{"id":704,"date":"2016-07-15T19:21:17","date_gmt":"2016-07-15T19:21:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.studypug.com\/blog\/?p=704"},"modified":"2024-08-08T23:39:39","modified_gmt":"2024-08-08T23:39:39","slug":"military-base-school-students-out-achieving-their-civilian-peers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/blog.studypug.com\/military-base-school-students-out-achieving-their-civilian-peers\/","title":{"rendered":"Military Base School Students Out-Achieving Their Civilian Peers"},"content":{"rendered":"
At Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) schools, 39 percent of fourth graders score as proficient in reading compared with 32 percent of all public school students. DoDEA school black fourth graders alone scored an average of 222 (out of 500) in reading, compared to ALL public school fourth graders, and the achievement gap in reading between black and white students at these base schools was 11 per cent, compared to 26 per cent at public schools.<\/p>\n Some experts are skeptical of the test results and the success they indicate for the DoDEA schools. Expert Paul Thomas told alternet.org that the NAEP is a flawed measurement tool itself and that it isn\u2019t easy to compare the two school systems.<\/p>\n \u201cYou must match a good deal of indicators, such as race, gender, socioeconomic, and subcategories that [are] often at the root of claimed \u2018differences\u2019 (ELL students, special needs students), before you can make any fair claim that military schools are better, the same, or worse,\u201d he opined.<\/p>\n He was also skeptical about the ability to replicate any potential success in the public school system.<\/p>\n \u201cCan the causes of high achievement\u2026be identified, and then can those cause-agents be replicated in the broader public schools that are unlike military base schools? (The answer is almost always, no.)\u201d<\/p>\n Nonetheless, many educators are willing to give the DoDEA system and its achievements a closer look. The DoDEA operates about 200 schools worldwide that teach more than 100,000 children from military families, supplementing 159 base schools in the U.S. that are run by local school districts. About 40 per cent of the students are Hispanic or African-American<\/a>, and many of the schools are in the U.S. South; the military didn\u2019t want families subjected to school segregation, a fact of life there prior to the 1960s.<\/p>\n Many of the DoDEA schools are substandard facilities in poor repair, with problems such as mould, poor temperature control or overcrowding. The youth who attend the schools aren\u2019t necessarily the children of well-educated officers; children from enlisted families also take advantage of on-base education<\/strong>. Research by the RAND Corporation also indicates that students whose parents are on long-term deployments may suffer from stress that leads to emotional outbursts and difficulty focusing, issues that can also be disruptive for their classmates.<\/p>\n
\nThe troubled American public school system need not look outside its borders to find a system that isn\u2019t broken as a role model. The schools on military bases throughout the United States is outperforming their public brethren<\/strong> and narrowing the gap between the performance of black and their white counterparts<\/strong>, too, according to results from the 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress<\/a>, the U.S. national testing program.<\/p>\nDoDEA Schools – Better Preparation for Students?<\/h2>\n
Does Military Life Mirror Academic Success?<\/h2>\n
\nThe success of these DoDEA schools is counterintuitive. After all, mobility is the watchword for military life. Families of active duty servicemen and women relocate every three years on average, and such instability should logically trigger poor academic performance. After all, the conditions for their schooling often aren\u2019t ideal.<\/p>\nThe Research on DoDEA Schools – the Recipe for Achievement<\/h2>\n