Blueprint For Connecticut Public Schools

Hartford Courant:

This state does well in schooling better-off suburban children. But it fails low-income children, who are mostly concentrated in city schools. Poor students in the fourth and eighth grades in Connecticut score three grade levels below their more comfortable peers — the worst achievement gap in the nation — even though this state is among the highest per-pupil spenders in the nation.
Connecticut’s goals for the next decade, starting in 2011, should be to end that terrible distinction and reach the No. 1 spot on “the nation’s report card,” the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Gov.-elect Dan Malloy’s choice of education commissioner will be critical.
The legislature and Board of Education made commendable strides in 2010 by increasing pre-K funding and adding more rigorous high school graduation requirements in math, science and languages, among other things.


Fast Lane Literacy by sedso