Ginia Bellafante has an excellent article in the New York Times about the dilemma of poor and immigrant students who strive to achieve success in community college.

 

She selects a student, Vladimir de Jesus, to illustrate the obstacles in his path. He wants to be an art teacher. He has a young daughter and has to work to pay his tuition and the cost of living.

 

She writes:

 

As a community college student, Mr. de Jesus is both prototype and outlier. The majority of community college students come from low-income families, and many arrive at school, as he did, with competing obligations (29 percent of community college students in the United States are parents), as well as the need for extensive remediation. The widely held impression that community colleges are essentially vocational is inaccurate. Data released by the American Association of Community Colleges in September indicated that most of the associate degrees awarded in 2012 were given in the liberal arts and sciences, outnumbering those for nursing, say, or marketing.

 

In recent years, mounting concerns about inequality have fixated on the need for greater economic diversity at elite colleges, but the interest has tended to obscure the fact that the vast majority of high school students — including the wealthiest — will never go to Stanford or the University of Chicago or Yale. Even if each of U.S. News and World Report’s 25 top-ranked universities committed to turning over all of its spots to poor students, the effort would serve fewer than 218,000 of them. Community colleges have 7.7 million students enrolled, 45 percent of all undergraduates in the country.

 

Philanthropists and hedge fund managers don’t care about community colleges, despite their oft-proclaimed dedication to poor kids. The community colleges serve mostly children from low-income families, but they don’t attract much funding from the wealthy who give millions to charters schools and their alma maters.

 

Bellafante writes:

 

Among individual donors, community colleges ignite little charitable impulse. An endowment fund begun at LaGuardia in 2003 has raised $11 million, of which $8 million has been spent. To put those sums in perspective, Prep for Prep, the organization started in the 1970s to help channel bright, disadvantaged New York City children into top private schools and ultimately the Ivy League, raised $3 million on a single night in June when it held its annual gala.

 

This shows, perhaps, that the Wall Street hedge funders and the philanthropists shower their millions on the strivers and the winners, not on the strugglers and stragglers like Vladimir de Jesus.

 

One especially large obstacle, for Vladimir and other students: the algebra course. He can’t pass the algebra course. He has taken it again and again. He can’t pass it.

 

Mr. de Jesus began the winter semester auspiciously; he received an A for an early personal essay. In addition to his English and art classes, he was taking a remedial course, Math 96, which is algebra-based and focuses on linear and quadratic equations.

Passing this class, which teaches math that most affluent children study in eighth or ninth grade, is required for graduation and the ascent to four-year programs. But at community colleges across the country, the basic math requirement has been a notorious hindrance to advancement. More than 60 percent of all students entering community colleges must take what are called developmental math courses, according to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, but more than 70 percent of those students never complete the classes, leaving them unable to obtain their degrees.

Mr. de Jesus was taking Math 96 for the third time last spring, having failed it twice. On one attempt he had fallen short by just a few points on the final exam; on another, he did not bother to show up for the exam at all because he was already failing. But in math, too, he had started the spring semester well, with grades in the 80s and 90s on the initial exams, his professor, Yelba Gutierrez, an adjunct at the time, told me.

When Mr. de Jesus came to school, he was present and engaged. In his English class, he typically offered observations that were sharper than those of the other students. But as the semester wore on, he had trouble getting to his classes on time — or at all….

 

“This whole thing with math just hits your spirit in the wrong way,” Mr. de Jesus remarked recently. “It demolishes your spirit. You become lazy.”

When I conveyed his sentiment to Dr. Mellow, LaGuardia’s president, she agreed and praised his wording. Dr. Mellow stands on one side of an intense debate among educators about the necessity of algebra for students who do not plan to pursue concentrated study in math- or science-related fields.

“I once got a note from a student who said, ‘This developmental algebra is a stainless-steel wall and there’s no way up it, around it or under it,’ ” she told me in her office one afternoon recently.
What makes algebra so hard for community college students? One factor is that many have been taught so poorly before they arrive. They have developed a debilitating reliance on calculators, Abderrazak I. Belkharraz, the chairman of the LaGuardia math department, told me, “for things as simple as what is the cosine of pi over two.” And the pedagogy tends to focus on computation rather than the underlying concepts, leaving the practice of math to seem far removed from the students’ experiences.

 

Imagine that! De Jesus could not figure out something “as simple as what is the cosine of pi over two.”

 

Let the truth be told: I took two years of algebra in high school, and I have no idea of what the cosine of pi over two is. Maybe I did in 1956, the year I graduated from high school, but I don’t now. And over the course of the many years since then, I have never once needed to know the cosine of pi over two. Why should a young man who desperately wants to teach art be required to pass an algebra test to get a community college degree? Perhaps he will never pass that test. Perhaps he will never get an associate’s degree. Perhaps he will never be allowed to teach art because he doesn’t know algebra. Without that degree, what will he do?