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50 Years After Brown, What Is the Future of Schools?
Commentary
By Lee Hubbard, Pacific News Service
A dramatic and perfectly legal re-segregation of schools has taken
place since the Supreme Court declared that different schools for blacks
and whites made education both separate and unequal.
May 14, 2004 - It has been 50 years since May 17, 1954, when the U.S.
Supreme Court unanimously declared that different schools for blacks and
white students made education both separate and unequal. The decision
was a springboard for the growing civil rights movement in the United
States, which helped to put an end to legalized segregation 14 years
later across the country.
But what has happened in recent years is perfectly legal, dramatic
re-segregation of American schools. A July 2001 study on the state of
education by the Harvard Civil Rights Project found that 70 percent of
the nation's black students attend predominantly minority schools (with
minority enrollment of over 50 percent), up significantly from the low
point of 62.9 percent in 1980. And a third of the nation's black
students (36.5 percent) attend schools with a minority enrollment of
90-100 percent.
A change in housing patterns has led this re-segregation. Whites have
moved out of the cities and into the suburbs, leaving behind blacks and
other minorities.
"Our research consistently shows that schools are becoming increasingly
segregated and are offering students vastly unequal educational
opportunities," says Gary Orfield, the author of the report and head of
the Harvard Civil Rights Project. "This is ironic considering that
evidence exists that desegregated schools both improve test scores and
positively change the lives of students."
The Civil Rights Project report called for efforts to continue local
desegregation plans and programs through litigation; more integrated
metropolitan-wide magnet schools; creation of expertise on desegregation
and race relations training in state departments of education; and a
provision of funding for better counseling and transportation for
inter-district transfer policies.
However, with the post-Brown focus on integration of schools, schemes
such as inter-district busing, out of district busing and racial capping
of schools have been tried and have failed due to resistance of whites
who have challenged their legality in the courts. This has largely been
a black vs. white issue. Some blacks also objected to busing. They felt
it took children out of the community and their support network. It was
also fought by other minority groups. In cities such as San Francisco,
Asian Americans, whose student population makes up 50 percent of the
local school district, fought measures to desegregate the schools. They
wanted their children to go to schools in the neighborhoods where they
lived.
Parents and some educators are increasingly talking about neighborhood
schools, the schools around your residences as a way to improve public
education. Improving urban and inner-city schools should be the No. 1
focus of school districts 50 years after the Brown decision. Seeing that
that tide is turning away from remedies of the past, Arlene Ackerman,
the Superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School district,
believes the so-called "Dream Schools" idea is a good start.
The Dream Schools project aims at building new and smaller schools in
inner city areas of San Francisco where black and Latino students live.
Modeled after the Loraine Monroe Model in the Bronx, New York, children
would wear uniforms and have a rigorous curriculum. Over the next few
years, 15 schools are scheduled to be built in San Francisco's inner
city, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Other school districts across the country are also implementing
innovative ideas-from charter schools, to magnet schools, to specialized
curriculum schools, such as math and science based schools, -to help
bridge the educational gap that has left many behind 50 years after the
Brown decision was seen as the final frontier in bridging the
educational gap. Brown was a righteous decision that opened the doors of
learning to all people. Today, it is time that we work on ways to keep
that door open.
PNS contributor Lee Hubbard (superle@hotmail.com) is a San
Francisco-based writer that writes on hip-hop, education and social
issues.
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