When Schools Dump Diversity

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Teaching Tolerance has reported many times and in many ways that the United States is plunging headlong toward racial and cultural re-segregation. That process took an enormous leap in the wrong direction last week when the Wake County school board in North Carolina voted to dismantle its policy of diversifying the schools.

The 140,000-student school system relied largely on busing and magnet schools to create diverse schools based on economic factors. Poor kids and rich kids were often bused out of their neighborhood zones. Meanwhile, prestigious magnet schools brought in suburban kids to inner-city schools.

Critics of the program, which has been in effect since 2000, cited a declining graduation rate over the last five years, a widening performance gap between rich and poor students and an increase in suspensions.

All of those are serious concerns. But they are not necessarily tied to the policy. And they pale in comparison to the benefits the diversity policy created. According to The New York Times:

“Students of all races in Wake continue to outperform state and national averages and have improved on S.A.T. scores and end-of-year tests in recent years, supporters note. There remain significant gaps between races, with 87 percent of white elementary school students performing at or above their grade level in reading, science and math, compared with 48 percent of Hispanics and 46 percent of blacks. But all races made gains over the past school year.”

The Times goes on to explain that:

“Across the country, research shows that students of all races and backgrounds perform better in diverse schools, said Roslyn Arlin Mickelson, a sociologist at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. Diversified schools typically have higher graduation rates, more college acceptances and fewer students in the criminal justice system, Ms. Mickelson said.”

“Some experts say that having middle-class students in a classroom raises the scores of poor students more effectively than increased per-pupil spending, more experienced teachers or lower student-teacher ratios.”

The program was so successful that it was repeated in districts from La Crosse, Wis., to St. Lucie County, Fla. But a newly elected majority of conservatives on the school board decided instead to embrace a new plan that creates “neighborhood schools.”

For decades, conservatives have argued that throwing money at a problem won’t make it go away. They have especially argued this when it comes to schools. But guess what Band-Aid that conservative board members have promised to apply to the impoverished schools who will be hit hardest by this vote. That’s right—greater funding.

Let’s say this greater funding actually materializes. How is that going to re-create diversity in Wake schools? How is it going to undo the incalculable damage this vote will do to race relations over time?

The answer to these questions lies across the state, in the city of Charlotte. In 2002, Charlotte’s schools ended busing to create diversity. The result? The schools are now thoroughly segregated along race and class lines.

The Rev. William Barber, head of the local NAACP, has threatened a lawsuit. “Your plan is wrong,” he told the school board. “It’s wayward. It will make things worse and you know it. Data doesn’t support it. Morality doesn’t support it.”

Comments

As a resident of Wake County,

Submitted by lwm on 9 March 2010 - 6:22pm.

As a resident of Wake County, I can't tell you how heartbreaking it is to have children in this school system right now, knowing what damage they're doing. Now that our superintendent has resigned because he basically refuses to drive the bus off the cliff at the behest of the board, I doubt there's any education-minded superintendent that will accept the position if s/he doesn't want to ruin their career while seeing the system go down in flames as it resegregates and the scores go down.

I do not get it! Don't we

Submitted by Victoria Tiede on 10 March 2010 - 3:45am.

I do not get it! Don't we teach about History in school so that we do not forget where it is that we came from? How can anyone be so ignorant to the fact that "segregation" is "segration" no matter how you dress it up? Are we truly doomed to keep repeating the past and never move ahead due to a prejudice of those that do not act and perform just as we do? I wish there were some way I could lend my voice to the subject, with an audience of unprejudiced contemporaries Unfortunately, that too seems to be something that will repaet itself: We don't have any!

Way to go ! That needs to be

Submitted by gerri gold on 10 March 2010 - 8:52pm.

Way to go ! That needs to be said, enough is enough this is 2010. Get with the program, try...take a risk for the children. It might be ok.

I remember back in 1967 while

Submitted by Maureen Goldman on 10 March 2010 - 1:46pm.

I remember back in 1967 while I was a student at Proviso West High School and there was discussion about whether or not some black students from Proviso East should be bussed to West. We were even asked to write a paper about it in English class. I was shocked at some of the horrific comments students were unafraid to voice. I couldn't wait for this to be a non-issue.

Now it's 43 years later and although the language is different and the racism is 'soft' it doesn't look to me that we've gotten anywhere. Yes I remember my history. When the Supreme Court overturned "separate but equal" with it's Brown v. The Board of Education decision they stated "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal."

If the "neighborhood" schools are just as good, why are they proposing giving them more funding? It's bad enough our towns and cities are segregated is this what we want to teach our children? I've got mine, to hell with you.

Are the parents and the school board concerned about the bussed children underperforming? I kind of doubt that. It was in high school that I first met a black person. Hard to believe but true. And Dick Gregory, when addressing students at Southern IL University, said that when he attended school there it was the first time he had actually spoken to a white person - looked them in the eye and had a conversation.

God help us if we go back to those days. I don't think 9 years is long enough to decide if the current Wake Forest system is working. And if the students are still outperforming others in the state I'm just not buying the reason they want to dismantle it.

Having a diverse school is

Submitted by S dunlap on 24 March 2010 - 4:27pm.

Having a diverse school is good for individuals to help them learn how to get along or tolerate others in society. I have a few reasons to criticize diversity in schools that only focus on academic achievements and not considering and embracing cultural differences. If you were to give me a letter grade for questions pertaining to: Rich white Americans, Rich black Americans, Latino, Asian, Indian, Muslim, or Jewish cultures I would probable get a D-. This would probably be true if the same test was given to the people I just mentioned.
Depending on one’s location and culture, English, Science, and Math may play little or no part in their quality of life. (Ex) if you were a fisherman you must know everything there is to know about fishing in order to survive as a fisherman. The same is true if you are a farmer, rancher, or musician. Not diminishing the importance of academics studies but in certain cultures it is required and some it is not. To say someone is dumb because they don’t know what you know reflects that you may be dumb if you don’t know what they know. Diversity is good but comparing academic achievements to every culture is not only wrong, but I think it does no justice to the contributions made by our diverse society.