Conquering the Belief Gap in Our Schools
Conquering the Belief Gap in Our Schools
Among the most significant resources our students require is our faith
in them
As early as preschool, teachers rely on harmful stereotypes of Black children. This kind of unconscious stereotyping is called implicit bias. While these biases may be unintentional the expectations teachers hold for students can significantly affect student outcomes and success.
Research in support of the "word gap" comes from landmark studies at the University of Kansas and Stanford University, which reveal that by the time a low-income child reaches the age of three they have potentially heard 30 million fewer words than peers who come from higher socioeconomic backgrounds. These findings have huge implications for school readiness and America’s pronounced achievement gap that persists among poor children and children of color.
-Education Post
[The Belief Gap] is the persistent and deep divide between what parents believe their children are capable of and what some elected leadership, through word and deed, believe those very same kids can do.
While I think that addressing the Belief Gap is necessary, I should say that I do not think it is sufficient in the absence of other large-scale public policy efforts to shrink income inequality, protect the civil rights of students and families, and address entrenched institutional racism.
-Chris Barbic
While I think that addressing the Belief Gap is necessary, I should say that I do not think it is sufficient in the absence of other large-scale public policy efforts to shrink income inequality, protect the civil rights of students and families, and address entrenched institutional racism.
-James Noonan
Research in support of the "word gap" comes from landmark studies at the University of Kansas and Stanford University, which reveal that by the time a low-income child reaches the age of three they have potentially heard 30 million fewer words than peers who come from higher socioeconomic backgrounds. These findings have huge implications for school readiness and America’s pronounced achievement gap that persists among poor children and children of color.
In recent years, a new catchphrase that also addresses academic
disparities has gained traction with many teachers, policy analysts, and
education activists. It is known as "the belief gap". As Harvard University
researcher and education policy expert Dr. James Noonan notes, the concept of
the belief gap has permeating education reform circles – including here in the
Twin Cities – for many years, but has become even more prominent in the past
half-decade.
According to journalist Libby Nelson, an example of the belief gap
in practice can be explained like this:
When black teachers and white teachers are asked to sum up high
school students potential, while teachers are much less likely to see black
students as college material. And that’s true even when they’re discussing the
same students.
This is what former President George W. Bush once referred to as
“the soft bigotry of low expectations.” The belief gap has become a central
element in the debate over charter schools versus public schools and a number
of critics have challenged the notion of the belief gap, even deriding it as an
attempt to “bolster the stance of reformers.” Yet as Noonan and Nelson highlight,
the research behind the belief gap is “rooted in empirical evidence.” They both
refer the famous 1968 experiment by Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson which
is known as “The Pygmalion Effect.”
In this project, the researchers administered IQ tests at the
start of the school year to students at Oak Elementary in California. Rosenthal
and Jacobson then randomly selected twenty percent of the test subjects and
informed teachers that the students in this group “could be expected to
outperform their classmates.” When the academic year was completed, their
research found that these students in fact did “outperform their peers,
suggesting that teachers may have viewed these students differently and treated
them accordingly.”
Many subsequent studies have further validated the research of
Rosenthal and Jacobson, including data published in American Psychologist,
Demography, Education Research and
Review, The Society for Research in
Child Development, and The Future of
Children, among numerous other journals. And a 2011 editorial in the Twin Cities Daily Planet cited examples
of elementary schools all over the nation where the “belief” of parents,
teachers, and administrators has made an indelible impact.
One such school is George Hall Elementary in Mobile, Alabama,
where more than 90 percent
of the student body is poor and African American. In 2004, less than half of Hall’s students were exceeding the minimum standards. However, by 2011, with some effort, determination, and of course belief, 94 percent of students at George Hall were performing in the “advanced” range.
of the student body is poor and African American. In 2004, less than half of Hall’s students were exceeding the minimum standards. However, by 2011, with some effort, determination, and of course belief, 94 percent of students at George Hall were performing in the “advanced” range.
As the Twin Cities Daily Planet
profoundly reveals:
If you scan the national education landscape and ask “what works”
you’ll find successful schools focus on what they can control. They reflect on
what they can change and then change it. They use data to quickly adjust their
practices. Their staff redesign schools to fit the needs of the children they
serve rather than conveniences that serve themselves. More than anything, they
believe that all children can thrive academically. In their worldview
demography is not destiny, and equity is more than a boiler plate.
Now, as James Noonan warns above, belief, in and of itself, is not the only element in the struggle to achieve educational
equity. There are still the complicated issues of social and educational
policy, the need to reduce racial and economic disparities, the defense of
human rights, and the dismantling of systematic racism. But belief, it would
seem, is a start.
Tony Kiene is the Executive Writer at Community Action Partnership of Ramsey & Washington Counties. A graduate of both the University of Kansas (Go Jayhawks!) and the University of Oregon (Go Ducks!), Tony is a passionate advocate for social change and achieving equity in our communities.
Comments
Post a Comment