and private philanthropic
groups. Public support in the various states generally
Historically Black Colleges and Universities
came in the form of land grants for school buildings.
Historically Black Colleges and Universities Many of the HBCUs founded during this time were
(HBCUs) are accredited institutions of higher learning religious schools, such as Edward Waters College in
established before 1964, whose principal mission was Florida (1866), Fisk University in Tennessee (1867),
to educate African-Americans. The first HBCU was and Talladega College in Alabama (1867). Howard
Cheyney University in Pennsylvania, established in University in Washington, D.C., was also founded in
1837, well before the Civil War. At that time, most 1867 by an act of the U.S. Congress. The university
African-Americans in the nation were still slaves, and was established as a coeducational and multiracial private
the prevailing practice was to limit or prohibit their school.
education.
According to the National Center for Education Statis-
Richard Humphreys, a Philadelphia Quaker, founded tics, in fall 2002 there were 103 HBCUs in the United
Cheyney University, which began as a high school States; half (50%) were public institutions, and half (50%)
Selected statistics on degree-granting historically black colleges and universities, selected years, 1980–2002
Public Private
Enrollment, degrees, type of
revenues, and type of expenditures Total Total 4-year 2-year Total 4-year 2-year
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Number of institutions, fall 2002 103 52 41 11 51 48 3
Total enrollment, fall 1980 233,557 168,217 155,085 13,132 65,340 62,924 2,416
Men 106,387 76,994 70,236 6,758 29,393 28,352 1,041
Men, black 81,818 56,435 53,654 2,781 25,383 24,412 971
Women 127,170 91,223 84,849 6,374 35,947 34,572 1,375
Women, black 109,171 75,226 70,582 4,644 33,945 32,589 1,356
Total enrollment, fall 1990 257,152 187,046 171,969 15,077 70,106 68,528 1,578
Men 105,157 76,541 70,220 6,321 28,616 28,054 562
Men, black 82,897 57,255 54,041 3,214 25,642 25,198 444
Women 151,995 110,505 101,749 8,756 41,490 40,474 1,016
Women, black 125,785 86,949 80,883 6,066 38,836 38,115 721
Total enrollment, fall 2001 289,985 210,083 181,346 28,737 79,902 79,201 701
Men 112,874 81,985 70,261 11,724 30,889 30,721 168
Men, black 90,718 62,603 58,019 4,584 28,115 27,947 168
Women 177,111 128,098 111,085 17,013 49,013 48,480 533
Women, black 147,920 101,751 92,812 8,939 46,169 45,639 530
Full-time enrollment, fall 2001 222,453 150,968 136,040 14,928 71,485 71,084 401
Men 89,688 61,894 55,721 6,173 27,794 27,664 130
Women 132,765 89,074 80,319 8,755 43,691 43,420 271
Part-time enrollment, fall 2001 67,532 59,115 45,306 13,809 8,417 8,117 300
Men 23,186 20,091 14,540 5,551 3,095 3,057 38
Women 44,346 39,024 30,766 8,258 5,322 5,060 262
Earned degrees conferred, 2001–02
Associate 3,436 3,265 1,034 2,231 171 89 82
Men 1,099 1,044 279 765 55 27 28
Men, black 496 451 94 357 45 18 27
Women 2,337 2,221 755 1,466 116 62 54
Women, black 1,379 1,267 319 948 112 58 54
Bachelor’s 28,846 19,101 19,101 * 9,745 9,745 *
Men 10,158 6,936 6,936 * 3,222 3,222 *
Men, black 8,623 5,707 5,707 * 2,916 2,916 *
Women 18,688 12,165 12,165 * 6,523 6,523 *
Women, black 16,499 10,326 10,326 * 6,173 6,173 *
Master’s 6,338 5,477 5,477 * 861 861 *
Men 1,773 1,511 1,511 * 262 262 *
Men, black 1,163 975 975 * 188 188 *
Women 4,565 3,966 3,966 * 599 599 *
Women, black 3,298 2,803 2,803 * 495 495 *
First-professional 1,427 531 531 * 896 896 *
Men 617 226 226 * 391 391 *
Men, black 399 106 106 * 293 293 *
Women 810 305 305 * 505 505 *
Women, black 598 202 202 * 396 396 *
Doctor’s 364 204 204 * 160 160 *
Men 165 82 82 * 83 83 *
Men, black 108 42 42 * 66 66 *
Women 199 122 122 * 77 77 *
Women, black 148 79 79 * 69 69 *
were private nonprofit colleges. During fall 2001, almost million students. Fewer than half (45%) were public
290,000 students were enrolled. Full-time students outnum- institutions, less than one-quarter (23%) were private
bered part-time students by more than three to one. Women nonprofit colleges, and nearly one-third (32%) were pri-
made up a majority (61%) of all students at these institu- vate for-profit organizations.
tions. Most HBCU students were African-American—84%
of the women and 80% of the men. (See Table 9.5.) Native American Colleges
Although Native American and tribal colleges and
Hispanic Serving Institutions universities differ widely in their stages of development,
Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) are institutions they share some similarities. The governing boards of
that have a minimum of 25% Hispanic student enrol- most are made up primarily of Native Americans and
lment. According to the National Center for Education Alaska Natives, as are their student bodies. Located in
Statistics, in 2001 there were 334 HSIs in the United twelve states, most of the tribal colleges are in isolated
States. Total enrollment in 2000–01 at HSIs was 1.7 areas of the nation.
Public Private
Enrollment, degrees, type of
revenues, and type of expenditures Total Total 4-year 2-year Total 4-year 2-year
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Financial statistics, 2000–01 in
thousands of dollars
Current-fund revenues * $2,865,406 $2,711,332 $154,074 * * *
Tuition and fees * 583,864 551,900 31,964 * * *
Federal government * 499,991 469,679 30,312 * * *
State governments * 1,245,385 1,171,471 73,914 * * *
Local governments * 66,520 57,804 8,715 * * *
Private gifts, grants, and contracts * 48,157 47,864 293 * * *
Endowment income * 8,035 7,973 61 * * *
Sales and services * 367,857 361,299 6,558 * * *
Other sources * 45,597 43,340 2,257 * * *
Current-fund expenditures * 2,803,193 2,657,909 145,283 * * *
Educational and general expenditures * 2,446,802 2,306,989 139,814 * * *
Auxiliary enterprises * 337,645 332,175 5,470 * * *
Hospitals * 0 0 0 * * *
Independent operations * 0 0 0 * * *
Other expenditures * 18,745 18,745 0 * * *
*Not applicable.
Note: Historically black colleges and universities are degree-granting institutions established prior to 1964 with the principal mission of educating Black Americans. Federal regulations, 20
U.S. Code, Section 1061 (2), allow for certain exceptions to the founding date. Most institutions are in the southern and border states and were established prior to 1954. Federal, state,
and local governments revenue includes appropriations, grants, contracts, and independent operations. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 224. Selected Statistics on Degree-Granting Historically Black Colleges and
Universities: 1980, 1990, 2000–01, 2001, and 2001–02,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National
Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt224.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
In 2000–01 there were twenty-nine tribal colleges, other predominately African-American institutions, and
serving about 13,500 full- and part-time students. All tribal colleges and universities. These colleges educate
were public institutions, and the enrollment was 467 42% of all Hispanic students, 24% of African-American
students on average. One of the major thrusts of the students, and 16% of Native American students. How-
Native American schools is to reinforce traditional cul- ever, member institutions serve students of all races and
tures and pass them on to coming generations. Their ethnicities; nearly one-quarter of students at NAFEO
curricula are primarily practical and geared to local institutions are non–African-American, more than half
needs. Many of them are strongly oriented toward com- of students at HACU institutions are non-Hispanic, and
munity service. almost two in five students at AIHEC institutions are
non–Native American.
Most funding for these schools has come from the
federal government under the Tribally Controlled Col- The Alliance member colleges provide greater access
lege or University Assistance Act (P.L. 95-471). The to low-income and underserved populations, striving to
government pays Native American colleges about keep tuition affordable. These colleges tend to have
$3,000 for each Native American student, almost 40% higher student success rates among minority students
less than what the average community college receives than do traditional colleges.
per student from federal, state, and local sources. Tribal
colleges typically do not receive state support because
TRENDS IN DEGREES
they have been established by sovereign nations and are
usually located on federal trust land. Trends in Enrollment by Degree Levels
The National Center for Education Statistics reports
Alliance for Equity in Higher Education that undergraduate enrollment grew from 11.3 million in
The Alliance for Equity in Higher Education is made 1988 to 13.3 million in 2001, an 18% increase. In 2001
up of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Univer- women outnumbered men; 56% of those enrolled were
sities (HACU), the American Indian Higher Education women. Enrollment is projected (by mid-range estimates)
Consortium (AIHEC), and the National Association for to reach about 15.6 million by 2013. (See Table 9.6.)
Equal Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO). It is The NCES also notes that between 1988 and 2001
coordinated by the Institute for Higher Education Policy, enrollment in graduate schools increased 27%, from 1.5
a Washington, D.C.–based nonprofit education group. million to 1.9 million. By 2013 enrollment is projected to
The Alliance represents more than 300 HSIs, HBCUs, reach about 2.2 million, increasing about 17% from 2001.
Total undergraduate enrollment in all degree-granting institutions, by sex, attendance status, and control of institution, with alternative
projections, Fall 1988–Fall 2013
[In thousands]
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Data for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures.
SOURCE: Debra E. Gerald and William J. Hussar, “Table 19. Total Undergraduate Enrollment in All Degree-Granting Institutions, by Sex, Attendance Status,
and Control of Institution, with Alternative Projections: Fall 1988 to Fall 2013,” in Projections of Education Statistics to 2013, NCES 2004-013, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, October 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/projections/tables/table_19.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
Total graduate enrollment in all degree-granting institutions, by sex, attendance status, and control of institution, with alternative
projections, Fall 1988–Fall 2013
[In thousands]
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Data for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures.
SOURCE: Debra E. Gerald and William J. Hussar, “Table 20. Total Graduate Enrollment in All Degree-Granting Institutions, by Sex, Attendance Status, and
Control of Institution, with Alternative Projections: Fall 1988 to Fall 2013,” in Projections of Education Statistics to 2013, NCES 2004-013, U.S. Department
of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, October 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/projections/tables/table_20.asp (accessed
July 26, 2005)
Total first-professional enrollment in all degree-granting institutions, by sex, attendance status, and control of institution, with
alternative projections, Fall 1988–Fall 2013
[In thousands]
Note: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Data for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures.
SOURCE: Debra E. Gerald and William J. Hussar, “Table 20. Total First-Professional Enrollment in All Degree-Granting Institutions, by Sex, Attendance Status,
and Control of Institution, with Alternative Projections: Fall 1988 to Fall 2013,” in Projections of Education Statistics to 2013, NCES 2004-013, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, October 2003, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/projections/tables/table_21.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
Earned degrees conferred by degree-granting institutions, by level of degree and sex of student, selected years, 1869–70 to 2012–13
Associate degrees Bachelor’s degrees Master’s degrees First-professional degrees Doctor’s degreesa
Year Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
1869–70 — — — 9,371b 7,993b 1,378b 0 0 0 c c c
1 1 0
1879–80 — — — 12,896b 10,411b 2,485b 879 868 11 c c c
54 51 3
1889–90 — — — 15,539b 12,857b 2,682b 1,015 821 194 c c c
149 147 2
1899–1900 — — — 27,410b 22,173b 5,237b 1,583 1,280 303 c c c
382 359 23
1909–10 — — — 37,199b 28,762b 8,437b 2,113 1,555 558 c c c
443 399 44
1919–20 — — — 48,622b 31,980b 16,642b 4,279 2,985 1,294 c c c
615 522 93
1929–30 — — — 122,484b 73,615b 48,869b 14,969 8,925 6,044 c c c
2,299 1,946 353
1939–40 — — — 186,500b 109,546b 76,954b 26,731 16,508 10,223 c c c
3,290 2,861 429
1949–50 — — — 432,058b 328,841b 103,217b 58,183 41,220 16,963 c c c
6,420 5,804 616
1959–60 — — — 392,440b 254,063b 138,377b 74,435 50,898 23,537 c c c
9,829 8,801 1,028
1960–61 — — — 365,174 224,538 140,636 84,609 57,830 26,779 25,253 24,577 676 10,575 9,463 1,112
1961–62 — — — 383,961 230,456 153,505 91,418 62,603 28,815 25,607 24,836 771 11,622 10,377 1,245
1962–63 — — — 411,420 241,309 170,111 98,684 67,302 31,382 26,590 25,753 837 12,822 11,448 1,374
1963–64 — — — 461,266 265,349 195,917 109,183 73,850 35,333 27,209 26,357 852 14,490 12,955 1,535
1964–65 — — — 493,757 282,173 211,584 121,167 81,319 39,848 28,290 27,283 1,007 16,467 14,692 1,775
1965–66 111,607 63,779 47,828 520,115 299,287 220,828 140,602 93,081 47,521 30,124 28,982 1,142 18,237 16,121 2,116
1966–67 139,183 78,356 60,827 558,534 322,711 235,823 157,726 103,109 54,617 31,695 30,401 1,294 20,617 18,163 2,454
1967–68 159,441 90,317 69,124 632,289 357,682 274,607 176,749 113,552 63,197 33,939 32,402 1,537 23,089 20,183 2,906
1968–69 183,279 105,661 77,618 728,845 410,595 318,250 193,756 121,531 72,225 35,114 33,595 1,519 26,158 22,722 3,436
1969–70 206,023 117,432 88,591 792,316 451,097 341,219 208,291 125,624 82,667 34,918 33,077 1,841 29,866 25,890 3,976
1970–71 252,311 144,144 108,167 839,730 475,594 364,136 230,509 138,146 92,363 37,946 35,544 2,402 32,107 27,530 4,577
1971–72 292,014 166,227 125,787 887,273 500,590 386,683 251,633 149,550 102,083 43,411 40,723 2,688 33,363 28,090 5,273
1972–73 316,174 175,413 140,761 922,362 518,191 404,171 263,371 154,468 108,903 50,018 46,489 3,529 34,777 28,571 6,206
1973–74 343,924 188,591 155,333 945,776 527,313 418,463 277,033 157,842 119,191 53,816 48,530 5,286 33,816 27,365 6,451
1974–75 360,171 191,017 169,154 922,933 504,841 418,092 292,450 161,570 130,880 55,916 48,956 6,960 34,083 26,817 7,266
1975–76 391,454 209,996 181,458 925,746 504,925 420,821 311,771 167,248 144,523 62,649 52,892 9,757 34,064 26,267 7,797
1976–77 406,377 210,842 195,535 919,549 495,545 424,004 317,164 167,783 149,381 64,359 52,374 11,985 33,232 25,142 8,090
1977–78 412,246 204,718 207,528 921,204 487,347 433,857 311,620 161,212 150,408 66,581 52,270 14,311 32,131 23,658 8,473
1978–79 402,702 192,091 210,611 921,390 477,344 444,046 301,079 153,370 147,709 68,848 52,652 16,196 32,730 23,541 9,189
1979–80 400,910 183,737 217,173 929,417 473,611 455,806 298,081 150,749 147,332 70,131 52,716 17,415 32,615 22,943 9,672
1980–81 416,377 188,638 227,739 935,140 469,883 465,257 295,739 147,043 148,696 71,956 52,792 19,164 32,958 22,711 10,247
1981–82 434,526 196,944 237,582 952,998 473,364 479,634 295,546 145,532 150,014 72,032 52,223 19,809 32,707 22,224 10,483
1982–83 449,620 203,991 245,629 969,510 479,140 490,370 289,921 144,697 145,224 73,054 51,250 21,804 32,775 21,902 10,873
1983–84 452,240 202,704 249,536 974,309 482,319 491,990 284,263 143,595 140,668 74,468 51,378 23,090 33,209 22,064 11,145
1984–85 454,712 202,932 251,780 979,477 482,528 496,949 286,251 143,390 142,861 75,063 50,455 24,608 32,943 21,700 11,243
1985–86 446,047 196,166 249,881 987,823 485,923 501,900 288,567 143,508 145,059 73,910 49,261 24,649 33,653 21,819 11,834
1986–87 436,304 190,839 245,465 991,264 480,782 510,482 289,349 141,269 148,080 71,617 46,523 25,094 34,041 22,061 11,980
1987–88 435,085 190,047 245,038 994,829 477,203 517,626 299,317 145,163 154,154 70,735 45,484 25,251 34,870 22,615 12,255
1988–89 436,764 186,316 250,448 1,018,755 483,346 535,409 310,621 149,354 161,267 70,856 45,046 25,810 35,720 22,648 13,072
1989–90 455,102 191,195 263,907 1,051,344 491,696 559,648 324,301 153,653 170,648 70,988 43,961 27,027 38,371 24,401 13,970
1990–91 481,720 198,634 283,086 1,094,538 504,045 590,493 337,168 156,482 180,686 71,948 43,846 28,102 39,294 24,756 14,538
1991–92 504,231 207,481 296,750 1,136,553 520,811 615,742 352,838 161,842 190,996 74,146 45,071 29,075 40,659 25,557 15,102
1992–93 514,756 211,964 302,792 1,165,178 532,881 632,297 369,585 169,258 200,327 75,387 45,153 30,234 42,132 26,073 16,059
1993–94 530,632 215,261 315,371 1,169,275 532,422 636,853 387,070 176,085 210,985 75,418 44,707 30,711 43,185 26,552 16,633
1994–95 539,691 218,352 321,339 1,160,134 526,131 634,003 397,629 178,598 219,031 75,800 44,853 30,947 44,446 26,916 17,530
1995–96 555,216 219,514 335,702 1,164,792 522,454 642,338 406,301 179,081 227,220 76,734 44,748 31,986 44,652 26,841 17,811
1996–97 571,226 223,948 347,278 1,172,879 520,515 652,364 419,401 180,947 238,454 78,730 45,564 33,166 45,876 27,146 18,730
1997–98 558,555 217,613 340,942 1,184,406 519,956 664,450 430,164 184,375 245,789 78,598 44,911 33,687 46,010 26,664 19,346
1998–99 559,954 218,417 341,537 1,200,303 518,746 681,557 439,986 186,148 253,838 78,439 44,339 34,100 44,077 25,146 18,931
1999–2000 564,933 224,721 340,212 1,237,875 530,367 707,508 457,056 191,792 265,264 80,057 44,239 35,818 44,808 25,028 19,780
2000–01 578,865 231,645 347,220 1,244,171 531,840 712,331 468,476 194,351 274,125 79,707 42,862 36,845 44,904 24,728 20,176
2001–02 595,133 238,109 357,024 1,291,900 549,816 742,084 482,118 199,120 282,998 80,698 42,507 38,191 44,160 23,708 20,452
2002–03d 662,000 246,000 416,000 1,311,000 548,000 763,000 492,000 210,000 282,000 80,400 42,300 38,100 43,300 22,900 20,400
2003–04d 660,000 243,000 417,000 1,333,000 559,000 774,000 502,000 213,000 289,000 84,400 44,300 40,100 44,200 23,300 20,900
2004–05d 669,000 243,000 426,000 1,352,000 578,000 774,000 506,000 213,000 293,000 87,800 46,300 41,500 44,600 23,600 21,000
About 2.1 million (69%) were professional staff, including Education Statistics. The 1.1 million men employed in
executives, administrators, and instructors. Almost 31% professional roles comprised more than half (52%) of the
(951,203) were nonprofessional, such as clerical or professional staff; 644,514 (58%) of the 1.1 million
secretarial staff, paraprofessionals, and skilled staff, faculty members were men. (See Table 9.12.)
including building maintenance and groundskeepers. (See
Table 9.12.) Race/Ethnicity
In fall 2001 approximately 1.5 million men In 2001, 2.2 million non-Hispanic whites made
accounted for 47% of all employees at degree-granting up more than 72% of all employees at degree-granting
institutions, according to the National Center for institutions. Non-Hispanic African-Americans (309,252)
Associate degrees Bachelor’s degrees Master’s degrees First-professional degrees Doctor’s degreesa
Year Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
2005–06d 675,000 244,000 431,000 1,397,000 584,000 813,000 513,000 215,000 298,000 89,100 47,100 42,000 45,000 23,700 21,300
2006–07d 676,000 243,000 433,000 1,413,000 585,000 828,000 519,000 217,000 302,000 90,100 47,300 42,800 45,300 23,800 21,500
2007–08d 681,000 244,000 437,000 1,425,000 589,000 836,000 522,000 218,000 304,000 91,300 47,800 43,500 45,600 24,000 21,600
2008–09d 684,000 244,000 440,000 1,441,000 594,000 847,000 526,000 219,000 307,000 92,200 48,300 43,900 45,700 24,100 21,600
2009–10d 688,000 245,000 443,000 1,456,000 598,000 858,000 530,000 220,000 310,000 92,900 48,600 44,300 45,900 24,200 21,700
2010–11d 692,000 246,000 446,000 1,469,000 603,000 866,000 536,000 222,000 314,000 93,600 48,800 44,800 46,200 24,400 21,800
2011–12d 696,000 247,000 449,000 1,488,000 610,000 878,000 544,000 224,000 320,000 94,600 49,200 45,400 46,600 24,500 22,100
2012–13d 699,000 248,000 451,000 1,509,000 616,000 893,000 556,000 228,000 328,000 95,900 49,600 46,300 47,300 24,700 22,600
— Not available.
a
Includes Ph.D., Ed.D., and comparable degrees at the doctoral level. Excludes first-professional, such as M.D., D.D.S., and law degrees.
b
Includes first-professional degrees.
c
First-professional degrees are included with bachelor’s degrees.
d
Projected.
Note: Data for 1869–70 to 1994–95 are for institutions of higher education. Institutions of higher education were accredited by an agency or association that was recognized by the U.S.
Department of Education, or recognized directly by the Secretary of Education. The new degree-granting classification is very similar to the earlier higher education classification, except
that it includes some additional institutions, primarily 2-year colleges, and excludes a few higher education institutions that did not award associate or higher degrees. Data for 1998–99
were imputed using alternative procedures. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 249. Earned Degrees Conferred by Degree-Granting Institutions, by Level of
Degree and Sex of Student: Selected Years, 1869–70 to 2012–13,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt249.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
FIGURE 9.5
accounted for about 10% of employees; Hispanics
Percentage of adults ages 25–29 who have completed a (157,128) comprised 5%; Asians or Pacific Islanders
bachelor’s or higher degree, by race and Hispanic origin, (148,945) were 5%; and Native Americans (18,423)
1980–2004 made up less than 1%. Nonresident aliens (135,026)
made up about 4%. (See Table 9.12.)
White, non-Hispanic White-alone, non-Hispanic
Salaries
Total Black, non-Hispanic
Black-alone, non-Hispanic Hispanic
According to the National Center for Education
Statistics, average faculty salary decreased during the
100 late 1970s and then recovered during the late 1980s. It
remained relatively stable for the next decade and then
50
increased again, starting in the late 1990s. In 1977–78
40 the average salary for full-time faculty (expressed in
Percent
30
2002–03 dollars) was $57,000, and in 2002–03 it had
increased to $62,800. With all benefits included, the
20 average faculty salary was $66,600 in 1977–78 and
10 $78,300 in 2002–03. In 2002–03 the average salary of
a full professor was $86,100. For associate and assistant
0
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2004 professors, the average salaries were $62,800 and
Note: From 1980 to 1999, the 1977 OMB (Office of Management & Budget)
$52,800, respectively, while instructors earned an
Standards for Data on Race and Ethnicity were used to classify persons into one of average of $47,300 and lecturers earned $43,700. (See
the following four racial groups: white, black, American Indian or Alaskan Native, or
Asian or Pacific Islander. From 2000 to 2003, the revised 1997 OMB standards Table 9.13.)
were used. Persons could select one or more of five racial groups: white, black or
African American, American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, and Native Hawaiian or
Other Pacific Islander. Data from 2000 onward are not directly comparable with
data from earlier years. In addition, note that data on race and Hispanic origin are THE COST OF HIGHER EDUCATION
collected separately, but are combined for reporting.
According to the U.S. Department of Education in
SOURCE: Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics,
The Condition of Education 2005, public two- and four-
“Table ED7. Percentage of Adults Ages 25–29 Who Have Completed
a Bachelor’s or Higher Degree by Race and Hispanic Origin, year degree-granting institutions took in $138 billion
1980–2004,” in America’s Children: Key National Indicators of in education and general revenue in 2000–01. Federal,
Well-Being, 2005, Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family
state, and local governments provided 46% of that sum
Statistics, Washington, DC, July 2005, http://www.childstats.gov/
americaschildren/edu7.asp (accessed August 10, 2005) ($64 billion); tuition and fees at public institutions accoun-
ted for 23% ($32 billion) of income; and donations,
Degrees conferred by degree-granting institutions, by control of institution, level of degree, and discipline division, 2001–02
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 257. Degrees Conferred by Degree-Granting Institutions, by Control of
Institution, Level of Degree, and Discipline Division, 2001–02” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt257.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
endowments, and government contracts produced another tion 2005, the U.S. Department of Education reports that
30% ($42 billion) in 2000–01. Combined spending on government appropriations per student for public institu-
post-secondary institutions from both public and private tions increased 3% from 1969–70 to 2000–01 when
sources averaged $20,358 per student in the United adjusted for inflation, but that tuition and fees paid by
States in 2000, the highest dollar amount in a survey of individuals had increased by 99% during the same period.
the thirty countries belonging to the Organization for According to Trends in College Pricing (College Board,
Economic Co-operation and Development. (See Table 2.8 2004), in 2004–05, the average residential student paid
in Chapter 2.) This figure was up 6% from the $19,220 $14,640 in total costs if he or she attended an in-state,
per student spent in 1999 in the United States, according four-year public college, including $5,132 in tuition and
to the U.S. Department of Education. fees, $6,222 in room and board, $853 in books and
supplies, $774 for transportation, and $1,659 in other
What Students Pay costs. At a four-year private college, total costs were
The cost of a college education has been increasing $30,295. The West had the lowest tuition rate for public
dramatically for some time. In The Condition of Educa- four-year institutions, the Southwest had the lowest
First-professional degrees conferred by degree-granting institutions in dentistry, medicine, and law, selected years, 1949–50 to 2001–02
Education
Education
TABLE 9.11
First-professional degrees conferred by degree-granting institutions in dentistry, medicine, and law, selected years, 1949–50 to 2001–02 [CONTINUED]
— Not available.
Note: Data for 1998–99 were imputed using alternative procedures.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 259. First-Professional Degrees Conferred by Degree-Granting Institutions in Dentistry, Medicine, and Law, by Number of Institutions
Conferring Degrees and Sex of Student: Selected Years, 1949–50 to 2001–02” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt259.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
tuition rate for private four-year institutions, New Eng- less expensive than private schools, but they are not
land had the highest rate for private four-year institutions, quite the educational bargains that they once were.
and the Middle states had the highest rate for public four- Private schools attribute their increases to several
year institutions. (See Table 9.14.) factors, including higher student aid, increases in salaries
and benefits for faculty and staff, higher energy costs,
Many factors have contributed to the increase in
and maintenance of academic programs and libraries.
costs at public schools, including declines in government
appropriations, increases in instructional and student
services costs, and increases in research expenditures. Financial Assistance for Students
States have raised room and board and tuition costs at Federal assistance that goes directly to students
once-inexpensive state schools to compensate for declin- includes Pell Grants, funds from the Stafford Student
ing federal aid. Public schools still remain significantly Loan Program, and Supplemental Education Opportunity
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 228. Employees in Degree-Granting Institutions, by Race/Ethnicity, Primary
Occupation, Sex, Employment Status, and Control and Type of Institution: Fall 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S.
Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt228.asp
(accessed July 26, 2005)
TABLE 9.13
Average salaries of full–time instructional faculty at degree–granting institutions, selected academic years, 1977–78 to 2002–03
[In constant 2002–03 dollars]
Percent change
Compensation, salary, 1987–88 to
and benefitsa 1977–78 1982–83 1987–88 1992–93 1997–98 2002–03 2002–03
Total compensation $66,600 $63,100 $70,000 $72,700 $73,500 $78,300 11.9
Salary 57,000 52,100 58,400 59,000 59,700 62,800 7.5
Academic rank
Professor 77,000 68,600 76,800 77,900 79,300 86,100 12.1
Associate professor 58,000 51,800 57,500 58,100 58,600 62,800 9.2
Assistant professor 47,400 42,300 47,400 48,200 48,400 52,800 11.4
Instructor 38,300 34,100 37,200 37,800 38,100 47,300 27.2
Lecturer 44,200 38,500 42,500 40,300 40,900 43,700 2.8
No rank 52,100 46,600 49,600 48,100 49,000 46,500 ⫺6.3
Type of institution
Doctoral universities 64,600 59,400 67,500 68,600 70,800 75,500 11.9
Master’s colleges
and universities 55,700 50,300 56,400 55,100 56,000 57,800 2.5
Other 4-year 47,400 44,600 48,800 50,400 50,400 52,700 8.0
2-year 52,200 46,800 50,600 49,300 50,100 51,000 0.8
Fringe benefits 9,600 11,000 11,600 13,700 13,800 15,500 33.6
*Total compensation is the sum of salary and fringe benefits. Salary does not include outside income. Fringe benefits may include, for example, retirement plans, medical/dental
plans, group life insurance, other insurance benefits, guaranteed disability income protection, tuition plans (dependent only), housing plans, Social Security taxes, unemployment
compensation, worker’s compensation, or other benefits.
Note: Full-time instructional faculty on less-than-9-month contracts were excluded. In 2002–03, there were about 3,500 of these faculty, accounting for less than 1 percent of all full-time
instructional faculty at degree-granting institutions. Salaries, benefits, and compensation were in constant 2002–03 dollars, which were adjusted by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics and rounded to the nearest 100. Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Patrick Rooney, William Hussar, Stephen Provasnik, and Gillian Hampden-Thompson, “Faculty Salaries: Average Salaries of
Full–time Instructional Faculty at Degree–granting Institutions by Academic Rank and Type of Institution, Average Fringe Benefits, and Total Compensation:
Selected Academic Years, 1977–78 to 2002–03,” in The Condition of Education, 2005, NCES 2005-094, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics,Washington, DC, June 2005, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005094.pdf (accessed July 26, 2005)
Grants. Colleges or universities also receive assistance, According to Trends in Student Aid (College Board,
which they in turn pay out to students, through Campus- 2004), aid to all students consisted of 56% loans, 38%
Based Programs and Perkins Loans. In general, the grants, 1% work, and 5% tax benefits in 2003–04. For
federal government has shifted its spending from grants undergraduate students, 44% of aid received was in the
to loans. form of grants, and almost half (49%) was in the form of
60
According to the National Center for Education
Statistics, in 2000–01 enrollment in distance education
40 courses had nearly doubled since 1997–98. More than
half (57%) of the institutions in the sample offered
20 distance education courses in 2000–01, up from 34% in
1997–98. While the majority of public two-year and
0
1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2002
four-year institutions (90% and 89%, respectively)
Year offered distance education, it was less common at
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M.
private four-year institutions (39%) in 2000–01. In
Hoffman, “Figure 3. Years of School Completed by Persons 25 Years 2000–01 more than three-quarters (76%—2,350,000 of
Old and Over: 1940 to 2002,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, 3,077,000) of the enrollments in distance learning
NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed
programs were at the undergraduate level. (See Table 9.15.)
.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_03.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed
July 26, 2005)
SUBSTANCE ABUSE AMONG COLLEGE
STUDENTS
Illicit Drug Use
Monitoring the Future: National Survey Results on
Drug Use, 1975–2003, Volume II: College Students and
Adults Ages 19–45 (National Institute on Drug Abuse,
FIGURE 9.7
Median annual income of persons age 25 and over, by highest level of education and sex, 2001
Men Women
$70,000
61,960
60,000
49,985
50,000
38,870 40,744
Income
40,000
30,973
30,000 28,343
22,638
19,434
20,000 15,665
10,330
10,000
0
Some high High school Associate Bachelor’s Master’s
school, completer degree degree degree
no diploma
Highest level of education
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Figure 25. Median Annual Income of Persons 25 Years Old and Over, by
Highest Level of Education and Sex: 2001,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure_25.asp?popup=1 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Tobacco Use
According to Monitoring the Future, full-time
Bethesda, MD, September 2004) was prepared by Lloyd college students were less likely than other people
D. Johnston, Patrick M. O’Malley, Jerald G. Bachman, in the same age group to be regular smokers. In
and John E. Schulenberg at the University of Michigan. 2002 nearly 16% of college students reported smok-
The survey of drug use among college students covers ing daily, down from 19% in 1999. About 8%
full-time students, one to four years out of high school, reported smoking half a pack or more per day. About
who were enrolled in two- or four-year institutions. 21% of nonstudents in the same age group reported
Compared to their nonstudent peers, college stu- smoking daily, while 14% said they smoked half a
dents showed a somewhat higher annual prevalence of pack or more a day.
Distance education institutions and enrollment, by level and type of institution, 1997–98 and 2000–01
SOURCE: John Wirt, Susan Choy, Stephen Provasnik, Patrick Rooney, Anindita Sen, and Richard Tobin, “Table 32–1. Total Number of Institutions That
Offered Distance Education Courses, Total Number of Enrollments in All Distance Education Courses, and the Number of Enrollments in College-Level,
Credit-Granting Distance Education Courses, by Level and Type of Institution: 1997–98 and 2000–01,” in The Condition of Education, 2004, NCES 2004-077,
U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, June 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2004/section5/table
.asp?tableID⫽86 (accessed July 26, 2005)
Every year Phi Delta Kappa, the professional educa- 2000 the public identified two problems as top con-
tion fraternity, publishes a survey of the American public cerns: lack of financial support and lack of discipline.
on education issues. This annual examination is consid- The same two concerns topped the poll in 2001 as well.
ered one of the best measurements of current American Fighting/violence/gangs and overcrowded schools tied
attitudes toward education. Except where otherwise for second place in 2001. (See Table 10.1.) Figure 10.1
noted, the information in this chapter comes from ‘‘The shows trends in the public’s attitudes about specific
36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s problems in schools from 1980 to 2003.
Attitudes toward the Public Schools’’ (Lowell C. Rose
and Alec M. Gallup, Phi Delta Kappan, September In 2002 lack of financial support topped the list of
2004). the public’s concerns, with lack of discipline and over-
crowding tied for second place. The top two concerns in
Keep in mind that these are surveys of people’s 2003 were lack of financial support and lack of disci-
opinions and feelings about public education, which pline, with overcrowding coming in third. Again in 2004
may or may not coincide with facts about the nation’s lack of financial support was cited most often as the
schools. Instead, the survey results illustrate trends in biggest problem facing public schools, with lack of dis-
current American thought on educational subjects. cipline, and overcrowding tied for second place. (See
Table 10.2.)
BIGGEST PROBLEMS FACING LOCAL PUBLIC
SCHOOLS GRADING THE SCHOOLS
Since Phi Delta Kappa began surveying the pub- Every year the Phi Delta Kappa survey asks respon-
lic’s opinions about education in 1969, discipline has dents to grade the public schools on the same scale used
been at or near the top of the list of concerns. Accord- to grade students. In general, the survey has found for
ing to the U.S. Department of Education, based on data many years that the respondents’ ties to local schools
from Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup, between 1969 and 1985 influence the way they rank them. For example, people
(with the exception of 1971, when the top issue was generally give their children’s schools a higher grade
finances), discipline was the most frequently men- than the schools in the community as a whole, and local
tioned problem. Drug abuse by students replaced dis- community schools are generally given higher grades
cipline as the top concern from 1986 through 1991, and than is the nation’s school system as a whole. (See
in 1992 drugs tied with lack of proper financial sup- Table 10.3.)
port, at 22% each. In 1993 lack of proper financial
support was clearly the number-one concern, with Overall, the 2004 survey found that almost half
21% mentioning it as the biggest concern for public (47%) of those surveyed believed the schools in their
schools in their communities. In 1994 lack of discipline communities deserved an A or B grade. (See Table
tied with fighting/violence/gangs, and in 1995 lack of 10.4.) Most (61%) public school parents awarded an A
discipline was back on top. Drug abuse edged out or B grade to the public schools in their community.
discipline as the top concern of 1996. In 1998 and When asked to grade the school attended by their own
1999 lack of discipline, violence in schools, and lack oldest children, a majority (70%) of public school parents
of financial support were the top three concerns. In awarded an A or a B. (See Table 10.5.)
Education 155
TABLE 10.1
Items most frequently cited by the general public as a major problem facing local public schools, selected years 1970–2003
Percent
Problem 1970 1975 1980 1985 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Lack of discipline 18 23 26 25 19 19 20 17 15 18 15 15 15 14 18 15 15 17 16
Lack of financial support 17 14 10 9 13 13 18 22 21 13 11 13 15 12 9 18 15 23 25
Fighting/violence/gangs — — — — — — — 9 13 18 9 14 12 15 11 11 10 9 4
Use of drugs 11 9 14 18 34 38 22 22 16 11 7 16 14 10 8 9 9 13 9
Standards/quality of education — — — — — — — — — 8 4 — 8 6 2 5 — — 4
Large schools/overcrowding — 10 7 5 8 7 9 9 8 7 3 8 8 8 8 12 10 17 14
Lack of respect — — — — — — — — — 3 3 2 — 2 2 2 — — —
Lack of family structure/
problems of home life — — — — — — — — — 5 3 4 — — — — — — —
Crime/vandalism — — — — — — — — — 4 2 3 — 2 5 5 — — —
Getting good teachers 12 11 6 10 7 7 11 5 5 3 2 3 3 5 4 4 6 8 5
Parents’ lack of interest 3 2 6 3 6 4 7 5 4 3 2 — — 2 4 4 — — —
Poor curriculum/standards 6 5 11 11 8 8 10 9 9 3 2 3 — 1 2 2 — — —
Pupils’ lack of interest/truancy — 3 5 5 3 6 5 3 4 3 2 5 6 5 2 — — — —
Integration/segregation/
racial discrimination 17 15 10 4 4 5 5 4 4 3 2 2 — — — — — — —
Management of funds/
programs — — — — — — — — — — 2 — — — — — — — —
Moral standards — — — 2 3 3 3 4 3 — — — — 2 2 — — — —
Low teacher pay — — — 2 4 6 4 3 3 — — — — 2 2 4 — — 4
Teachers’ lack of interest — — 6 4 4 4 2 2 — — — — — — — — — — —
Drinking/alcoholism — — 2 3 4 4 2 2 — — — — — — — — — — —
Lack of proper facilities 11 3 2 1 1 2 — — — — — — — — — — — — —
— Not available.
Note: Respondents were permitted to select multiple or no major problems.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 23. Items Most Frequently Cited by the General Public as a Major Problem
Facing the Local Public Schools: Selected Years, 1970 to 2003,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt023.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
SCHOOL REFORMS
Lack of discipline Lack of financial support Use of drugs Respondents were asked whether they preferred
reforming the existing public schools or finding an alter-
40 native to the system. In 2004 nearly two-thirds (66%)
said they favored reforming the existing system, while
Percent citing problem
20
Two-thirds (66%) of respondents favored increasing the
mandatory attendance age to eighteen as a way to deal with
10
the school dropout problem (see Table 10.8), and nearly
three-quarters opposed eliminating the senior year of high
0
school so that students could get an earlier start on going to
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2003 college or entering the workforce. (See Table 10.9.)
Year
In 2004 nearly three-quarters (73%) of respondents
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M.
Hoffman, “Figure 6. Items Most Frequently Cited by the Public as a
believed that it is not possible to accurately judge a
Major Problem Facing the Local Public Schools, 1980–2003,” in Digest student’s proficiency in English and math on the basis
of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of of a single test. (See Table 10.10.) When respondents
Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC,
December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/figures/figure
were asked whether they were concerned that relying on
_06.asp?popup⫽1 (accessed July 26, 2005) testing for English and math only to judge a school’s
performance would mean less emphasis on art, music,
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 4. What do you think are the biggest problems the public schools of your community must deal with?,” in
“The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with
permission.
TABLE 10.3
Average grade public would give public schools in their community and in the nation at large, 1974–2003
All adults No children in school Public school parents Private school parents
Local Local Local Local
Year Nation community Nation community Nation community Nation community
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1974 — 2.63 — 2.57 — 2.80 — 2.15
1975 — 2.38 — 2.31 — 2.49 — 1.81
1976 — 2.38 — 2.34 — 2.48 — 2.22
1977 — 2.33 — 2.25 — 2.59 — 2.05
1978 — 2.21 — 2.11 — 2.47 — 1.69
1979 — 2.21 — 2.15 — 2.38 — 1.88
1980 — 2.26 — — — — — —
1981 1.94 2.20 — 2.12 — 2.36 — 1.88
1982 2.01 2.24 2.04 2.18 2.01 2.35 2.02 2.20
1983 1.91 2.12 1.92 2.10 1.92 2.31 1.82 1.89
1984 2.09 2.36 2.11 2.30 2.11 2.49 2.04 2.17
1985 2.14 2.39 2.16 2.36 2.20 2.44 1.93 2.00
1986 2.13 2.36 — 2.29 — 2.55 — 2.14
1987 2.18 2.44 2.20 2.38 2.22 2.61 2.03 2.01
1988 2.08 2.35 2.02 2.32 2.13 2.48 2.00 2.13
1989 2.01 2.35 1.99 2.27 2.06 2.56 1.93 2.12
1990 1.99 2.29 1.98 2.27 2.03 2.44 1.85 2.09
1991 2.00 2.36 — — — — — —
1992 1.93 2.30 1.92 — 1.94 2.73 1.85 —
1993 1.95 2.41 1.97 2.40 1.97 2.48 1.80 2.11
1994 1.95 2.26 1.95 2.16 1.90 2.55 1.86 1.90
1995 1.97 2.28 1.98 2.25 1.93 2.41 1.81 1.85
1996 1.93 2.30 1.91 2.22 2.00 2.56 1.80 1.86
1997 1.97 2.35 1.99 2.27 2.01 2.56 1.99 1.87
1998 1.93 2.41 1.92 2.36 1.96 2.51 1.81 2.20
1999 2.02 2.44 2.03 2.42 1.97 2.56 — —
2000 1.98 2.47 1.94 2.44 2.05 2.59 — —
2001 2.01 2.47 2.00 2.42 2.04 2.66 — —
2002 2.08 2.44 2.08 2.40 2.06 2.61 — —
2003 2.11 2.41 2.09 2.32 2.16 2.57 — —
— Not available.
Note: Average based on a scale where A⫽4, B⫽3, C⫽2, D⫽1, and F⫽0.
SOURCE: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, “Table 22. Average Grade That the Public Would Give the Public Schools in Their
Community and in the Nation at Large: 1974 to 2003,” in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National
Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt022.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
history, and other subjects, the majority (81%) responded Respondents were asked whether they thought an
that they were concerned a great deal or a fair amount. increased emphasis on English, math, and science at all
(See Table 10.11.) grade levels would serve all, most, some, or only a few
Public opinion on grading the schools in their community, 2004 Public opinion on grading the schools in the nation, 2004
STUDENTS ARE OFTEN GIVEN THE GRADES OF A, B, C, D, AND FAIL TO DENOTE THE HOW ABOUT THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN THE NATION AS A WHOLE? WHAT GRADE
QUALITY OF THEIR WORK. SUPPOSE THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS THEMSELVES, IN YOUR WOULD YOU GIVE THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS NATIONALLY—A, B, C, D, OR FAIL?
COMMUNITY, WERE GRADED IN THE SAME WAY. WHAT GRADE WOULD YOU GIVE THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS HERE—A, B, C, D, OR FAIL?
National No children Public school
totals in school parents
National No children Public school
totals in school parents ’04 ’03 ’04 ’03 ’04 ’03
% % % % % %
’04 ’03 ’04 ’03 ’04 ’03 A&B 26 26 28 26 22 26
% % % % % % A 2 2 2 1 3 5
A&B 47 48 42 45 61 55 B 24 24 26 25 19 21
A 13 11 11 8 17 17 C 45 52 45 52 44 49
B 34 37 31 37 44 38 D 13 12 13 11 13 13
C 33 31 37 30 24 31 Fail 4 3 3 4 6 2
D 10 10 9 10 10 10 Don’t know 12 7 11 7 15 10
Fail 4 5 3 7 5 3
Don’t know 6 6 9 8 * 1 SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 2. How about the
public schools in the nation as a whole? What grade would you give the
*Less than one-half of 1%. public schools nationally—A, B, C, D, or FAIL?,” in “The 36th Annual
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 1. Students are often
Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public
given the grades of A, B, C, D, and FAIL to denote the quality of their work. Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Suppose the public schools themselves, in your community, were graded in
the same way. What grade would you give the public schools here—A, B, C,
D, or FAIL?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the
Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, STUDENT FAILURE
September 2004. Reproduced with permission. In 2004 survey respondents were asked who is most
important in determining how well or how poorly stu-
dents perform in school. Nearly one-half (45%) believed
TABLE 10.5
that students’ parents are the most important determinant,
while 30% cited students’ teachers and 22% cited the
Public opinion on grading the school their oldest child attends, students themselves. (See Table 10.13.)
2004 In 2004 more than half (55%) of respondents whose
USING THE A, B, C, D, FAIL SCALE AGAIN, WHAT GRADE WOULD YOU GIVE THE
SCHOOL YOUR OLDEST CHILD ATTENDS?
children were failing would prefer tutoring provided by
teachers in their child’s school, and two-fifths (40%)
Public school parents would favor tutoring provided by an outside agency.
’04 ’03
(See Table 10.14.)
% %
A&B 70 68
A 24 29 THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP
B 46 39
C 16 20 In 2004 the public was asked several questions
D 8 8 related to the academic achievement gap that exists
Fail 4 4
Don’t know 2 * between white and minority students. More than three-
*Less than one-half of 1%.
quarters (78%) of respondents believed that minority
children had the same educational opportunities as white
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 3. Using the A, B, C,
D, FAIL scale again, what grade would you give the school your oldest child children in their communities in 2004 (see Table 10.15).
attends?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Seventy-four percent responded that the achievement gap
Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. between white and minority students is related mostly to
Reproduced with permission.
other factors, not to the quality of schooling (see Table
10.16). When asked how important it is to close this gap
public school students in the community. The responses between groups of students, 64% responded that it is very
were about evenly divided between all, most, and some, important to close the gap (see Table 10.17), and more
with 29% believing that the increased emphasis would than half (56%) responded that it is the responsibility of
serve all students, 32% believing that the increased the public schools to close the achievement gap between
emphasis would serve most students, and 28% believing white and minority students. (See Table 10.18.)
that the increased emphasis would serve some students. When asked about various proposals to close the
Only 9% of the public believed that the increased achievement gap between white and minority children,
emphasis on English, math, and science at all in 2004 the public strongly favored encouraging parental
grade levels would serve only a few students. (See involvement (97%), providing more instructional time for
Table 10.12.) low performing students (94%), and strengthening
Public opinion on reforming the existing public school system versus finding an alternative to the existing public school system, 2004
IN ORDER TO IMPROVE PUBLIC EDUCATION IN AMERICA, SOME PEOPLE THINK THE FOCUS SHOULD BE ON REFORMING THE EXISTING PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM. OTHERS
BELIEVE THE FOCUS SHOULD BE ON FINDING AN ALTERNATIVE TO THE EXISTING PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM. WHICH APPROACH DO YOU THINK IS PREFERABLE—REFORMING
THE EXISTING PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM OR FINDING AN ALTERNATIVE TO THE EXISTING PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 5. In order to improve public education in America, some people think the focus should be on reforming
the existing public school system. Others believe the focus should be on finding an alternative to the existing public school system. Which approach do you
think is preferable—reforming the existing public school system or finding an alternative to the existing public school system?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta
Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 35. Some people have
proposed increasing the mandatory attendance age to 18 as a way to deal
with the school dropout problem. Would you favor or oppose increasing the
mandatory attendance age to 18 in your state?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi
Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public
Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 10.9
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 36. Some people have
proposed eliminating the senior year of high school so that students could
get an earlier start on getting a college education or on entering the work
force. Would you favor or oppose using this plan in the high schools in your
community?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the
Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan,
September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Public opinion on whether it is possible to judge a student’s proficiency in English and math on a single test, 2004
IN YOUR OPINION, IS IT POSSIBLE OR NOT POSSIBLE TO ACCURATELY JUDGE A STUDENT’S PROFICIENCY IN ENGLISH AND MATH ON THE BASIS OF A SINGLE TEST?
SOURCE:Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 10. In your opinion, is it possible or not possible to accurately judge a student’s proficiency in English
and math on the basis of a single test?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta
Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 10.11
Public opinion on whether relying on English and math testing to judge a school’s performance will lead to less emphasis on other
subjects, 2004
HOW MUCH, IF AT ALL, ARE YOU CONCERNED THAT RELYING ON TESTING FOR ENGLISH AND MATH ONLY TO JUDGE A SCHOOL’S PERFORMANCE WILL MEAN LESS EMPHASIS
ON ART, MUSIC, HISTORY, AND OTHER SUBJECTS? WOULD YOU SAY YOU ARE CONCERNED A GREAT DEAL, A FAIR AMOUNT, NOT MUCH, OR NOT AT ALL?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 11. How much, if at all, are you concerned that relying on testing for English and math only to judge a
school’s performance will mean less emphasis on art, music, history, and other subjects? Would you say you are concerned a great deal, a fair amount, or not at
all?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced
with permission.
TABLE 10.12
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 13. Now, let’s assume that your child was failing in his or her school. Which kind of tutoring would you
prefer—tutoring provided by teachers in your child’s school or tutoring provided by an outside agency that you would select from a state-approved list?,” in
“The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with
permission.
TABLE 10.15
Public opinion on whether minority children have the same educational opportunities as other children, 2004
IN YOUR OPINION, DO BLACK CHILDREN AND OTHER MINORITY CHILDREN IN YOUR COMMUNITY HAVE THE SAME EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES AS WHITE CHILDREN?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 28. In your opinion, do black children and other minority children in your community have the same
educational opportunities as white children?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi
Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
TABLE 10.16
Public opinion on whether the achievement gap is related to the quality of schooling or to other factors, 2004
IN YOUR OPINION, IS THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP BETWEEN WHITE STUDENTS AND BLACK AND HISPANIC STUDENTS MOSTLY RELATED TO THE QUALITY OF SCHOOLING RECEIVED
OR MOSTLY RELATED TO OTHER FACTORS?
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 25. In your opinion, is the achievement gap between white students and black and Hispanic students
mostly related to the quality of the schooling received or mostly related to other factors?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s
Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 24. Black and Hispanic students generally score lower on standardized tests than white students. In your
opinion, how important do you think it is to close this academic achievement gap between these groups of students?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/
Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Public opinion on whether it is the public schools’ responsibility Public opinion on various proposals to close the achievement gap,
to close the achievement gap, 2004 2004
IN YOUR OPINION, IS IT THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS TO CLOSE NUMEROUS PROPOSALS HAVE BEEN SUGGESTED AS WAYS TO CLOSE THE
THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP BETWEEN WHITE STUDENTS AND BLACK AND HISPANIC ACHIEVEMENT GAP BETWEEN WHITE, BLACK, AND HISPANIC STUDENTS. AS I
STUDENTS OR NOT? MENTION SOME OF THESE PROPOSALS, ONE AT A TIME, WOULD YOU TELL ME
WHETHER YOU WOULD FAVOR OR OPPOSE IT AS A WAY TO CLOSE THE
ACHIEVEMENT GAP.
National No children in Public school
totals school parents
Favor Oppose Don’t know
’04 ’01 ’04 ’01 ’04 ’01
% % %
% % % % % %
Encourage more parent involvement 97 2 1
Yes, it is 56 55 56 56 56 53
Provide more instructional time for
No, it is not 40 41 39 39 41 45
low-performing students 94 5 1
Don’t know 4 4 5 5 3 2
Strengthen remedial programs for
SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 26. In your opinion, low-performing students 92 6 2
is it the responsibility of the public schools to close the achievement gap Provide free breakfast and free lunch
between white students and black and Hispanic students or not?,” in “The programs as needed 84 15 1
Provide state-funded preschool programs 80 18 2
36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward
Provide in-school health clinics 76 21 3
the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, September 2004. Reproduced with
permission. SOURCE: Lowell C. Rose and Alec M. Gallup, “Table 27. Numerous proposals
have been suggested as ways to close the achievement gap between white,
black, and Hispanic students. As I mention some of these proposals, one at a
time, would you tell me whether you would favor or oppose it as a way to
close the achievement gap?,” in “The 36th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup
Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan,
September 2004. Reproduced with permission.
Education 163
RESOURCES
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) book, including To Assure the Free Appropriate Public
of the U.S. Department of Education (Washington, DC) Education of All Children with Disabilities; 24th Annual
is a valuable source of information about the state of Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Indivi-
education in America. Its two annual publications, Digest duals with Disabilities Act (2002); Challenge and Oppor-
of Education Statistics and The Condition of Education, tunity: The Impact of Charter Schools on School Districts
provide a detailed compilation of education statistics (2001); and A Guide to Education and ‘‘No Child Left
from pre-kindergarten through graduate school. Behind’’ (2004).
Many other NCES publications were of major assis- The National Education Goals Panel (Washington,
tance in the preparation of this book: The Nation’s Report DC) published Raising Achievement and Reducing
Card: An Introduction to the National Assessment for Gaps: Reporting Progress toward Goals for Academic
Educational Progress (NAEP); NAEP 2004 Trends in Achievement (2001).
Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Perfor-
mance in Reading and Mathematics Findings in Brief; The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO;
NAEP 2004 Trends in Academic Progress: Three Dec- Washington, DC) has published numerous studies on
ades of Student Performance in Reading and Mathe- American education, including Special Education: Fed-
matics; The Nation’s Report Card: Geography Highlights eral Actions Can Assist States in Improving Postsecond-
2001; The Nation’s Report Card: U.S. History Highlights ary Outcomes for Youth (2003).
2001; The Nation’s Report Card: Science 2000; and The The U.S. Department of Justice (Washington, DC)
Nation’s Report Card: Writing 2002. monitors the problem of crime and violence among the
Also from the NCES: National Education Longitudi- school-age population. A publication produced by the
nal Study of 1988; Overview and Inventory of State Edu- Department of Justice in collaboration with the U.S.
cation Reforms: 1990 to 2000 (2003); Projections of Department of Education was used in this book: Indica-
Education Statistics to 2013; Financing Education So That tors of School Crime and Safety: 2004. U.S. Census
No Child Is Left Behind: Determining the Costs of Improv- Bureau (Washington, DC) publications were also con-
ing Student Performance; Parent and Family Involvement sulted, including Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance
in Education 2002–03; Coming of Age in the 1990s: The Coverage in the United States: 2003.
Eighth-Grade Class of 1988 Twelve Years Later; America’s
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Charter Schools: Results from the NAEP 2003 Pilot Study;
(CDC; Atlanta, GA) published HIV/AIDS Surveillance
Issue Brief: Rates of Computer and Internet Use by Chil-
Report (2003) and Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance—
dren in Nursery School and Students in Kindergarten
United States, 2003, in CDC Surveillance Summaries
through Twelfth Grade: 2003; Distance Education Courses
(2004). Dr. Lloyd Johnston of the University of
for Public Elementary and Secondary School Students:
Michigan’s Institute for Social Research, with support
2002–03; Revenues and Expenditures for Public Elemen-
from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA),
tary and Secondary Education: School Year 2002–03; and
annually performs the Monitoring the Future study, an
Public Elementary and Secondary Students, Staff, Schools,
in-depth survey of drug use among high school and
and School Districts: School Year 2002–03.
college students. The U.S. Department of Health and
Other offices at the U.S. Department of Education Human Services, Administration for Children and
publish valuable reports that were consulted for this Families, produced the Head Start Fact Sheet (2005).
Education 165
Other important sources of information include the Tennessee Initiative for Gifted Education Reform
National Commission on Excellence in Education’s A produced the National Survey on the State Governance
Nation at Risk (1983); the National Governor’s Associa- of K12 Gifted and Talented Education (2002).
tion Time for Results; the Education Commission of the Phi Delta Kappa, a national teachers’ fraternity, pub-
States’ ECS Report to the Nation: State Implementation lishes numerous reports on the condition of education in
of the No Child Left Behind Act (2004) and What Next? the United States, including The 36th Annual Phi Delta
More Leverage for Teachers; and the Council of Chief Kappa/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes toward the
State School Officers’ Key State Education Policies on Public Schools (Phi Delta Kappas, 2004).
PK–12 Education (Washington, DC, 2004).
The College Board (New York) produced 2004 Col-
Also referenced was America’s Children: Key lege Bound Seniors: A Profile of SAT Program Test
National Indicators of Well-Being (2004), a report in an Takers; Trends in College Pricing (2004); and Trends
annual series prepared by the Interagency Forum on in Student Aid (2004), which were consulted for this
Child and Family Statistics, which provided statistics on book, as were materials from the American College Test-
early childhood education and ‘‘detached youth.’’ Child ing Program’s 2004 ACT National and State Scores.
Trends, in its 2005 Facts at a Glance (Washington, DC),
published data on teen pregnancy and births. The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) was a
valuable source of information on teacher salaries in AFT
The Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development Public Employees Compensation Survey and Survey and
printed Turning Points (Report of the Task Force on Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 2002. Further infor-
Education and Youth Adolescents, New York, 1989), mation on the teaching profession and salaries was pub-
High School Students at Risk: The Challenge of Dropouts lished by the U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor
and Pushouts, (Carnegie Corporation of New York, Statistics (Washington, DC) in Occupational Outlook
2004), as well as Great Transitions: Preparing Adoles- Handbook, 2004–2005 and National Compensation Sur-
cents for a New Century (1995). A Nation Prepared: vey: Occupational Wages in the United States, July 2004
Teachers for the 21st Century (Carnegie Forum on Edu- (August 2005).
cation and the Economy, Washington, DC) and Turning
Points 2000 (Teacher’s College Press, New York, 2000) The Institute for International Education’s Open
were also referenced for this book, as was The RAND Doors (2004 and 2005) provided data on international
Corporation’s Research Brief: Problems and Promise of students in the United States, and on American students
the American Middle School (Rand Education, Santa studying abroad.
Monica, CA, 2004). The Seventh Annual Report on School Performance
2003–04 (Edison Schools, New York); the 1998 AFT
The American High School Today: A First Report to
report Student Achievement in Edison Schools
Interested Citizens (McGraw-Hill, New York, 1959), the
(Washington, DC); A Guide to Recent Studies of School
Public Agenda report Sizing Things Up (2002), and
Effectiveness by the Edison Project and the American
School Size, Achievement, and Achievement Gaps (Edu-
Federation of Teachers (Harvard University, Cambridge,
cation Policy Analysis Archives, 2004) were used for
MA, May 1998); and An Evaluation of Student Achieve-
information on school size.
ment in Edison Schools Opened in 1995 and 1996 (Wes-
Richard M. Ingersoll, in Is There Really a Teacher tern Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, 2000) were
Shortage? (Center for the Study of Teaching and Policy, used to summarize information on for-profit schools.
Seattle, WA, 2003), reported on his study of teacher
Finally, numerous Web sites were consulted for this
attrition and migration.
book, including those of the National Education Associa-
The Consortium for Policy Research in Education tion; the National Forum to Accelerate Middle School
published A Decade of Charter Schools: From Theory Reform; the Alliance for School Choice; the Home
to Practice (Graduate School of Education, University of School Legal Defense Association; and National Teacher
Pennsylvania, 2002). Also consulted was State of the Recruitment Clearinghouse. Information on these and
Charter Movement 2005 (Charter School Leadership other organizations can be found in ‘‘Important Names
Council, 2005). and Addresses.’’
Page references in italics refer to photo- Augustus F. Hawkins–Robert T. Stafford Costs of higher education, 144–145,
graphs. References with the letter t follow- Elementary and Secondary School 148–150, 150t
ing them indicate the presence of a table. Improvement Amendments, 61 Course requirements, high school, 76–77,
The letter f indicates a figure. If more than 77, 79–80
one table or figure appears on a particular Court cases
page, the exact item number for the table or B
Baby boom, 2 Agostini v. Felton (1997), 114
figure being referenced is provided.
Bachelor’s degrees, 140 Aguilar v. Felton (1985), 114
Bagley v. Raymond School Department Bagley v. Raymond School Department
A (1999), 110 (1999), 110
Accommodations in reading performance Benson, Jackson v., 110 Committee for Public Education and
assessment, 62 Religious Liberty v. Nyquist (1973),
Bilingual education, 116
Accountability, 84, 85, 86 114
Birth rates, teenage, 100, 101t
Achievement gap, 158–159, 161(t10.16), 162t Edwards v. Aguillard (1987), 114
Bullying, 103, 103(f6.5)
Adequate Yearly Progress, 86 Elk Grove Unified School District v.
Adolescent health studies, 97–103 Michael A. Newdow (2002), 114
Adult education, 134, 134t C Epperson v. Arkansas (1968), 114
Advanced courses, 77, 79f Career and technical education, 27–28, 49 Jackson v. Benson, 110
Agostini v. Felton (1997), 114 Career outlook for teachers, 122 Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District
Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied (2005), 115
Aguilar v. Felton (1985), 114
Technology Education Act, 27 Kotterman v. Killian, 110
Aguillard, Edwards v. (1987), 114
Carnegie Council on Adolescent Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925), 109
AIDS, 100–101, 102t
Development, 94 Strout v. Albanese (1999), 110
Albanese, Strout v. (1999), 110
Carnegie units, 76, 77f, 78t–79t Creationism, 114–115
Alcohol use, 99, 100t, 152
Castle, Mike, 27 Crime against teachers, 124–125, 125f
Alliance for Equity in Higher Education,
Certification, teacher, 121–122
138
Charter School Expansion Act, 106
Alternative schools, 93–94 D
Charter schools, 85, 106–108, 108f
American College Test, 80–82, 82(t4.12), Days in attendance, 25, 35(f2.9)
82(t4.13) Church and state, separation of, 110,
113–115 Definitions
American Federation of Teachers, 87–88 at-risk students, 93
Clinton, Bill, 83
Americans with Disabilities Act, 49 gifted and talented students, 49–51
College entrance examinations, 80–82,
Appropriations, Head Start program, 55, Degrees
82(t4.12), 82(t4.13)
58t–59t
Colleges. See Higher education completion data, 133–134, 134f
Arkansas, Epperson v. (1968), 114
Committee for Public Education and degrees conferred, by control of
Associate degrees, 140 institution, level of degree, and
Religious Liberty v. Nyquist (1973), 114
At-risk students discipline division, 145t
Computers
charter schools, 107 degrees conferred by level of degree
high school exit examination for
detached youth, 97, 97f computer skills, 81f and sex of student, 143t–144t
dropouts, 94–97 history performance test scores and first-professional degrees conferred in
Attainment, educational. See Educational use of, 75 dentistry, medicine, and law,
attainment mathematics performance scores and, 146t–147t
Attendance 71, 72(f4.10) race/ethnicity, 144f
compulsory, 26–27 in schools, 115–116, 115t–116t Dentistry, 146t–147t
days in attendance, 25, 35(f2.9) Content standards, 61 Detached youth, 97, 97f
Education 167
Disabled children Elk Grove Unified School District Charter School Expansion Act, 106
career and technical education, 49 v. Michael A. Newdow (2002), 114 charter schools, 107–108
computer and Internet use, 115t–116t Employment disabled, programs for the, 42t–43t
education services, 47t disabled students, 49 Elementary and Secondary Education
exiting special education, 49, 50f, 51t dropouts, 95–96 Act, 84
federally supported programs, 42t–43t work-related courses, adults taking, 134t low-income school districts, 84, 93
high school completion rates, 49, 52t English No Child Left Behind Act, 84, 85
inclusion programs, 44, 47–48 advanced courses, 79f as percentage of total funding, 14
Individuals with Disabilities high school exit examinations, 81f teacher and principal training and
Education Act, 41, 44, 48f high school graduation requirements, recruiting fund, 124
learning disabilities, 44 77(f4.12), 78t, 79t Felton, Agostini v. (1997), 114
performance standards, 48–49, 48t, public opinion on emphasis on, Felton, Aguilar v. (1985), 114
49t, 91(t5.6) 160(t10.12) Fights, 101
preprimary programs, 49 English as a Second Language programs, 53 Financial assistance, 148–150
Distance education, 116, 117t, 150–151, 153t English Language Learners, 93 First-professional degrees, 140, 142t
Diversity, 14 English proficiency, 85 For-profit schools, 108–109
Doctoral degrees, 140 Enrollment Foreign language courses, 79f
Dover Area School District, Kitzmiller v. degree levels and higher education Free lunch eligibility, 52–53
(2005), 115 enrollment, 138, 140 Funding
Dropouts distance education, 153t Charter School Expansion Act, 106
at-risk students, 94–97 first-professional, 142t charter schools, 107–108
disabled students, 49, 52t geographic regions, 17f, 18t–19t disabled, programs for the, 42t–43t
economically disadvantaged students, 52 graduate schools, 141t low-income school districts, 84, 93
by race/ethnicity, 54f Head Start, 57(t3.11), 58t–59t No Child Left Behind Act, 84, 85
by sex and race/ethnicity, 53t higher education, 127, 128(f9.1), 129t, sources, 14, 16–17
Drug use. See Substance abuse 130t–132t, 139t
state accountability, 84
by level and control of institution, 2t, teacher and principal training and
9t–10t recruiting, 124
E preprimary programs, 15t–16t
Early childhood activities, 64–65, 66f, 66t Title I, 52, 54t–55t, 56t–57t
private schools, 31t, 32f Title IV, 54t–55t
Early childhood education. See projections, 6, 14f
Preprimary programs
public and private schools, 33t
Earnings and salaries
public schools by type and size of G
dropouts, 96 school, 20t GED diplomas, 27
faculty, 144, 149(t9.13) by race/ethnicity, 21t–22t Gender
teachers, 122–124, 123t by race/ethnicity, sex, and age, 7t–8t American College Test scores, 82(t4.12)
Echo effect, 2 trends, 1–2 bullying, 103
Economically disadvantaged students, Epperson v. Arkansas (1968), 114 Carnegie unit requirements, 78t
51–53 charter school students, 107, 108f
Evolution, 114–115
Edison Project, 108–109 college entrance test scores, 80
Exit examinations, high school, 77, 79–80,
Education Commission of the States, 80f, 81f, 82(t4.11) computer and Internet use, 115t–116t
85–86 computers in schools, 115
Expenditures
Education Flexibility Partnership Act, degrees conferred by degree-granting
economically disadvantaged students, 52
106 institutions, 143t–144t
elementary and secondary education, 26f
Education for All Handicapped Children dropouts, 53t
Act. See Individuals with Disabilities by enrollment and type of locale,
Education Act 18t–19t early childhood activities, 66t
Education Summit, 83, 105–106 international comparisons, 21–22 educational attainment, 3t–5t, 6
Educational attainment per-pupil spending, 17, 21 enrollment, 7t–8t
gender, 6 as percentage of GDP, by country, 28f, fights in school, 101
29t, 30t higher education enrollment, 130t–132t
high school completion, 1
public schools, 27f Historically Black College and
higher education, 1, 127
total education spending, 6, 11t University students, 137t–138t
income by, 151(f9.7)
Experience, teacher, 122 income by educational attainment,
persons age 25 and over, 6f, 128(f9.2) 151(f 9.7)
race/ethnicity, 2, 6 National Assessment of Educational
race/ethnicity and sex, 3t–5t F Progress geography scores, 74
unemployment, 95t–96t, 152f Faculty, higher education, 140, 143–144, National Assessment of Educational
years of school completed, 151(f 9.6) 148t–149t, 149(t9.13) Progress history scores, 75
Edwards v. Aguillard (1987), 114 Faith-based organizations, 115 National Assessment of Educational
Elementary and Secondary Education Family risk factors, 65, 67f Progress mathematics scores,
Act, 84, 106 Federal funding 69, 70