In an interview, Angel Harris, author of Kids Don't Want to Fail: Oppositional Culture and the Black-White Achievement Gap, who'd been in the bottom tenth of the students in high school, describes the moment in college when a professor talked about listing a child's behaviors and letting a listener draw their own conclusions, rather than just calling the child bad-- this level of empiricism was a revelation to Harris and permanently changed the way he thought. This starts about 3 minutes into the recording and only runs for about five minutes.
His general point is that a lot of the gap between black and white students can be explained by teachers giving up on the black students-- he's got studies-- and that a lot of what looks like oppositional behavior is actually frustration from students who are being expected to learn things that they weren't given the prior education to understand.
I'd say his more general point is to have more respect for the idea that people are showing ordinary human reactions to their situations rather than there being something weird about them explaining what they're doing.
While what you point out is worth reading and it is definitely a real phenomena, the following quote from the link:
Sends bad signals about the author to me. Far too much ink has already been and is being spilled and far too much effort wasted on the same ineffectual tactics and the same recycled few theories.
No friends. Closing The Gap is not the most important issue which educators should worry about. While its perfectly possible I've been reading too much Steve Sailer or was too impressed with Murray's Real Education, what isn't possible is that Closing The Gap is low hanging fruit. And there is low hanging fruit in education.
What is further more unlikely is that we haven't yet hit diminishing or perhaps even negative returns with the current approaches. And don't think for a moment anyone's actually come up with anything new in the last decade or so, the only new thing is a fresh mix of applause lights and false rationalizations as to why it "works" and even these are more and more just reruns. The last 20 years in particular have seen schemes that have provided ever greater incentives for fraud on a massive scale in schools (don't think the schools haven't responded) and cooking up various tests like the SAT to try and Close The Gap as much as possible on paper without sacrificing too much of their predictive value.
We have been on this merry go round before. So. Many. Times.
I can't even muster the will to try and RP what Charlie Sheen would say.
Upvoted for this. There are just so many counter indications in so many countries both developed and developing for such a long period of time that we should have realized that closing the gap is hard and additional increases in s... (read more)