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You are here: Home Newsroom Education News Roundup Archive 2011 April 2011 A lesson in mediocrity: California’s schools show how direct democracy can destroy accountability

A lesson in mediocrity: California’s schools show how direct democracy can destroy accountability

  • 04-20-2011
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The Economist

EVERYTHING ABOUT CALIFORNIA’S school system is complicated, starting with the question of how bad its public schools are. Comparisons show that students in California fare worse than the national average in mathematics, reading, science and writing. But the numbers are unfair, says John Mockler, an expert in Californian education who has been following its fortunes since the 1960s. For instance, half of California’s pupils are Hispanic, and 40% of those hardly speak English. Most other states don’t face this problem. Nonetheless, there is a broad consensus that California’s public schools are not what they could be, nor what they used to be. California ranks 47th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia in spending per pupil ($7,886, against an average of $11,397). It ranks last in the number of students per teacher: (more...)

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