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Wednesday, October 21, 2015

What Kind of Country Would California Be? Very Unequal - On California - Education Week

What Kind of Country Would California Be? Very Unequal - On California - Education Week:

What Kind of Country Would California Be? Very Unequal

Child Poverty.jpg




We have read in this blog that California is exceptional.  If California seceded from the union, it would surely be an exceptional nation...but in what way? Economically, California would rankeighth in the world, ahead of Canada, Italy, and Russia.  Our knowledge economy would place us on the global cutting edge in terms of innovation and technological growth.  Unfortunately, California's great wealth is also accompanied by deep pockets of poverty, especially among minorities and less educated Californians
TLuschei.jpgAs a result of these extremes of wealth and poverty, California ranks near the top of U.S.  states in income inequality, as measured by the Gini Index.  While California's Gini Index (48.9) is slightly higher than that of the United Status (48.04), the United States ranks at the top of developed nations in income inequality.  This means that California would be one of the most unequal developed countries in the world.
California would also lead the industrialized world in child poverty, again rivaling the United States.  A recent report by the UNICEF Office of Research estimated that in 2012, nearly one in three children in the United States lives in poverty, compared to 8.8% in Finland and 13.4% in South Korea: two nations that are often identified as educational role models.  The same report estimated child poverty in California to be (36%), similar to rates in Alabama (36.5%), Idaho (36.5%), and Oklahoma (36.2%). According to the California Budget and Policy Center, children also represent a disproportionate shareof poor Californians: although children comprise 23.7% of the state's population, they represent 32.7% of Californians living in poverty (see graph above).
Unfortunately, many of California's poor children do not receive adequate health or educational services.  In 2012, 75.5% of low-income families did not have a medical home. Although the percentage of children without health care coverage has declined as a result of federal health care reform, 497,000 Californian children—many of them poor—did not have health insurance in 2014. Additionally, a 2014 report by the California Legislative Analyst's Office found that 54 of California's counties provide fewer than 20% of low-income children with childcare and 26 counties serve fewer than 10% of low-income children. Although the income eligibility limit for subsidized preschool in California has not been updated since 2007, the limit for eligibility was lowered in 2011 from 75% to 70% of the state median income. As a result, many families are ineligible for subsidized childcare or preschool despite receiving relatively low incomes.
High levels of inequality and child poverty are bound to affect educational performance in California; if California were a country, where would it rank educationally? The results of the 2011 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) allow us to make a rough comparison, as California was included as a "benchmark" participant in eighth grade mathematics and science.  In both math and science, Californian eighth graders scored below all other US benchmark states (Connecticut, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina), except Alabama.  Californian eighth graders scored slightly below the international average of participating education systems in both math and science, substantially below top performers like Singapore, South Korea, Japan, and Finland, and below nearly all the developed countries participating in the assessment.  In other words, California might be considered a developing or emerging country educationally. 
Culturally, California shares many ties with our neighbors in Latin America and the Caribbean. Thirty-nine percent of our population is Latino and 29% speak Spanish at home.  The impact of   What Kind of Country Would California Be? Very Unequal - On California - Education Week: