John Thompson, teacher and historian in Oklahoma, writes here about the resurgence of segregation in America’s schools.
He writes:
Are we heading into another resegregation era? A half century ago, at least in terms of urban education, “White Flight” gave Jim Crow a new lease on life. Then, Reaganomics subsidized more “suburban flight” as “Supply Side Economics” provided subsidies for moving good-paying jobs from cities to the exurbs. This further stimulated the “Big Sort,” or resegregation based on personal preferences. Segregation by choice, this time accompanied by gentrification and competition-driven corporate school reform, fired a second shotgun blast at inner city schools; this occurred as the Rightwing accelerated the destruction of our industrial base, and they were followed by New Democrats seeking to “end of welfare as we know it.”
Research by Cornell’s Kendra Bischoff, Stanford’s Sean Reardon, Ann Owens of the University of Southern California, and others raise the specter of a third wave of resegregation. Bischoff and Reardon recall that income segregation increased by 4.5% per decade since 1970. It has accelerated greatly since 2007. By 2012, more than 1/3rd of families in large metropolitan areas lived “in neighborhoods of concentrated affluence or concentrated poverty,” as “middle-class neighborhoods have become less common.” Moreover, Bischoff further explains why this segregation is so damaging to schools, “Local environments are important for children’s early and adolescent development, so the more polarized communities become, the more unequal the opportunities available to high- and low-income children.”
Reardon and Ann Owens add nuance to the sorry tale that we’ve always known – how flight from desegregated urban schools played a huge part in dividing modern America against itself. In doing so, it severely damaged our social and physical environments and our physical as well as moral health. Owens finds “that neighborhoods in the 100 largest cities became steadily more isolated by income between 1990 and 2010–but the segregation was driven by families with school-age children.”
Whenever we talk about neighborhood and school segregation, they really go hand-in-hand. … There’s really a feedback loop, and it’s often framed as, we can never have integrated schools while we have segregated neighborhoods, but the flip side is true, as well. As long as schools are unequal and linked to neighborhoods, that’s going to play a big role in neighborhood segregation.
Reardon uses a massive Stanford database to analyze “16 different facets of racial segregation: school and residential isolation, segregation within and between districts, racial or socioeconomic isolation, and differences in how likely students are to be exposed to students of particular races or socioeconomic groups.” He shows how the racial achievement gap is not just a legacy of discrimination, personal racism, and poverty. Reardon explains:
Even after you control for kids’ family backgrounds, it’s quite clear in the data. … it’s something about school quality–not only about racial segregation, but about the fact that racial segregation in America almost inevitably leads to these kind of disparities in [students’] exposure to poverty and differences in the kinds of resources that schools have.
My Oklahoma City provides a clear illustration of the patterns these scholars document – of the devastation produced by Jim Crow, the Big Sort, and the devotion to personal choice, as well as our failure to face the moral facts of segregated life. The metropolitan area spreads over 621 square miles. The sprawl created a culture dominated by the automobile, and the resulting social and health care costs. Once a sturdy, frontier culture characterized by neighborliness, Oklahoma City became increasingly obese, isolated and susceptible to the politics of fear. Faced with desegregation orders, the Oklahoma City Public School System (OKCPS) immediately lost nearly half of its 75,000+ students. Now, the OKCPS is an underfunded, 86% low-income district which competes with 26 other school systems.
As Steve Lackmeyer’s Daily Oklahoman in-depth analysis, “Unsustainable,” explains, “After decades of sprawl, Oklahoma City officials know something must change.” Lackmeyer describes the way that previous forms of school choice drove the most destructive patterns of mindless geographical expansion. Developers would overbuild apartments on the edges of the city limits, outside the OKCPS boundaries. Then, to paraphrase one businessman, apartment growth “on the fringe” prompted expansion “beyond the fringe.” These complexes then deteriorated into violent and chaotic eyesores, undermining the quality of life in the areas that became inner-ring suburbs. This nudged the affluent further out into exurbs and school systems serving concentrations of children from extreme privilege.
It’s no surprise that developers overbuild apartments in those areas. Parents make the safest decisions for their own children, as opposed to what would be a best for society as a whole. Sean Readon’s database shows that the average OKCPS student’s test scores are about 2-2/3rds years behind the average student in Edmond, the rich suburb just to the north. However, these outcomes are explained by the deficits children bring to the school, not the quality of classroom instruction. Adjusting for socio-economic factors, student performance increases at very similar rates in the OKCPS and Edmond. (Both are below the national mean, however.)
It’s great that business and political leaders now understand that Oklahoma City must control suburban sprawl as it creates an even more vibrant downtown. But, we should not repeat the sins of the past and promote this third wave of segregation in the central city. There is no reason to believe that charter schools could provide a better education for the children of the Millennials who are moving into the central city. But, today’s developers, who criticize their predecessors for promoting destructive suburban sprawl, often embrace charters in the belief that they are a better “brand.” The worst example of this short-sightedness is the once-secret plan to create up to ten new charters, including a ring around downtown. Its advocates claim to believe that they could find high-performing charters that would not push out harder-to-educate children.
Of course, the new charters designed for upwardly-mobile professional families would not be “No Excuses,” teach-to-the-test schools. A new charter conversion law would allow a long list of institutions to sponsor selective and niche schools – even without the consent of teachers and patrons. The goal would be a “Portfolio” model like New Orleans. The reward and punish behaviorism of KIPP would be subsidized by turning the nicest buildings serving 100% low-income, predominantly black students over to that charter. The poorest children of color, special education students and English Language Learners, and survivors of extreme trauma, would be rejected from both the new charters designed for privileged families and the higher-poverty No Excuses schools. They would not be welcome in affluent charters. And, those that would be unwilling or unable to put up with the endless hours of nonstop teach-to-the-test at KIPP and other higher-poverty charters would be pushed out of the buildings that once housed their neighborhood schools.
In other words, Oklahoma City is just one example of today’s corporate reformers selectively learning the lessons of history. Segregation is awful for children and other living things. Integration is crucial to success in the 21st century, and urban revitalization is necessary to recruit the children of the suburbs and exurbs back into the city center. But, business leaders remain oblivious to the damage done to poor children by segregating them into charter schools.
There is a serious danger that the federal government, and top-down reformers who used the stress of high stakes testing to overcome the stress of the poverty which undermines student performance, will refuse to heed the lessons of history. Families with choices were bound to flee the bubble-in malpractice which corporate school reformers incentivized, prompting more separation. The market-driven reformers also used the stress of competition between charters and neighborhood schools, and the segregation which inevitably resulted, to supposedly reverse the legacy of Jim Crow. It will be even worse, however, as the failure of test-driven, competition-driven reform becomes apparent to corporate reformers, if they continue to respond by doubling down on charter schools and ignoring the ways that they contribute to resegegration.
Charter schools like Success Academy promote a 4th wave of segregation:
the WANTED
and
the UNwanted
Promoted to the nation in the humiliating “test score” terms of ACCEPTABLE and UNacceptable.
Not just “wanted” and “unwanted”.
There are 3 Success Academy elementary schools in District 3 in NYC. That means priority goes to any child in the district.
Two of the schools are primarily low-income and minority — there may be a small handful of white kids.
One of the schools is only 25% low-income, where white kids are the biggest ethnic group.
If that wasn’t bad enough, instead of combining those 3 segregated elementary schools for middle school, Success Academy has a special middle school that is out of district for the elementary school where almost all the white and middle class students go. Say what???
The commentator Tim often posts here about segregation in public schools and he pretends that charter schools are the answer.
The other notable thing is that the two District 3 Success Academy schools with mostly minority and low-income students have sky high suspension rates and attrition rates that Success Academy wants to keep hidden.
The one school with most white and middle class kids has very low suspension rates.
We have an economically diverse public system here and it’s just so important. The higher income families literally have “skin in the game”- they vote to support the public schools because their children attend them.
“Choice” would destroy this town- the public schools are one of the few things we have in common. They are quite literally the glue holding this place together. I think about some of the smaller public school systems that surround mine where it’s 70 or 80 or 90% working class and the towns are in bad shape economically- falling wages and no job security. The one constant they have is public schools. There is no other “center” to these places.
Does anyone in ed reform consider what they’re throwing away? Any downside risk analysis at all?
Public schools are not supposed to be the ‘center.’ Unfortunately school officials spend so much money and time trying to be a center that they no longer help kids learn the essentials.
jring281,
It wasn’t school officials that made public school into the alleged ‘center’ you are referring to, whatever ‘center’ means to you or the radio talk show you listen to.
It was legislation at the state and federal level over a period of decades that added repeated responsibilities on the traditional public schools to do what too many parents weren’t doing.
Therefore, in most cases school officials at the district and school level are only doing what the law tells them to do, because all traditional public schools must be accredited on a regular basis and if they are not complying with the law, then they can be sanctioned, punished, fired, closed.
jring281 I think you have misinterpreted the comment. Public schools in my town of 30k in central NJ (& same is true of my home upstate-NY town of 30k still, 50 yrs later) are not “the center” nor do they try to be. When you have a town w/2 middle schools & 1 hisch, & 90% of parents send their kids there, & they’re run by an elected board of townfolk, public school cannot help but form a glue holding the town together. It means a large proportion of citizens have met each other repeatedly coming & going from school events for a good chunk of their adult years. It’s how neighbors get to know each other, why faces on the board, running for council etc are known. Friendships, book clubs, parent coaches, library sales, civic groups are built this way. Churches & temples & Y’s – & the choirs & bands that rehearse there – double those connections & merge various age groups. But the largest connection point is the schools. School officials spend their $ & time on the students’ ed not on ‘trying to be the center’.
Lloyd,
Exactly.
Last time I looked a public school superintendent had to administer 21 programs edicted by the FEdeRAL government thereby having essentially zero time to ensure appropriate learning achievements by the students.
Leaders of Learning in other kinds of schools are not similarly oppressed.
Sorry if you are distressed by my agreement with you. My favorite talk show encourages dialog. Hope you feel better soon.
What is your favorite talk show? I don’t have one, because I abandoned talk shows back in the late 1980s or early 1990s after I started to fact check the claims made by the hosts of those shows. That is why I quit listening to political based talk shows because every one of them I checked was often wrong, misleading and based on lies.
Without the Fairness Doctrine—that President Reagan got rid of opening the door to far right hate media—to ensure a balance in debates, it is almost impossible to find any talk show that isn’t one sided.
And I’m not talking about just federal programs. Most of the restrictions on the community based, democratic, transparent, non-profit public schools comes from state education codes that came into existence through the legislative democratic process as outlined in state and federal Constitutions and the verdicts of court cases, and the last time I looked, the justice system in the U.S. was one of the three divisions of power as it was set up in the U.S. Constitution by America’s Founding Fathers.
Therefore, getting rid of the community based, democratic, transparent, non-profit public schools and turning OUR children (and not the children of the wealthiest 1 percent) over to autocratic, often abusive of children using bully tactics, often fraudulent, lying, cheery picking students and facts, for profit, and often inferior or no better corporate charter schools is not the answer. In fact, that will end up making the situation worse in our schools because due process and the protections offered by the U.S. Constitution will be removed.
If you want to change the rules that govern the traditional public schools, you do it through the process of government that the Constitution set up. You focus on legislation at the state and federal level. You focus on the courts. You don’t get rid of the schools and turn OUR children over to profit sucking frauds that worship at the alter of avarice where business as usual means lie, lie and lie some more if that makes you money.
Did you know that racism and segregation of the classes is at the heart of the far right movement to subvert the republic and the U.S. Constitution. For instance, the libertarian movement that is funded mostly by the Koch brothers through ALEC is a racist political organization with more than 90 percent of its members white and mostly made up of white man?
Only 7% of the total U.S. population says they are libertarians but the amount of money coming from billionaires like the Koch brothers that supports that movement is way beyond what 7% of the average Amreican could offer as financial support. In fact, self described libertarians in the U.S. are matched by U.S. citizens that support Communism. Both are each represented by about 7 percent of the population. Two dangerous extremes that should be stopped.
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2011/09/koch-brothers-million-dollar-donor-club
Lloyd, Your metrics for public education as you conceive it, notably, “…community based, democratic, transparent, non-profit…” do not attend to what the student is actually able to do.
Could it be that your “talk show” is this blog and the opinions of the NEA, notably, ‘it is not about the kids, it is about power’?
Why didn’t you answer my question — what is your favorite talk show?
Why did you change the topic and turn it around and allege that I had a favorite talk show that was this blog. Diane doesn’t tell us what to think, and she offers a wide variety of reputable sources loaded with facts to support what she says. Something you seldom if ever get from the far right hate media machine that always controls the dialogue 100 percent and manufactures it’s own often misleading and fake data to support its autocratic movement.
Diane’s blog is not a talk show supported by a corporation and or billionaire oligarchs. Diane has nothing to gain from the efforts she is making to save community based, democratic, transparent, non-profit public education. Diane doesn’t run ads on her Blog but with the traffic her blog gets, she could and she would earn a lot if she did. For Diane there is no profit motive.
How much does the host of your favorite talk show get paid?
The comments on Diane’s blog represent many opinions often supported with links to reputable facts that have not been cherry picked, and Diane seldom pushes the button that stops or limits someone from commenting on her Blog. She only steps in when someone won’t stop insulting her or relentless badgering others who leave comments here.
But far right hate media talk shows often cut off callers that start to make sense and then the higly paid host attacks them once they are off the air and can’t defend themselves, and often resorts to ad hominem attacks before moving on with the next lie. In fact, most if not all talk shows have a filtering system in place that makes sure the callers are hand picked before they are put through to the host. If the staff pick someone that disagrees with the host, those callers are picked because they will have trouble supporting what they think.
For instance, how many far right hate media talk shows that support the autocratic, opaque and often fraudulent and inferior corporate charter school movement have asked Diane to appear on their shows to represent the other side of this issue? What are they afraid of — the truth from a reputable source that uses reputable data that has not been cheery picked to support a political and/or for-profit agenda?
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation made that mistake when they invited Anthony Cody to debate them. The result was “The Educator and The Oligarch: A Teacher Challenges The Gates Foundation” by Anthony Cody. I don’t think the Gates Foundation will make that mistake again as they spend bilious to achieve the Gates agenda to destroy the traditional public school system, a community based system that is responsible for making the United States one of the most educated countries on the planet.
https://www.amazon.com/Educator-Oligarch-Teacher-Challenges-Foundation/dp/1942146000
Lloyd,
Ahhh, the Fairness Doctrine, a policy pursued by political appointees at the FCC.
Is this your understanding of a government of, by, and for the people?
The Fairness Doctrine did nothing to limit free speech. What it did was make sure that free speech was really free and both sides of an issue aired on radio was heard at the same time. That, of course, made it almost impossible to cheery pick facts and mislead the public.
In addition, both Houses of Congress voted to make the Fairness Doctrinaire legal but Reagan vetoed that bill and when the bill came up again under the first Bush and Congress once again passed it, that Bush vetoed it again.
The Fairness Doctrine was also challenges in the Supreme Court where it was upheld by a vote of 8 – 0. What that means is the law as laid out in the U.S. Constitution had a chance to judge the Fairness Doctrine, and it was unanimously supported in the U.S. Supreme Court and won the vote in the U.S. Congress but two GOP presidents blocked it with their veto power.
But what exactly was the Fairness Doctrine? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine
With the Faintness Doctrine gone, it became much eater to fool and manipulate Americans through the corporate owned media.
Lloyd,
After you introduced your pejorative presumption that I had a favorite radio talk show I strove to focus on the issues rather than the ad hominems.
However, I am quite willing to share my favorite source of perspective. Perhaps it will qualify for what you mean as ‘talk show’ — Franklin Graham’s Samaritan’s Purse.
Perhaps a contribution from you would lead you to a more cheerful existence. At least I hope so.
Unless I confused you with someone else, scroll back through your comments where you mentioned that you had a favorite talk show.
The US has fewer public employees:
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/01/14/job-shifts-under-obama-fewer-government-workers-more-caregivers-servers-and-temps/
I wonder about it though- I’d like to see an analysis of how much of this is due to privatization. Do they count “public sector” jobs that are filled by publicly-paid private contractors as “private sector jobs”?
If so that’s a bit of a shell game, don’t you think? If they’re just replacing public employees with contractors they’re not “creating” anything. Not really seeing the net upside of this, other than for the contractors of course.
What happened to our private sector that they only thing they know how to do is replace the public sector and skim public funding off the top? How is that “productive” in terms of net value-added? They know they all can’t be on the public payroll, right? The public will need something to pay them with?
The question is not Public Sector or Private Sector it is what economic functions should be assumed as “Public Goods “. I would argue as Joe Stieglitz ,Dean Baker and Jonas Salk had that drug research should be a Government function no body should profit off of illness. We could save hundreds of billions a year for the American people for a thirty billion dollar effort and the elimination of patents . We unfortunately are heading in the other direction. In many area from education to medicine.
Another embarrassing hit for ed reform in Ohio:
http://ohiosenate.gov/democrats/press/senator-schiavoni-condemns-ecot-lawsuit-against-the-ohio-department-of-education
ECOT, the garbage for-profit they all promoted, is suing the state to avoid “accountability”.
First we find out their voucher program is a complete bust and now this clout-heavy charter chain is suing.
One would think lawmakers in Ohio would stop taking direction from Fordham and start doing their jobs at some point. What will it take to release this stranglehold the ed reform lobby has on this state? How many embarrassing public debacles? If we wanted to elect Fordham lobbyists to run Ohio public schools we would have elected them.
Diane, I know you follow Jeanie Kaplan’s blog but I believe Denver Public Schools are more segregated now than before court-ordered busing. There is no outrage, no concern, not even any interest on the part of the press. It is frustrating and disconcerting.
Here’s today’s visit to the ed reform echo chamber:
“Online (or virtual) charter schools are typically nonprofit organizations authorized to serve students anywhere in a given state. In the 24 states where online charter schools exist, some are locally operated by nonprofits using commercial platforms and content, some nonprofits contract with local partners for content and instructional services, and other nonprofits contract with national partners. There are, with a few exceptions like in Arizona, no for-profit charter schools.”
Read that last line. LOL. Blatantly untrue. I guess he missed FL, OH, MI and PA. Oh, and CA.
http://educationnext.org/online-charters-expand-learning-options-forum-virtual-schools-tom-vander-ark/
These are the people who get exclusive access to lawmakers. No wonder they’re all clueless.
After the Brown ruling and the civil rights era, schools in the south expanded “Christian schools” which often were little more than white schools. The difference is that these schools charge tuition to attend and operated privately. “Reform” is resegregating many cities using public dollars to underwrite what is essentially segregation. This practice should be challenged in the courts as privatization has created a hybrid entity that is neither “fish nor fowl.” Our country appears to have quit enforcing integration.
Professional educators, who are mostly empaths that care for the children they teach — and not the cold, ruthless, calculating psychopaths like most of the billionaire oligarchs — know logically from experience that this report is truth, but we are up against the fact that most decisions people/parents make are based on emotion and not logic.
The Neuroscience behind Derision Making
“Think of a situation where you had bulletproof facts, reason, and logic on your side, and believed there was absolutely no way the other person could say no to your perfectly constructed argument and proposal. To do so would be impossible, you figured, because there was no other logical solution or answer.
“And then the other person dug in his heels and refused to budge. Hew wasn’t swayed by your logic. Were you flabbergasted? …
“They’re doomed to fail, however, because decision-making isn’t logical, it’s emotions according to the latest findings in neuroscience.”
http://bigthink.com/experts-corner/decisions-are-emotional-not-logical-the-neuroscience-behind-decision-making
I know that what the findings in neuroscience reports is true because I have run up against these people for most of my life that base most if not all of their thinking on emotion — for instance, an old (former) friend of mine I’ve known for more than fifty years and a few of the commenters here, that refuse to even acknowledge the tsunami of facts we throw at them.
How often have you spent hours putting together facts from reputable sources (with links) as the foundation in a debate with a supporter of the corporate public education destruction movement and they dismissed everything you’ve said in a short statement and then tossed out a question that has nothing to do with your logically formed fact based argument that you know beyond doubt is truth?
And Trump is all about playing to the emotional fears of his followers while the Clinton hating far right also spreads myths and lies about Bill and Hillary to stir up the emotional fears and prejudices of their followers — even some of the education professionals here that know that corpaote public education reform is not only wrong but a fraud but they literally hate Hillary and ignore all the logic that what Trump represent ts is worse than HRC in the White House.
If you are one of the Hillary haters, I think you should check out what Snopes.com says about all the sewer sludge slinging myths out there about the Clintons that are all designed to appeal to emotion.
http://www.snopes.com/politics/clintons/clintons.asp
How do we fight this perfect storm designed to appeal to emotion? We have to phrase our logic based on facts to the emotional concerns and fears of parents and/or people. We can no longer rely on just facts and logic to get our message across. We must appeal to emotion too. We must fight fire with fire.
The so-called “education reform” movement is all about racial segregation. The first calls for “reform” in the form of vouchers arose immediately after the 1954 Supreme Court ruling on Brown v. Board of Education in which the Court declared that separate but equal was inherently unequal and ordered racial integration of the public schools. That ruling triggered “white flight” from public schools to private schools — but parents quickly realized that the tuition cost of private schools was more than they wanted to pay out-of-pocket. That realization led political and private resegregationists to the concoct the “reform” of vouchers, and to sell it to eager parents by deceptively marketing it then (and now) as merely giving parents free “choice.”
But the 1950’s voucher reform faded away when it became clear that because of school attendance boundaries no more than a few token blacks would be attending formerly all-white public schools. In 1972 when the Supreme Court finally ordered busing to end the ongoing de facto segregation, the reform movement rose from its grave and has been alive ever since then trying new tactics to restore racial segregation because it’s unlikely that the Court’s racial integration order can ever be reversed. When it became clear in the 1980’s that vouchers would never become widespread, the segregationists tried many other routes to restore racial segregation, and the most successful has been charter schools because charter schools can be sold to blithely unaware do-gooder billionaires as well as to unscrupulous profiteers who recognized charter schools as a way to divert vast amounts of tax money into their own pockets and into the pockets of supportive politicians at every level of government.
An essential part of the strategy to mask their underlying motives has been for segregationists to sell the public on the necessity for charter schools because public schools are allegedly “failing.” With all manner of “research” that essentially compares apples to oranges against foreign nations’ students, and with the self-fulfilling prophecy of dismal public school performance generated by drastic underfunding of public schools, and with condemnation of public school teachers based on statistically invalid student test scores, the segregationists are succeeding in resegregating education in America via what are basically private charter schools that are funded with public money.
Too bad people like Bill Gates have been unable to trace the roots of the charter school movement and see the pointed hoods behind the movement’s well-maintained facade.
The Third Way is behind the third wave of segregation.
THIS IS MUST READING!!!!!!!!!!!!BRR I beg you…BRR
Billy R. Reagan
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