Classroom Inequality
Higher Education
Integration
No Child Left Behind
Public Opinion
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In Plain Sight: Simple, Difficult Lessons from New Jersey's Expensive Effort to Close the Achievement Gap
Gordon MacInnes, Century Foundation Press, 1/9/2009
Improving On No Child Left Behind: Getting Education Reform Back on Track
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Century Foundation Press, 10/15/2008
America's Untapped Resource
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Century Foundation Press, 1/14/2004
Public School Choice vs. Private School Vouchers
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Century Foundation Press, 9/24/2003
Can Separate Be Equal? The Overlooked Flaw at the Center of No Child Left Behind
Richard D. Kahlenberg, The Century Foundation, 4/23/2004
Divided We Fail: Coming Together through Public School Choice
The Century Foundation, Century Foundation Press, 9/18/2002
All Together Now
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Brookings Institution Press, 2/15/2001
A Notion at Risk
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Century Foundation Press, 9/15/2000
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Closing the Achievement Gap Through Additional Funding, High Quality Instruction, and a Focus on Early Literacy: Lessons From New Jersey Districts
The Century Foundation & The Center for American Progress
4/7/2009  11:30am to 1:30pm
1333 H St. NW, 10th Floor

Opening Remarks:

Robin Chait, Associate Director for Teacher Quality, Center for American Progress

Featured Panelists:

Gordon MacInnes, Fellow, The Century Foundation and Author, In Plain Sight, Simple Difficult Lessons from New Jersey's Expensive Effort to Close the Achievement Gap
Sara Mead, Senior Research Fellow, New America Foundation
Pablo Munoz, Superintendent, Elizabeth Public Schools, Elizabeth, New Jersey

Discussion Moderated by:

Greg Anrig, Vice President for Policy, The Century Foundation

Since 2002, the New Jersey State Department of Education has partnered with city school districts in an attempt to close the achievement gap between poor, minority students in urban districts and their counterparts in the predominantly white, affluent suburban districts. Created as a result of the landmark New Jersey Supreme Court case Abbott v. Burke, the program provided generous funding to improve educational outcomes in poor districts. Many of the state’s poorest school districts made dramatic progress by focusing on high-quality instruction and introducing effective early literacy practices. Only in Massachusetts did fourth graders score higher than those in more diverse New Jersey on the 2007 National Assessment of Educational Progress reading test. The lessons from these New Jersey districts apply in any American city that has concentrations of poor children in failing school districts.

On April 7, The Center for American Progress and The Century Foundation held a discussion of the book In Plain Sight, Simple, Difficult Lessons from New Jersey's Expensive Effort to Close the Achievement Gap by Gordon MacInnes. The author and our expert panelists will discuss the lessons learned by these districts as well as the implications for state and federal policy.

Highlight Video

Gap

Discussion Video

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Discussion Video

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Q&A Video

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Order In Plain Sight: Simple, Difficult Lessons from New Jersey's Expensive Effort to Close the Achievement Gap

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