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Sunday, November 14, 2010

'Highly effective' teachers are spread unevenly across District

'Highly effective' teachers are spread unevenly across District

'Highly effective' teachers are spread unevenly across District

Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, November 13, 2010; 6:46 PM

The District's most affluent ward has more than four times as many "highly effective" public schoolteachers as its poorest, underscoring a problem endemic to urban school systems: Their best educators often do not serve the children who need them most.

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The inequity is reflected in the distribution of teachers judged to be most effective under the school district's rigorous new evaluation system, known as IMPACT. Just 5 percent of the 636 top performers work in Southeast Washington's Ward 8, home to many of the city's lowest-achieving schools and its highest concentration of children living in poverty.

In contrast, 22 percent of the top-performing teachers are in affluent Ward 3 in Northwest Washington, home to some of the most successful and sought-after public schools. The area has eight fewer schools than Ward 8 and about 60 percent of Ward 8's enrollment.

The imbalance represents a significant challenge for