IN THE NEWS

Thomas Friedman, "Swimming without a suit," New York Times  
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"Study tallies education gap's effect on GDP," Wall Street Journal 
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Clive Crook, "America's classroom equality battle," Financial Times 
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The economic impact of the achievement gap in America's schools

 

"The economic impact of the achievement gap in America's schools" examines the dimensions and economic impact of the education achievement gap. While much controversy exists on the causes of the gap and on what the nation should do to address it, the full range of the achievement gap's character and consequences has been poorly understood.

This report examines the dimensions of four distinct gaps in education: (1) between the United States and other nations, (2) between black and Latino students and white students, (3) between students of different income levels, and (4) between similar students schooled in different systems or regions.

The report finds that the underutilization of human potential as reflected in the achievement gap is extremely costly. Existing gaps impose the economic equivalent of a permanent national recession—one substantially larger than the deep recession the country is currently experiencing. For individuals, avoidable shortfalls in academic achievement impose heavy and often tragic consequences via lower earnings, poor health, and higher rates of incarceration.

Download the report (PDF-772KB) and supporting materials (PDF-1.0MB), and read the McKinsey Quarterly article.

Report Launch with Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and NYC Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein

National Press Club, Washington, D.C. (April 22, 2009)

Welcome
Matt Miller, Senior Advisor, McKinsey & Company
1:59
Opening Remarks
Joel I. Klein, New York Public Schools Chancellor
3:12
Overview of Achievement Gaps
Byron Auguste, Director, Social Sector Office, McKinsey & Company
8:13
Economic Cost of Achievement Gaps
Bryan Hancock, Partner, McKinsey & Company
8:14
Case for Optimism
Byron Auguste, Director, Social Sector Office, McKinsey & Company
2:27
Moving Forward
Arne Duncan, U.S. Secretary of Education
4:43