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June 5, 2013

The number of high-poverty schools increases by about 60 percent

Jill Barshay:

Poverty is getting so concentrated in America that one out of five public schools was classified as as a "high-poverty" school in 2011 by the U.S. Department of Education. To win this unwelcome designation, 75 percent or more of an elementary, middle or high school's students qualified for free or reduced-price lunch. About a decade earlier, in 2000, only one in eight public schools was deemed to be high poverty. That's about a 60 percent increase in the number of very poor schools!

This figure was part of a large data report, The Condition of Education 2013, released by the National Center for Education Statistics on May 23, 2013. There's a lot to chew on in it. But school poverty jumped out at me as a really depressing data point showing the growing income inequality in America.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at June 5, 2013 1:56 AM
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