|
from the August
21, 2001 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2001/0821/p1s1-usgn.html
Minorities to schools: Listen to
us
Parents protest from
Greensboro, N.C., to San Francisco to win a greater say in their own
children's education.
By Patrik Jonsson
| Special to The
Christian Science Monitor
GREENSBORO, N.C. - The new school year was to come laden with
goodies for the black and Latino kids of Greensboro's south side.
Targeting overcrowded schools, city officials intended to hire 34 new
teachers, build a new high school, and fire up a trendy achievement
program at one middle school.
Disturbed over a growing disconnect between the theories of
"educrats" and the realities of black and Latino culture,
parents saw the district's flurry of bureaucratic beneficence more as
"politricks" than real help for their kids.
In the board's well-meaning votes, many minority parents here
saw: a gambit to tear down a historic black school, the firing of 94
black aides to make room for the 34 likely white teachers, and, in the
new International Baccalaureate program, another test for their kids to
fail.
The clash in Greensboro highlights an emerging reality in
low-income neighborhoods across the country: Tired of watching their
kids struggle to learn under the academic policy du jour, minority
parents across the US are demanding that school districts listen to
their ideas of how best to educate their children.
And their answers, which frequently include a desire to put
minority children in all-black or Latino schools or make sure they have
a teacher of the same color, are dismaying some educators. They are
afraid a generation of diversity policies may be undone by the very
people those policies were created to help.
"We're seeing more and more minority parents stand up and
get involved on a more systematic level," says Judith Brown, an
education attorney with the Advanced Project in Washington, an
educational advocacy group affiliated with the NAACP. "It's a
phenomenon that's percolating across the country."
Organizing in pews and community centers from the steep streets
of San Francisco to muggy Drew, Miss., these new parent activists are
having more success than many of them ever imagined.
On Saturday in Denver, hundreds of black and Latino parents on
the city's vast north side cheered at the opening of a dual-language
Montessori school designed not by administrators, but by parents.
In Drew, Miss., parents are engaging the school board over
"zero tolerance" policies that set out to make schools safer -
but which parents say have resulted in a disproportionate number of
black students being kicked out of the classroom.
And yesterday morning in San Francisco, Edison Elementary
opened for the first day of school, thanks to parent protests. At least
one mother, Linda Gausman, planned to walk the halls after dropping off
her fourth-grader to savor the victory. This summer, Ms. Gausman and
more than 100 other mostly minority parents waved placards on the
streets and lobbied the state school board to override a decision by a
local school district to close the popular school. "We had no
choice but to win - for our kids," says Ms. Gausman.
Parents
show up to class
With not enough time to develop a boycott, a peaceful protest
began here Monday in Greensboro's elementary, middle, and high schools.
Forty-one years after black youths convinced shops to end lunch-counter
segregation in this city, hundreds of parents were expected to stroll
into local schools as part of an organized civil action to bring
attention to the plight of their children.
Even before protests began yesterday, the school board made
concessions to the at-times volatile crowds that have packed recent
board meetings.
The board promised parents they'd hire a restoration consultant
to study options other than tearing down the visibly deteriorated
school.
And the new "international baccalaureate" program at
Hairston Middle School? On hold until parents are convinced it won't
become another stumbling block.
"This isn't rocket science," says Carmia Caesar, an
attorney with the Advancement Project in Washington. "Every parent
wants what's best for their child."
These new parent activists see the answer in allowing them to
choose where to send their children to school, through the use of either
charter schools, vouchers, or other options. A new poll shows that 70
percent of poor black parents want the choice to send their children to
private or charter schools. And the growing population of middle-class
blacks and Latinos choose private schools at higher rates than whites do
today.
For many of these parents, the elusive ideal of diversity is
far less important than ensuring that their own children get a quality
education. The result, in many cases, has been a return to more
segregated schools.
Wanted:
black teachers
In Charlotte, for example, 80 percent of those who applied for
private-school vouchers were black. A large majority of those parents
are sending their kids to a new cadre of all-black church schools that
require strict discipline and uniforms.
Oftentimes, parents are frank about demanding teachers of their
own color for their children. "It's just a fact: Where a white
teacher may see a thug, a black teacher will see a kid," says Ms.
Brown.
For those who still believe in integration as a means to ending
inequity in schools, it's a discouraging trend.
"I don't think there's any maliciousness on the part of
people to get away from people of other races, as much as this is an
artifact of trying to increase their own security, safety, and their own
futures," says Randy Thomson, a sociology professor at North
Carolina State University in Raleigh. "The effect, unfortunately,
is the same."
But for the small group of black parents and children assembled
at the St. James Baptist Church in Greensboro's Smith Hall neighborhood
last Thursday, it's time for educators to listen to the needs of parents
instead of hewing to well-meaning, but ultimately condescending, social
ideals.
Diversity:
just talk?
They say integration may have worn out its promise, especially
as it's hard for the system to argue that new policies, such as
zero-tolerance, are not disproportionately affecting black and minority
teens.
"People kind of lost track of the idea of improving the
quality of education for minorities," says Jay Greene, a scholar
with the Manhattan Institute in New York. "Instead, we've been
obsessed with the idea of mixing. Unfortunately, mixing is usually done
at the expense of minority students."
That's not how Susan Mendenhall sees it. "What we're
trying to do is raise standards and put some extra academic emphasis on
those schools that are highly impacted by poverty," says Ms.
Mendenhall, the chairman of the Guilford County School District.
But Goldie Wells says such statements no longer assuage
minority parents. Too often, academics just don't get it, says the
retired Greensboro teacher.
"When you look at all the black kids being kicked out and
failing, you start to wonder whether they're just pretending to educate
our children," says Ms. Wells.
Still, as protests began this week, the emotions swirling
around the school board's decisions have simmered down into something
approaching communication, says Mendenhall.
"We've had so much division, but, if the end result is
getting minority parents involved in the school, I'm glad of it,"
she says.
|