| Creating Crisis |
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How California Teaching Policies Aggravate Racial Inequality in Public Schools. © Applied Research Center, August 1999. Principal Researchers: Terry Keleher, Libero Della Piana & Manijeh Fat. Executive SummaryCalifornia has a teaching crisis. In the summer of 1999, school district recruiters scrambled to find 27,000 new teachers. In the past year, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing helped fill the vacancies by issuing a record 33,994 emergency teaching permits and credential waivers.At the same time that schools are searching for these new teachers, they are educating a more and more racially and culturally diverse population; today 60% of California’s public school students are of color, frequently born into homes where English is a second language, and often foreign-born themselves. Given the schools’ needs, it would seem that state education officials and local districts would move decisively to sweep away barriers to recruitment, and especially recruitment of teachers of color. Instead, teacher training programs are full of roadblocks to the aspiring teacher – including high costs, standardized tests that bear no measurable relationship to teaching success, and low pay and lack of respect for those who do jump the hurdles. Creating Crisis focuses on three key areas: |
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ARC's Facing Race Conference was featured in the San Francisco Chronicle!The writer focused on our "Post-Election Reflections" panel. Rinku Sen Named an UTNE VisionarySen is one of 50 who made the list Watch Rinku Sen on Meet the BloggersThe 'Accidental American' authors interviewed on Tavis SmileyWatch a clip of Rinku Sen and Fekkak Mamdouh discussing their book, The Accidental American, on The Tavis Smiley Show. |