ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) — Montgomery County officials are considering a change to school boundaries to diversify student bodies as a way to close a persistent achievement gap among some minority students.
At a meeting Monday, schools Superintendent Joshua Starr told members of the county council that boundary changes would be considered in a study later this year.
The Washington Post reports (http://wapo.st/1r0NNsG) that several council members pressed for boundary changes after studies showed that minority achievement improved when low-income students attended schools with a higher proportion of affluent students.
Starr called closing the achievement gap in the county a “moral imperative.”
One school board member — Christopher Barclay, who is African American — said he opposed boundary changes and was offended by the notion that minority students could only achieve when surrounded by whites.
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Information from: The Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com
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