Minorities are disproportionately failing Florida's controversial teacher licensing exam
Data: blacks fail at double the rate of whites
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Data: blacks fail at double the rate of whites
By:
Katie LaGrone
Posted
and last updated
Two years after we first exposed how thousands of teachers and aspiring teachers are failing a revised teacher licensing exam, state data reveals minority examinees are disproportionately failing the state mandated teacher test.
“These are tears of frustration,” former Florida teacher Deborah Quinn told us this summer after learning she was terminated from her South Florida school for not passing Florida’s Teacher Certification Exam (FTCE). The state requires teachers and aspiring teachers pass the test if they want to teach in a Florida classroom.
Now, new data Investigative reporter Katie LaGrone obtained from the Florida Department of Education (FLDOE) through a public records request shows minorities taking the test are disproportionately failing the test.
“You have no idea how much I cried over this. I’m heartbroken, I’m frustrated,” Claudia Borges told us in 2017. Borges was a kindergarten teacher in Hillsborough County but lost her job because she could not pass the General Knowledge (GK) math section of the test. Borges took the test 5 times.
Minority examinees are failing at nearly double the rate
State data shows Borges is one of 60% of Hispanic examinees who failed the GK math test last year. While black examinees also experienced disproportionately high failure rates with 74% flunking the test during the same time frame. However, of Caucasian examinees who took the same test, 43% failed, leaving the majority passing the test last year.