Florida is one of only three states that narrowed the black-white achievement gap in fourth grade reading between 1992 and 2007, and one of only 15 that narrowed the gap in fourth grade math, according to a report released this morning by the National Center for Education Statistics.
In fourth grade reading, only Florida, Delaware and New Jersey showed increased scores for both black and white students and a narrowing gap, said the report, using scores from the National Assessment of Educational Progress.
In fourth grade math, Florida pulled off the same feat along with Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Arkansas and Louisiana in the South.
In eighth grade math, Florida was not among the four states that showed a narrowing achievement gap, but was among many that showed increased scores for both black and white students.
In eighth grade reading, no states showed a significantly narrowing gap between 1998 and 2007.
The bigger picture is sobering: Between 1992 and 2007, the achievement gap between black and white fourth graders in reading narrowed 5 points nationally. At that rate, we’ll reach parity in 75 years.
In Florida, it narrowed by 9 points.
In a written statement, Florida Education Commissioner Eric J. Smith said the NCES report represented "tremendous progress for our state" but also "highlighted that we still have much more work to do."
- Ron Matus, state education reporter


Get inside the world of Florida education with St. Petersburg Times staff writer Jeffrey S. Solochek and the rest of the Times education reporting team. We'll bring you up-to-date information about the latest education trends, fads and news and dig deep into Tampa Bay area school issues.
I am afraid we are dumbing education down to make other feel adequate. Well I guess that is why we have private school
Posted by: Tom | July 15, 2009 at 01:27 PM
Sure is closing the gap. The achievement of the white demographic and the hardworking minority students drops as the teachers' time is dominated by students representing a black demographic whose parents and community care little about their children's education. For the majority of folks in this community, it's all about the next welfare hand-out. Why get an education when all your family's basic needs (food, utilities, housing, etc... is paid for by the government. ) No one wins.
Posted by: formerAfAmpinellasteach | July 15, 2009 at 08:57 AM
more money down the drain.
thought the Republicans were all about "return on investment"?
if that's the case we're (taxpayers) definately not getting our bang for our buck.
when will voters and taxpayers get their heads out of their doo doo holes?
FloriDUH.....last in education....first in corruption!
Posted by: terminator | July 14, 2009 at 12:39 PM
Parents and a community that valued education would be the quickest way to close the gap.
Posted by: flateacher | July 14, 2009 at 12:00 PM
Kids need to come to school ready and willing to learn!!!! Those that do achieve more and faster.
Posted by: jwt | July 14, 2009 at 10:23 AM