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Media Advisory
April 18, 2007
Contact: Jayne Bigelsen
(212) 382-6655

Closing the Educational Achievement Gap: No Child Left Behind, De Facto Segregation, and the Quest for Educational Equality

When: Wednesday May 2 nd, 6:30 pm

Where: House of the Association, 42 West 44th Street.

Closing the educational achievement gap is a hugely important issue for our democracy, and we are at a critical moment: this year, Congress is slated to consider the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act, the sweeping federal overhaul of the education system, while Governor Spitzer and Mayor Bloomberg pursue ambitious agendas for improving education. Additionally, the Supreme Court will decide whether school districts have the right to take voluntary steps to remedy de facto segregation.

This program will feature Andres Alonso, the deputy chancellor for teaching and learning at the New York City Department of Education, Edwin Darden, Director of Educational Policy at Appleseed, Douglas Mesecar, the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary at the US Department of Education, Dennis Parker, Director of the Racial Justice Program at the ACLU, Sheila Evans-Tranumn, Associate Commissioner of the New York State Education Department, and Randi Weingarten, President of the United Federation of Teachers. Moderating will be Anthony DePalma, from the New York Times.

Topics under discussion on this night will include:

  • Is No Child Left Behind (NCLB) meeting its goal of closing the achievement gap?
  • Should NCLB be reauthorized, and what changes should be made?
  • What educational policies will work to close the achievement gap? Do some of the educational policies currently being used discriminate against the low-income, largely minority children they attempt to help?
  • Must policy makers address the de facto segregation of our urban schools as part of the effort to provide equality of educational opportunity?

This event will have a particular focus on New York City , but the issues at hand are relevant across the country. For more information, please see www.nycbar.org.


About the Association
The New York City Bar Association (www.nycbar.org) was founded in 1870, and since then has been dedicated to maintaining the high ethical standards of the profession, promoting reform of the law, and providing service to the profession and the public. The Association continues to work for political, legal and social reform, while implementing innovative means to help the disadvantaged. Protecting the public’s welfare remains one of the Association’s highest priorities.

 

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