The Interdisciplinary Resource  
  Subscribe
Login
 
 
     
Search  
Sort by:
Results Listed:
Date Range:
  Advanced Search
 
The World & I eLibrary

Teacher's Corner

World Gallery

Global Culture Studies (at homepage)

 
 
Social Studies

Language Arts

Science


The Arts

Spanish
 
 
Crossword Puzzle
 
 
American Indian Heritage
American Waves
Biographies
Ceremonies/Festivities
Diversity in America
Eye on the High Court
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Genes & Biotechnology
Impacts
Media in Review
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Poetry
Point/Counterpoint
Profiles in Character
Science and Spirituality
Shedding Light on Islam
Speech & Debate
The Civil War
The U.S. Constitution
Traveling the Globe
Worldwide Folktales
World of Nature
Writers & Writing

 

Black Americans and the Educational Wasteland of Our Public Schools


Article # : 10986 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 6 / 1986  4,849 Words
Author : J.A. Parker

       American public education is a disaster whose steady decline has had an adverse impact upon citizens of all races. In the case of the black community, it has been particularly devastating.
       
        Although we have compulsory education, and spend more money per student than we have ever spent before--and far more than is spent by any other country--we have an illiteracy rate which is skyrocketing: 20 percent of adults are functionally illiterate as are 13 percent of all 17-year-olds. There is, in addition, a 32 percent marginal illiteracy rate for adults and minority youth illiteracy may run as high as 40 percent. There is, in addition, a 32 percent marginal illiteracy rate for adults and minority youth illiteracy may run as high as 40 percent. There is an increase of 2.3 million adult illiterates each year.
       
        These statistics--and others which are equally disturbing--can be found in the report "A Nation At Risk,:" issued by the U.S. Department of Education.
       
        Author Jonathan Kozol, in his Illiterate America, argues that the figure he has adopted--60 million illiterate and semi-literate adult Americans--is a conservative estimate. It is his view that more than $250 billion is lost in income by people 25 to 35 years old who have less than high school level skills.
       
        Not only are millions of adults unable to read a newspaper, but they also cannot read a product label at the grocery store or a driver's license manual. Perhaps as many as three out of four unemployed Americans--a group in which blacks are over-represented--are illiterate.
       
        The failure of our public elementary and high schools to teach basic literacy skills has cost the military close to $40 million from fiscal year 1982 to 1984 to teach reading to recruits, who have already received high school diplomas. According to military statistics, the cost is expected to continue to rise into the 1990s. Basic reading skills programs like the ones in the military may be fund in government agencies and throughout private business and industry.
       
        A pound of cure
       
        The Carnegie Foundation recently released a 224-page report entitled "Corporate classroom." It reports that corporations are spending $40 billion on instruction which ranges from remedial work to doctoral programs. The author of the report said that, "The proliferation of remedial work… implies an indictment of the schools for graduating students who lack the fundamentals needed to perform well on almost any job." About three-quarters of major U.S. corporations reported that they had such classes.
       
        The 18-member bipartisan National Commission on Excellence in Education declared in its landmark 1983 report that:
       
        Educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and as a people. If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war. As it stands, we have allowed this to happen to
... Read Full Article
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2008 The World & I Online. All rights reserved.