By DANNY BLISS AND TRACY STEELE
2/15/07

This past October, hundreds of students, educators and university administrators converged at Yale for a series of lectures and discussions addressing one of the most flagrant manifestations of inequity in America today: the lack of socioeconomic diversity on our nation’s university and college campuses.

The numbers speak for themselves. According to former Princeton President William Bowen, if American families are divided into quartiles by income, 75% of students at the nation’s 146 most selective institutions of higher education hail from the top quartile; while a mere 3% are from the bottom.

Put quite simply, the average American college student is 25 times more likely to be “rich” than “poor.”

The causes of this staggering statistic are complex. We do know, however, that low income students have the least qualified teachers throughout their educational careers. For example, in California alone, more than a quarter of teachers at schools that have the

highest population of low income students — those in which more than 75% of their students qualify for free or reduced lunch — lack full teaching credentials. The consequences of this situation are clear: According to recent research by nationally renowned Stanford Education Prof. Linda Darling-Hammond, “Among the strongest predictors of student failure on the state tests were the proportion of uncertified teachers and a measure of teacher shortage.”