The United States has a shameful academic record with the great majority of low-income children. Unfortunately, educators have accepted a common belief that economically disadvantaged children cannot learn as well as others. An educator from New York says that students from less wealthy families are not expected to be as academically advanced (Lewis 648). Numerous education critics claim "Minority and poor students are disproportionately placed in lower track and lower achievement courses in schools, which, are often taught by the least qualified teachers ("Out-of-Field "). It is difficult to see how these children are being given a fair chance in their educational careers when they are placed under such stereotypes and promoted socially.
Education critics have said that students from poor and disadvantaged communities do not have equal access to qualified teachers. In schools across the Nation teachers are being assigned to teach courses in areas that do not match their formal background preparation. It has been found that lower income schools have a higher level of out-of-field teaching in core-academic classes than the wealthier schools ("Out-of-Field "). A principal from a public school serving poorer children from the South said that he is forced to hire