The Smartest Kids in the World (35 page)

BOOK: The Smartest Kids in the World
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Oklahoma State Department of Education.
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Oklahoma State Department of Education.
Sallisaw Public School No Child Left Behind Act Annual Report Card 2010-2011.
Oklahoma City, 2011.

Oklahoma State Department of Education.
Superintendent’s Salary Listing.
Oklahoma City, 2011.

Oklahoma Commission for Teacher Preparation,
Teacher Preparation Inventory 2012.
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Orfield, Gary, and Chungmei Lee.
Historic Reversals, Accelerating Resegregation, and the Need for New Integration Strategies.
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——. “Teacher, Leave Those Kids Alone.”
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——. “What Makes a Great Teacher?”
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Suh-young, Yun, and Na Jeong-ju. “Nation Holds Breath for Most Crucial Test.”
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Suh-young, Y. “My Dream Is to Reshape Korea’s Education.”
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Table B.1.71: Average combined mathematics literacy scores of 15-year-old students, by national quartiles of the PISA index of economic, social and cultural status (ESCS) and jurisdiction: 2009.
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. Accessed 2012.

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U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics.
Digest of Education Statistics, 2010: Table 45: Children 3 to 21 years old served under Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, Part B, by type of disability: Selected years, 1976-77 through 2008-09.

U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics.
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
Various years, 1990–2011, Mathematics Assessments.

U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics.
Table 8: Average number of public school teachers and average number of public school teachers who were dismissed in the previous year or did not have their contracts renewed based on poor performance, by tenure status of teachers and state: 2007–08
. Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS), Public School District Data File, 2007–08.

U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics.
Table 194: Current expenditure per pupil in average daily attendance in public elementary and secondary schools, by state or jurisdiction.
Various years, 1959-60 through 2007-8.

U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics.
Table 135: American College Testing (ACT) Score Averages, by Sex: 1970-1997.

U.S. News and World Report.
“College Ranking Lists: Top 100 Lowest Acceptance Rates, Fall 2011.” Accessed December 2012.

Walsh, Kate, and Christopher O. Tracy.
Increasing the Odds: How Good Policies Can Yield
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Walsh, Kate, Deborah Glaser, and Danielle Dunne Wilcox.
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. Washington, DC: National Council on Teacher Quality, 2006.

Wang, Aubrey, Ashaki Coleman, Richard Coley, and Richard Phelps.
Preparing Teachers Around the World.
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Whelan, Fenton.
Lessons Learned: How Good Policies Produce Better Schools.
London: Fenton Whelan, 2009, p. 7.

Window & Door.
“Therma-Tru to Close Oklahoma Manufacturing Facility.” January 26, 2009.

Winerip, Michael. “Despite Focus on Data, Standards for Diploma May Still Lack Rigor.”
New York Times
, February 5, 2012.

Won, Seoung Joun, and Seunghee Han. “Out-of-School Activities and Achievement Among Middle School Students in the U.S. and South Korea.”
Journal of Advanced Academics
21 no. 4 (August 2010): 628-661.

World Economic Forum.
The Global Competitiveness Report 2012-2013: Full Data Edition.
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Yoon, Ja-young. “Foreign Investors Eye Education Market.”
The Korea Times,
September 12, 2008.

Yun, Suh-young. “ ‘My Dream Is to Reshape Korea’s Education.’ ”
The Korea Times,
September 21, 2011.

notes

prologue: the mystery

Crap:
Ripley, “Rhee Tackles Classroom Challenge.”

Kimball Elementary School:
Ripley, “What Makes a Great Teacher?” Unemployment rate for Ward 7 comes from the D.C. Strategic Workforce Investment Plan.

Dance of the Nations:
The graphic, updated in July 2012 for this book, was also scheduled to appear in Hanushek and Woessmann’s forthcoming book,
The Knowledge Capital of Nations
.

American kids were better off:
OECD,
PISA 2009 Results (Vol. II)
, Table II.1.1, 152.

Eighteenth in math:
The PISA test, the most sophisticated international test of teenagers’ critical thinking skills, is administered by the OECD. For this book, I relied primarily, though not exclusively, on PISA data. In an effort to be fair and consistent, I did not include non-countries (i.e. Hong Kong, Shanghai, or Macao-China) when I derived rankings from PISA data.

Also, I considered countries with exactly the same average PISA score to occupy the same ranking. (In other words, since the most affluent kids in Australia and Germany had the same mean math score, I considered both countries to rank about tenth in the world, not tenth and eleventh.)

The PISA test does not collect data on parental income per se, partly because students do not generally know how much money their parents earn. The test does however measure socioeconomic status by asking students about their parents’ education levels, occupations, and the number of books and computers in their home, and so on. Their answers make up something that the OECD calls the index of students’ economic, social,
and cultural status (ESCS). Students’ answers to these kinds of questions tend to be surprisingly accurate—and the results can better predict educational success than income alone.

This index reveals that American kids who rank in the top quartile on the ESCS index ranked eighteenth in math in 2009 compared to kids in the top quartile around the world (see U.S. Department of Education,
Table B.1.71
at
http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/international/tables/B_1_71.asp
).

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