When you do nothing you feel overwhelmed and powerless. But when you get involved you feel the sense of hope and accomplishment that comes from knowing you are working to make things better.
-Maya Angelou, American Poet and Activist, 1928 – 2014
"Americans across major racial and ethnic groups became better educated over the past decade, though significant gaps remain in the rates at which blacks and Hispanics earn a high school diploma or college degree." This is the conclusion of a Brookings Institution census analysis reported in an Education Week (May 19, 2010) article, "Education Attainment Rises for Americans Across Race, Ethnicity."
"The percentage of both Hispanic and black adults, age 25 and older, who hold at least a high school diploma climbed by about 8 percentage points between 2000 and 2008.... For Hispanics it reached 61 percent, and for African-Americans, 81 percent. But those numbers were still well below the 90 percent of white adults with at least that credential.
While these increases are welcome, there is an underlying concern pointed out in the Brookings report: as minority groups, particularly Hispanics, become a much larger share of the U.S. population, "... the nation's overall education attainment levels could slip, given how much ground Latinos still need to make up."
Beginnings Workshops Book #1 - Literacy includes over 20 practical articles by some of the field's most respected experts on...
- Building Literacy
- Talking
- Multi-Language Programs
- Bilingual Education
- Storytelling
Comments (2)
Displaying All 2 CommentsUnited States
This is interesting but the USA is made up of more than just Hispanics and African Americans, what about the other minorities such as Native Americans? Talk about discrepancy ?!?!
Shishu Vikash Kendra
Kolkata, West Bengal, India
I will be very happy if there will be no difference between white and black .
And it is to be done from the early childhood development .
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