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On US Education: It’s the Socioeconomic Segregation, Stupid

Darling-Hammond, who was recruited to get Team Obama up to speed on education issues following the 2008 election, entitled her piece, "Why Is Congress Redlining Our Schools?". It should be noted that as soon as Team Obama got a lay of the edu-land in early 2009, they dismissed Darling-Hammond and brought in corporate lackey, Arne Duncan, to serve as titular head of the Education Department while the corporate foundations run the show.
Now that I think about it, she might have more appropriately named her piece "Why are the White House and Congress Redlining Our Schools?”.
Just as red-lining was used for many years by the FHA to maintain racial purity and avoid ethnic mixing in housing, red-lining is a good description of what is going on today in urban public education to contain and isolate children of the poor in the new chain gang charter schools. Thanks to requirements of NCLB, residents of urban areas who send their children to public schools with their sub-par testing results must contend with the federal label of failure and high risk, with public monies often withheld because the poor children in these schools cannot pass tests whose pass rates are directly correlated to family income. And as the teachers and principals in these schools have been blamed, then, for the student failure that poverty has assured, these red-lined schools are labeled, shut down, or reconstituted per the NCLB plan.
The public school buildings, then, are often handed to corporate foundations in sweetheart deals enabled by new charter-embracing laws (try Indiana where charter corporations can buy an empty school for a dollar). Add some corporate, tax-sheltered venture funds and, bingo, a new intensely-segregated charter is born, complete with cheaper marginally prepared teachers (20% cheaper nationally), a chain gang instructional model, total compliance and constant surveillance, zero tolerance, no excuses, and little oversight (see what can happen when institutional safeguards are dangerously absent).
Standing to profit mightily from the urban containment and indoctrination model are growing numbers of self-serving and displaced Wall Street hacks, venture philanthropists, and hedge funders. In charge are the educational management organizations (EMOs) or the charter management organizations (CMOs), which often recruit as principals the former Teach for America Corps members who are schooled in the new corporate model of autocratic control of poor children, even down to the behavioral catechisms and the learned optimism strategies of the creepy positive psychologists with whom they consult.
So Dr. Darling-Hammond, that is Why Congress AND the Whte House Are Redlining Our Schools.
In moving beyond No Child Left Behind in ways that are humane, effective, and efficient, we must implement education policies that challenge economic inequality rather than increasing it, which will require an about-face for most politicians on both sides of the aisle of the corporate jet. One thing that schools can do in this regard is to take seriously the research by James Coleman, which has been ignored or misused since it was published in 1966, just one year after Congressional approval of the first ESEA in 1965.
Coleman’s findings are here summarized by Coleman scholar, Gerald Grant (2009):
Simply put, Coleman found that the achievement of both poor and rich children was depressed by attending a school where most children came from low-income families. More important to the goal of achieving equal educational opportunity, he found that the achievement of poor children was raised by attending a predominantly middle-class school, while the achievement of affluent children in the school was not harmed. This was true even if per-pupil expenditures were the same at both schools. No research over the past forty years has overturned Coleman’s finding . . . (p. 159).
Coleman also found that the longer that poor black children were stuck in low SES schools, the lower their achievement moved in comparison to middle class children.
First up, we need to ditch federal charter school policy that actually calls for high poverty quotas of 60 percent minimum of poor children in order to win the federal grants for "successful"” charter expansion. If charter schools are going to continue at all, this kind of incentive for segregation is exactly the opposite of what needs to be done. Charters or any other schools should, in fact, have a maximum of 40 percent low-income children, so that the social capital that James Coleman and hundreds of other scholars have shown to be so important in raising achievement can help to equalize the punishing effects of concentrated poverty. Ending socioeconomic segregation, of course, is only a partial solution, but it is one that would signal that we are at least aware of the problem, rather than continuing to ignore the problem as our solutions increasingly resemble what came to be the scourge of eugenics a hundred years ago.
An earlier version of this article first appeared at Substance News.
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31 Comments so far
Show AllIs Socioeconomic Segregation Stupid? Not if you're rich.
Fellow CD posters, how would you rate the following on the "makes you cry" list?
1. The decimation of our nation's public schools (along with much of "The Commons").
2. Fracking: And the ruin of much of the water table
3. Offshore oil drilling: And the ruin of much of the sea
4. Banging the drums for yet more war
5. The evisceration of our Bill of Rights, with every citizen perceived as a would-be terrorist, and all manner of extra-judicial EVILS awaiting him or her on the mere charge of suspicion.
6. The absence of leadership.. when so much is at stake!
7. The growing numbers of the homeless inside this Homeland Security State
8. The growing numbers of the hungry " " " "
9. The growing numbers of the jobless " " "
10. The political circus that passes for a viable presidential election
11. Watching the Lords of Disaster Capitalism run their numbers games on Europe
12. Wondering how much radiation has spewed over from Japan, and when the next nuclear accident will shipwreck public health, along with what's left of our national economy
13. The knowledge that "Only the truth shall set them free," up against an absolutely Captured media and its 24/7 streams of dis-information that keep so many blind, deluded, or dumb-struck.
14. Idiots like "Robert C" who pollute these threads with glib bits of nothingness
don't you mean glib bits of gibberish?
I hear ya. And in every case we get articles like the current one in the form of: We want A, they're doing not A which is bad, tell them to do A. What the authors always miss, because they're naive or stupid or whatever, is that the GOAL of the PTB is in fact not-A. It's not that their goal is A and they're just doing a bad job.
C'mon SiouxRose, Robert C was just saying the current system works for the rich. Some of us enjoy glib one liners.
I've thought a lot about education and charter schools and I think this article gets to the heart of the problem. If we had busing like in the sixties to even out economic disparities I bet you'd start to see money going back to the schools.
I recently attended a School Board meeting where a school administrator was talking about a "backpack" food program she had begun, to send food home with kids on the weekends because, for some of her students, the only food they got was at school.
Hard to teach hungry kids.
I'm hoping we're already in the worse part of "it's got to get worse before it gets better" instead of "it's got to get worse before it gets even worse than that". But then I was hoping Obama would change things for the better. That didn't work out so well.
SiouxRose, I'd argue that the sell off of the commons should be added to the cry list.
I like this attempt at bracketing. It is actually very helpful. I might have itemized it differently but... "Robert C"?
Every item on your list makes me cry, up to and including calling other people "idiots."
Since we are anonymous on this discussion board, it can be easy to forget that each of us is an actual human being. We don't know what kind of suffering and pain any of us may be experiencing, and we don't know what motives any one else has. Mockery and exclusion can be painful and even deadly. Those of us who argue for peace and justice might want to adopt the principles of nonviolence, and renounce verbal, spiritual, and psychological aggression as well as physical aggression.
There's a great article in the current issue of Rethinking Schools called "Chicago's Peace Warriors," about a very atypical charter school that has focused on teaching the students the principles of MLK's nonviolence, and has had amazing success in reducing violence at school. (Of course, the students are still condemned to live in poverty, surrounded by crime and injustice, and to attend a school that lacks the resources provided to the schools in affluent districts.) The article is here:
http://rethinkingschools.org/archive/26_02/26_02_haga.shtml
I agree petrkrop, I have been subjected to some of the most rank and foul insults on this site I have ever heard. This nasty invective comes from those that define themselves as "progressives" I don't understand it. Cheers!
As one who has been on the receiving end of SR's bile, I agree.
I'm all for sympathy and compassion when it's based on HONEST circumstances. There is a pattern on this site that consists of posters dominating threads, then after spending countless hours over the course of months, these posters suddenly "disappear" and in their place are new names repeating the exact same moves. 90% of Robert's posts have a way of mocking events, almost sneering at Progressives and any dedicated efforts aimed at mending this nation's serious wounds. THAT is why he's not given any respect from my end. There are plants on this site who try to sound just Left enough to gain a modicum of credibility. From there, all of their posts are aimed at knee-capping the Left or those on the front lines of meaningful action.
It's no accident that "iwonder" throws an accusation my way, as he knows I regard him as one from this group of frauds.
Some have been posting here for years, myself included, and none of us has seen the need to hide behind a variety of screen names. Nor is it likely that those who posted here on so regular and redundant a basis just suddenly disappeared with the "arrival" of "new" posters sounding just like them.
The ones paid to snoop, spy, or plant Right Wing memes don't like me because I call them out. Then their favorite reflex is to attempt to slay my character. That's how Defense attorneys operate in their attempt to impeach witnesses, the very ones in a position to expose the malfeasance (or worse) of their clients.
It's not a new game. And calling out the creeps in no way reduces my character or integrity. To the contrary, I'd say it's brave given the increasing lockdown on information and the disgusting expectation that all Amerikans need march lockstep to their authoritarian, martial masters.
If you get a chance to read that article I mentioned about nonviolence, at the Rethinking Schools website, I'd be interested in your thoughts about it.
I have noticed that posters disappear from CD, but I have no way of knowing if they reappear under new names, or just get tired of wasting time on the internet --a habit I'm trying to break, too! :-)
But whether posters are honest or not, it seems to me that each is a soul deserving of respect, and we should be able to disagree without attacking each other or trying to exclude each other.
One poster who seems to have disappeared, ShadowDancer, always ended his posts with this excellent reminder, which I always appreciated: "Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive."
"But whether posters are honest or not, it seems to me that each is a soul deserving of respect, and we should be able to disagree without attacking each other or trying to exclude each other."
THANK YOU ! Some people just have no respect or tolerance whatsoever. As for "disappearing" posters, some of us come and go on and off. The reason can be almost anything but there are those of us who just don't have all day and all night to post. I take more time to read than I would bother at posting anymore. Aside from a minority of disrespectful posters who engage in slandering others, most posters on this site are respectful and willing to discuss even when there are disagreements.
Siouxrose -- n. pseud The arbiter of correct thinking in all issues progressive.
The only answer is to give students what they need, such as a 10-1 student-teacher ratio: See http://www.communityschool.k12.nj.us/ Bloomberg's lousy school system relies on federal money for NYC tutors to visit rat-infested homes to help kids who cant read, never heard word 'Congress.' All at $15/hr. Shame on Bloomberg. I doubt he has ever found a dead rat behind the stove while a visitor sat in his kitchen.
The long range effect of luring away high achievers from traditional schools to charter schools would result in something quite the opposite from the original goals of the Bush school reforms. The kids left behind by No Child Left Behind would be the very children, most of them poor, that the reforms were supposed to rescue. “When you’ve siphoned away all the successful kids, only poor kids will go to public schools,” recently warned Diane Ravitch, a longtime voice for reform and a chronicler of failed reforms (which you might have guessed from the title of her most recent book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education). She said public schools, if the charter system isn’t fixed, will evolve into repositories for the unwanted, where we train poor kids to take the big test. Not to learn.
The Miami Herald’s series, Cashing In On Kids, by Kathleen McGrory and Scott Hiaasen, charted how so much public money going into these nominally non-profit ventures finds its way into the accounts of for-profit management companies. And how the operators of the management companies often double as the charter school’s landlords. Sometimes you’re not sure whether to call these people educators or real estate profiteers.
Ravitch said that even in states that outlaw for-profit management companies, the supposedly non-profit charter school operators hire for-profit subcontractors. “People have figured out that this is a great entrepreneurial opportunity.” She confessed to a “visceral dislike” of for-profit corporations running public-funded schools. “I worry that their first obligation is to the shareholders, not to students.”
garlanddegreeff,
It's interesting that you stated: "where we train poor kids to take the big test. Not to learn." I just came up with the same thought the other day in the sense of do we want our schools to "train and test" or do we want to "teach and learn".
Those of us that have been teaching for a while understand that teaching and learning are completely different than training and testing. Humans teach and learn while we train and test animals-a fairly simple concept
OYE
People can fight back. Here in Colorado we just had a Denver district court judge rule that Colorado's funding of education violates Colorado's constitutional requirement of uniform funding. In a massive written ruling the judge basically said that the state had to completely re-do its funding system. Of course the corporate powers that rule our state have appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court, and the seven members of the 1% sitting on the supreme court surely will reverse the ruling. But the ruling has huge popular support, especially among Hispanics, who make up a large percentage of our population and an even larger percentage of our poor people.
http://lobatocase.org/
"Simply put, Coleman found that the achievement of both poor and rich children was depressed by attending a school where most children came from low-income families."
Yep. I attended three high schools. The first was South Shore High on Chicago's South Side. The last was Palo Alto High School. No doubt about it, education was a joke at South Shore, even to the teachers.
On the other hand, there was a good deal of rampant racism both when I was at Palo Alto High and when my daughter later attended. Still, middle class students were certainly better served in Palo Alto than at Chicago's South Shore High.
Great title. Says it all. Very well written article.
Trouble is--how do you even out socioeconomic differences in an area like Detroit or Chicago where geography dictates that, without bussing, all the students will be poor and from minority background? Back to bussing? I can see redistricting to integrate high- and low income neighborhoods, but sometimes that doesn't do it either. Besides, with open enrollment policies, most parents in the better neighborhood would send their kids to another district, driving them in the morning, themselves.
I would like to take another approach: Schools should be given resources exactly in proportion to their need. In other words, if one school has a student body 60 percent in poverty and 95 percent minority and another is mostly white with less than 10 percent poverty, then the first school should receive roughly twice as much money--22k per student instead of 11k. That difference could lower class size, hire tutors, take education out of crappy buildings, and enlist parents in their children's education.
Right now, Obama's and Duncan's plan is just the opposite. The schools facing the deepest trouble are penalized. Suburban schools in my state, mostly made up of students whose parents are professionals, are getting 13k per student, while Detroit gets 11k or so. With the kinds of problems Detroit has, that district should be getting 16k or more.
You think money doesn't make a difference? Try teaching a class of 36 kids biology from an inner city neighborhood. Try teaching them with lousy equipment in a classroom that has been trashed over the last several decades. Now, imagine you are teaching 18 of them with an aide to help out in a classroom that honors students and educators by its up-to-date design and equipment. Imagine counselors who can intervene if kids' personal lives go bad. Imagine principals who--rather than simply suspending kids for misbehavior--works with families through outreach personnel. Don't you suppose students would learn more in such an environment? And don't you think students would begin to respect education?
DROSERA: I like your idea, and certainly it would be worth a try! Imagine the looks on the faces of children who were used to shoddy schools (knowing the lack of resources reflected back at them, society's view of their reduced worth) only to enter a shiny lab with all sorts of amazing devices! The subliminal feeling would be: "Someone cares about us! Maybe I can apply myself and BECOME important... give something back to the society that has extended this wonderland of discovery to me."
Would you consider writing such a proposal to Bill Gates using your background as a science teacher to make this case? Ask him if he'd fund one region or county to set up an experiment in the way of a Litmus Test? It could be worth a try.
"Would you consider writing such a proposal to Bill Gates using your background as a science teacher to make this case? " -- Siouxrose
You are kidding aren't you?
Bill Gates is the creator of "The Race to the Top." -- I mean, "The Race to the Bottom!" He supports charter schools!
Maybe, Drosera knows him personally and can contact him.
Good Luck!
SR: You probably won't get back to this, but I'll write it anyway. Fact is, real school reform costs a lot of money. Gates and friends imagine it's just a matter of raising standards, giving more homework, putting kids in uniforms, and kicking out the unruly, and--above all--testing kids and schools continuously for accountability--really punishment. Reform as I described would cost Gates many times his own ridiculous fortune in a single year. These guys know it--they want change and they want it cheap.
Testing costs a fraction of what new schools, better trained teachers, smaller class sizes, and counselors cost. Raising standards doesn't cost a nickel. As I have said before in this forum, we sent a man to the moon by spending a fortune and now we want to make our education system first-class by what amounts to implementing the mumbo-jumbo of conservative pundits like Gates. Good thing he wasn't in charge of Apollo.
To each according to her/his need--not a bad idea at all!, especially when combined with From each according to his/her ability!
I heard Ravitch speak the other night and she is so laser clear it's wonderful: there is no question about it that the gaggle of "education reform" groups (Ravitch calls them "corporate reform") that dominate the discussion on U.S. education are single-mindedly committed to entirely destroying public education and replacing every bit of it with for-profit, hyper-stratified, private education on the public till. Why? To make more easy money for the same billionaires who pillage for profit in every other sphere. This is the central problem we must contend with in U.S. education now. To have any chance of turning schooling into schooling for liberation, we must fully out this agenda and articulate all our heart visions and knowledge of teaching and learning, and fully connect our work with students to the collective work of humanity to save our species and many others from unending suffering. May we persevere to the ultimate degree.
The problems (ALL problems, not just education) have grown so massive and inter-locking that it's overwhelming to the usual problem-solving sensibilities. It seems we need a change of Vision, to spark a massive societal reconstruction & re-organization. A "changing this & changing that" approach seems wholly inadequate now. It's like a thousand things must be done, simutaneously, to effect the needed change...a rebirth actually.
Totally right; At this point, however, I do really think it must be "OFF WITH THEIR HEADS." What is Mandatory, in my view, is a full-scale Revolution, which will necessarily entail FORCE.
Short-List of Things to Do:
Annihilating completely all corporations; Ending entirely the ghastly law of corporate personhood; Sending all the filthy and corrupt politicians to prison for life; Getting all the American peoples' hard-earned tax dollars back from the whores that stole it all; Yanking all the filthy mansions and filthy yachts from all the filthy CEO's and Other Criminals, along with all the bastard corrupt politicians, then giving them all away to people that work hard for a living; Giving black people reparations for all the horrible things that greedy white people did to them and, incidentally, continue to do to them; Educate the brainless masses; Find somewhere on earth that isn't completely RUINED by the horrible and insanely unconscious top one percent of the American population...
I can't say the same train-of-thought hasn't occurred to me also. I also see my Roundhead ancestors' dilemma now, up close & personal. I hope for divine intervention where the Angels step in, with Their better Natures ( I sense indications of this possibility in this era, where it previously wasn't available). But WE are the flesh-bound souls, stuck on this mudball, and share the responsibility for its' upkeep. WE are the dirty ones. Perhaps the dirty work IS ours to do. It's at this point, in protest against the filthy established order & for some other, better way, that the Roundheads took up the pike & sword & musket, and set about the dirty work, in deadly earnest, of eradicating the oligarchy of their day (the job's never finished;the changes, ALWAYS impermanent). Maybe another way WILL BE available this time. Since I do see a possibility of it, I'm obliged to wait upon it longer. We can only strike flesh & blood, with the sword. The Angels can strike hearts & minds, with Their silent Voice. I know this all sounds crazy. I really don't care about that anymore.
The corporate state coming into being, does not need the lower classes to be educated. You don't need an education to be a crack whore, itinerant laborer, street sweeper, or to sit in front of the TV eating junk food all day collecting welfare. The only jobs planed for the new non-educated underclass, are in prison slave labor camps, and they will have all the time they need to learn what they need to when they get there.
As that genius philosopher of the 20th Century said: “Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?” George W Bush, Florence, S.C., Jan. 11, 2000
Always nice to see education articles on Common Dreams. Jim Horn always has interesting things to share.
The problem we face is that the concept of "the commons" and "the common good" has been forsaken in the general discourse. Instead, ideas like "choice" and "accountability" and "data-driven instruction" have become predominant. In other words, instead of education as a universal good, the "market" has become the model. So instead of trying to lift up (and funding) everyone, we allow winners and losers in the "race to the top."
Somehow the powers that be (including Obama, Duncan, Gates, Broad, and Rhee) don't seem to realize that if everything is charterized, any sense of a "system" of education is lost. Districts don't even exist in reality if everything is charterized.
And guess what? No longer is actual education important, but how well one can "sell" one's school or program. PR becomes paramount. Image becomes reality. Except it doesn't. Eventually the chickens come home to roost. And we'll all be "shocked, shocked" to see that segregation by race and class has become the new normal.
In the latest Ed Week, Rep. George Brown (D-Ca.) defends NCLB still. The NEA and AFT still play footsie with Obama, Duncan, and Gates. It's all a bit reminiscent of Rachel Carson's intro to her book Silent Spring, in which the people wake up one day in a poisoned world and realize that "they had done it to themselves."
I just hope it's not too late for public education.
Public Education in this country at large, has been on the decline since around the 1920's, and various politicians, from the White House, to Congress, to various public School Committees throughout the United States (both the North and the South alike), have been consistantly hostile towards efforts at desegrating their school systems. As a result, many Federal District judges have been compelled to implement tougher remedial policies that, along with intransigent public school committes and officials, have served to make already long-standing bad situations worse and exacerbate age-old, pre-existing intergroup tensions and hostilities.
Boston, the city that I reside near and love, is an excellent example of that.
Good to see the word SEGREGATION used, which is exactly what is happening. Many stupid liberals are conned into thinking this is now impossible now that a half-genetically-but-not-cuturally-African idiot is in the White House.
It is time to rise up above the tangled web and observe it from a comfortable distance. If we wish to produce a system in which health, opportunity, prosperity, and peace prevail, then we need to provide the support systems necessary for all the parts to participate fully. In the Basic Community Unit, there are only 12 essential functions which must all work together in order to produce a high quality of life within the means we have to sustain it. A goal of the society is to continually be increasing the ease and efficiency of the system's parts as they perform their basic functions for the overall wellbeing of the society.
The parts are: (A) ENERGY, NUTRITION, MONEY (the means)
(B) EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT, RECREATION (time allocations)
(C) DESTINATION, TRANSPORTATION, COMMUNICATION (to and from)
(D) GOVERNANCE, JUDICIAL, HEALTH (societal performance)
Organize around these 12 inter-related essential functions in an egalitarian, frugal system for the general wellbeing of the whole, and we will be on our way
to a sustainable, peaceful, sustainable, fair, healthy, and dare I say, "happy" world.