Just in time for Christmas, here’s some good news for kids, from Pamela Davis-Kean and Justin Jager:
The achievement gap has long been the focus of educational research, policy, and intervention. The authors took a new approach to examining the achievement gap by examining achievement trajectories within each racial group. To identify these trajectories they used the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study–Kindergarten Cohort, which is a nationally representative sample of students in kindergarten through Grade 5. In the analyses, the authors found heterogeneity within each racial group in mathematics and reading achievement, suggesting that there are in fact achievement gaps within each race/ethnicity group. The authors also found that there are groups that catch up to the highest achieving groups by Grade 5, suggesting a positive impact of schooling on particular subgroups of children. The authors discuss the various trajectories that have been found in each racial group and the implications this has for future research on the achievement gap.
“In the analyses, the authors found heterogeneity within each racial group in mathematics and reading achievement, suggesting that there are in fact achievement gaps within each race/ethnicity group.”
Social Science Surprise of the year!
Sorry. Merry holidays to all!
“the authors found heterogeneity within each racial group”
P.S. They don’t all look alike either.
+1
Why is this noteworthy at all. (a) Groups are heterogeneous (b) Ranking between groups sometimes changes
The big change in average test scores in the 21st Century has been Asians pulling away from whites to become the clear #1.
SAT score gaps 1987 to 2010, showing Asians pulling away:
http://isteve.blogspot.com/2011/09/unsilenced-silence-blog-has-good-graph.html