NEWSWEEK POLL:
School
Segregation Far From Dead
and Goal of Educational Equality 'As
Elusive As Ever,'
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NEW YORK,
May 9, 2004 -- On the 50th anniversary of the landmark
school desegregation decision Brown v. Board of
Education, a report commissioned by the Rockefeller
Foundation has found that Brown, measured purely by its
effects on the poor schoolchildren of color at its
center, is "a disappointment-in many respects a
failure." |
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Majority (59%) of Blacks Say It's Impossible to Provide Equal
Educational Opportunities As Long As Children of Different Races
Go to Separate Schools |
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The report, authored by Contributing Editor
Ellis Cose, is excerpted in the May 17 issue of Newsweek. "A half century later, school
segregation is far from dead and the goal of educational
equality is as elusive as ever," writes Cose. "Since the early
1990s, despite the continued growth of integration in other
sectors of society, black and Latino children are increasingly
likely to find themselves in classes with few, if any,
nonminority faces."
Indeed today, most blacks are no longer convinced their kids
necessarily do better in integrated settings, writes Cose.
According to an exclusive Newsweek Poll, some 57 percent of
black parents say the schools' racial mixture makes no
difference, significantly more than the 41 percent who said that
in a 1988 Newsweek Poll. But they also know resource allocation
is not colorblind. Hence, 59 percent of blacks, 52 percent of
Hispanics and 49 percent of whites agree that it will be
impossible to provide equal educational opportunities for all
"as long as children of different races in this country
basically go to different schools."
And while most white and Hispanic Americans (59 percent for each
group) think their community schools are doing a good or
excellent job, only 45 percent of blacks feel that way,
according to the Poll. "That is up considerably from the 31
percent who thought their schools were performing well in 1998,
but it means a lot of people are still unhappy with the deck of
skills being dealt to black kids," writes Cose, who on May 16
will moderate a townhall meeting and panel discussion reflecting
upon Brown's legacy, its influence on the current educational
climate and its future implications at Harlem's historic Apollo
Theater.
Cose writes that 50 years after the court case that changed
America, another battle is upon us. "It may in some ways be the
second phase of Brown: a continuation by other means of the
battle for access to a decent education by those whom fortune
left behind." Cose writes that a major shift in tactics among
those fighting for the educational rights of poor people is
underway, with emphasis shifting from "equity" to "adequacy."
"Now the cases are about whether states are providing sufficient
resources to poor schools to allow the students who attend them
to effectively compete in society," he writes. They are called
"adequacy" cases, and they aspire to force states to produce
graduates capable of functioning competently as citizens and as
educated human beings."
"The shift in strategy stems, in part, from the Supreme Court's
making equity cases more difficult to win but leaving the door
open to adequacy claims," writes Cose. "In a seminal moment for
this new movement, the Kentucky Supreme Court decided in 1989
that students in Kentucky had a right to a much better education
than they were receiving. In response, the legislature totally
overhauled the state's educational system."
"Elsewhere, legislative reforms-so far-have been less dramatic
as politicians have fought efforts to mandate spending
increases. But in several states, including New York, judges are
looking on adequacy suits with favor. Indeed, last week a group
of high-profile businessmen called on New York politicians to
heed the call for more and smarter education funding. The notion
that schools ought to invest more in those whose need is
greatest goes against American tradition, but it seems an idea
whose time is coming."
In the last several years, writes Cose, voucher programs have
also sprouted in a number of states. "Certainly there is
evidence that voucher programs can help some students," writes
Cose. "And most people view vouchers in a positive light." Some
66 percent of blacks and 67 percent of Hispanics favor vouchers,
as do 54 percent of whites, according to the Newsweek Poll. "But
most people understand quite clearly that in the real world they
are not likely to get a voucher that will allow them to send a
child to any school of their dreams," writes Cose. "So it is not
inconsistent that a majority of Americans favor increasing
funding for public education over providing parents with
vouchers. Nor it is surprising that blacks, even more than
whites, strongly support funding for public schools."
Though it may come as a surprise to some, testing is
particularly popular with the black and Latino public, writes
Cose. Blacks (83 percent) and Hispanics (91 percent) are much
more likely than whites (73 percent) to believe that it is
important or very important to use "standardized tests to raise
academic standards and student achievement." "My guess is that
the numbers measure support more for the idea of testing than
for the reality of what testing has become," writes Cose. "The
idea-that ability can be recognized and developed, that
deficiencies can be diagnosed and remedied-is impossible to
argue with. It is far from clear at this junction that that is
what is happening."
In too many ways, when it comes to children of color, we
continue to ask the wrong questions, writes Cose. "We poke and
probe and test those kids as we wrinkle our brows and ask, with
requisite concern, "Why are you such a problem? What special
programs do you need?" when we should be asking, "What have we
not given to you that we routinely give to upper-middle-class
white kids? What do they have that you don't?"" The answer,
writes Cose, is simple. "They have a society that grants them
the presumption of competence and the expectation of success;
they have an environment that nurtures aspiration, peers who
provide support and guardians who provide direction. If we are
serious about realizing the promise of Brown, about decently
educating those who begin with the least, we will have to ponder
deeply how to deliver those things where they are desperately
needed."
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