Most Minnesota schools still have a lot of work to do to cut the disparity between white and minority students' proficiency in reading and math in half by 2017, according to new data released Tuesday by the state Department of Education.
Nonetheless, Minnesota education officials say the data give them hope that the state's persistent achievement gap may be relenting. "For the first time, we have concrete goals around gaps, and are letting our school leaders know exactly how far they need to go to be fully on track to close these gaps," said Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius. "When you look at the numbers, you begin to realize not only how far we've come, but that our goal of reducing these disparities is actually within our reach and very doable."
The state's ambitious goal is laid out in its waiver to the federal No Child Left Behind law.
The data released Tuesday reflects proficiency rates in reading and math for white and nonwhite students, students with limited English proficiency, and those enrolled in special education programs.
School officials were notified this week of whether they had met 2013's goals.
Statewide, 40 percent of school districts met their targets for math for every subgroup of students. In reading, 43 percent of districts met the targets in every category.
Two of the state's most racially and economically diverse districts — Minneapolis and St. Paul — fell short in almost every student category.
Minneapolis, for example, hit the state's proficiency target for only its white students. St. Paul public schools met the state targets only for white students and those with limited English proficiency. "It's certainly right for the state to acknowledge the progress that's been made in closing the achievement gap, but it's also disingenuous to ignore the ongoing challenges, particularly in areas where you see the greatest concentration of underserved kids," said Daniel Sellers, executive director of MinnCAN, a Twin Cities group pushing for education reform.