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He noted that half of the more than 1 million students who drop out of school in the United States each year are from just 100 school districts. What can make a difference for those kids? Raikes wants to find out. The foundation also is investing money to improve data collection in public schools
-- in part, to better find out what works -- and to help community colleges improve graduation rates. Raikes talked of a study of the Los Angeles Unified School District after an initiative to reduce class sizes led to a liberalization of rules on who could be hired to teach. The district found that whether a teacher had a certificate had no effect on student achievement. Raikes said the district found that putting a great teacher in a low-income school helped students advance a grade and a half in one year. An ineffective teacher in a high-income school held student achievement back to about half a grade of progress in a year. "We really have to focus classroom-by-classroom," said Jim Morris, chief of staff at the L.A. district. "Every teacher matters just like every student matters." Morris said the most important factor to successful schools is excellent teachers and supporting what they do in the classroom. The Harvard researcher who studied the Los Angeles district, Thomas J. Kane, now works for the Gates Foundation as deputy director of education for data and research. ___ On the Net: Gates Foundation: L.A. Unified School District: http://snurl.com/laschl
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/
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