Arthur Camins recently retired after a distinguished career in science, engineering, and the study of innovation.
He has an inspired idea for innovation in education: try equitable, integrated public schools.
He writes:
Secretary of Education Betsy Devos says that students in the US attend schools that are a “mundane malaise that dampens dreams, dims horizons and denies futures.” She accuses public schools of being stuck in the past. She claims to want innovation.
Miriam-Webster defines innovation as follows;
1: the introduction of something new
2: a new idea, method, or device: novelty
DeVos and her allies want to give public funds to parents to send their children to any public, charter or private schools, whether or not they are religious and whether or not they discriminate by race, religion or sexual orientation.
If enacted, her policies would mean returning to a time when schools were more segregated by race, religion, and class. That is not new or novel. In fact, it is stuck in the past. Segregation is not innovative. It is old school.
DeVos believes that individual parents are in the best position to choose a school that is best for their child, rather than democratically elected representatives. That unlimited choice would return us to a time when individual parents’ inclinations and, yes, their prejudices were prioritized over the needs of the communities in which they live and over the needs of the nation.
For several decades after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court Decision in 1954 public schools in the US became more integrated. However, that trend has reversed. Public schools are becoming more segregated, not just by race but by socioeconomic status as well. In other words, it is becoming more likely that student will attend schools with children who are more similar to one another than not. That trend may satisfy the narrow interests and proclivities of some, but it is destructive to the nation.
Segregated schools are destructive to the nation not just because the inherent inequality of separate education shortchanges particular categories of individual students, but because it deprives all students of the benefit of learning to live across differences in our unalterably diverse country. Integrated schools are not only a moral and democratic imperative but an economic one too. Research indicates that diverse groups are more productive and creative and make better decisions. Learning to participate in diverse groups should start in school not on the job….
The idea of mediating racial and socioeconomic school segregation is not new. But, doing something substantive about it would be innovative.
Here are several policies that promote the old, but still vital idea and value of diversity and equity. Isolated boutique enactments are not innovative. Widespread systemic implementation would be.
Stop funding local public schools primarily through property taxes. Since communities have significantly varied tax bases, this is inherently inequitable. Instead, shift school funding to graduated state and personal federal income, capital gains, and corporate taxes.
Incentivize more integrated neighborhoods through changes in lending and zoning practices. It was, in fact, federal policies that help to limit integrated and promote segregated neighborhoods. It is time to reverse that deplorable history.
Since addressing inequity is necessarily a long-term effort, prioritize funding to schools with the greatest percentages of children from low-incomes and traditionally underrepresented groups.
Increase federal funding, so that rather than taking from well endowed, middle-class schools, funding for the rest can be increased.
Increase federal funding for special education, so that meeting the requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act does not come at the expense of other children.
Provide nutritional, social, health, and economic support to children and their families, so that all children can engage fully in learning.
Invest in infrastructure and research jobs with decent wages so that adults are employed and provide stability at home.
Promote positive social and emotional learning practices in all schools so that all students are known, valued and respected.
Fund professional learning and formative assessment practices so that teachers continue to learn how to best engage and address the learning needs of all students.
None of these ideas are new. However, as a nation, we have only tinkered at designing solutions. We are a nation of interdependent communities and states. Systemic efforts to address inequity have always been limited not by what is possible, but by the political constraints driven by economic elites. The self-proclaimed realists among the empowered condescendingly claim, “We cannot afford all that.” What they really mean is, “I don’t want to pay for it.”
It’s time to give priority to the needs of the majority of Americans. More integrated, well-funded schools would benefit everyone. That would be innovative.
The innovation I would like to see would be to somehow cause the media to consider public education a subject worth discussing. The people are actually ahead of the media, the corporate foundations…..and understandably……the politicians who supposedly represent what people want regarding the desire for information. The democrats bear much more responsibility for this situation….because public education is more important to the basis for their existence than it is for Republicans. Democrat politicians are failing to do what should make sense for their survival.
Lets break this down the Corporate foundations , control the corporate media through the billionaires who control both . Who in turn exert undue influence on the politicians .
I believe that is best described as oligarchy and throughout history there has only been one answer to oligarchy. Rarely does this end peacefully . But we will have political revolution or ……
Yes: Democrats are failing to do what should make sense. And perhaps their recent non-survival on election night had more than a little to do with this fact.
If our country were led by those that value equitable schools, Camins’ suggestions would have been adopted. They are all achievable and doable, if our leaders had the will to do them.
Integration is a powerful tool in pursuit of equality and justice. I was fortunate to have worked in an integrated school district as an ESL teacher for over three decades. One of the reasons I am so passionate about public education is that I got to see the potential of an integrated school in action. While I taught all ages of students, as the program expanded, I taught ESL in our most diverse elementary school for over twenty years. My district had the practice of inviting all the district’s teachers to the high school graduation. I got to see the impact that a good integrated school had these young people as they told me about their college and post high school plans. My ELLs were among the poorest students in the district; yet almost all of them were heading to a four year or community college. Today most of these young people are in the middle class as are many of the district’s former African American students. Integration along with high expectations and supported opportunities for poor students is a powerful antidote to poverty.
AMEN. WORKS. And what a concept. The Deformers, HOWEVER, have NO CLUE. The deformers don’t know how to help kids construct knowlege. Instead they use the SKINNERIAN model of rewards and punishments.
Remember Kohn’s book: Punished by Rewards. Kohn is right. We are indeed punished by rewards. Look at the DEFORM of our public schools. Both teachers, students, and parents are punished by “stupid” rewards via the DEFORMERS.
Camins is right.
“Clue”
It happened in White House
With Arne D.
A ball peen VAMmer
And tests for thee
It happened in Podunk
With William Gates
A Common Chore
That sealed our fates
It happened in charters
With Moskowitz
Torn up papers
School’s a bitch
It happened in public
For all to see
But Clue is the thing
We lack, you see?
It happened in public
To you and me
But Clue is the thing
We lack, you see?
Sadly I do not believe that the answer to segregation or the answer to unequal educational outcomes is to be found in our schools. That answer is to be found in the economic policies that trap people in poverty and always have . Slavery has been replaced by wage slavery as economic policies have shifted income and income gains to the very top of the income scale and not by accident. The top 1/10 of 1 % having more wealth than the bottom 90% . The exploitation of racial hostilities has always been used to divert attention away from this theft. Especially in the South but certainly not limited to that region. Not even limited to the United States as we saw Brexit unfold in England not so much as a reaction to Muslim immigrants but rather to Eastern Europeans .
What a wonderful world this would be, if education (other than political education )were truly a solution to these problems . The notion that we can educate and create the economy that lifts all Americans to equality is as wrong headed as the notion from that great educator Rick Perry (sarcasm), that if we produce more coal we will produce the demand for it.
I agree with you. Poverty is a much larger issue than just education. However, education can make a dent. One of the reasons my school district was successful to a large degree was that we were in a diverse suburban school district, Two thirds of the students in the school were middle class. Though these students were poor, poverty did not engulf them. Many of the poor students lived in supportive families that were aspirational. Some of our students faltered too, especially those that came from dysfunctional families. However, I am thrilled that so many of our students actually found their way and are productive members of society. This would not have been possible if the district hadn’t had the willingness to help these students.
There probably is some selection bias and certainly my observation is not scientific . In the mid 60s the electrical union in NYC became one of the first trade unions to voluntarily integrate (vs a court order)in NYC and the Nation .Roughly a thousand members mostly minority were taken in, the project continues to this day. With efforts to determine why there are fewer minority members in supervision. That aside most of these members who only needed a HS degree to qualify have children who have gone on to four year degrees .
My H.H.H.school district out on the Island sounds much the same as the wealthy district you describe with a rather large group of minority students bused in from another town. I seriously doubt the outcomes are even near equal.
But the problem goes deeper than race, as that most of the stats showing wage advantage of college graduates are based on our generation . With Gen X and millennial’s lagging far behind boomers in wages at a given age.
Some damper and I share some perceptions…the Democrat party is not fulfilling a responsibility to deal with the damage of Duncan and gates. A political party should be formed to remind them. Cue up horrified angry lecture from centrists whose main principal is that trump is awful.
Let me know where the phone booth is where your third party is holding its first meeting.
My view is that we have to take our fight to the Democratic Party. They can’t win without us and they need to hear it from us.
Politicians don’t lead. They follow. If we build a powerful movement, we can push Democrats to follow. That’s how we got Social Security, Medicare, civil, voting and worker rights, etc that we are now having to defend.
Sorry, I forgot that there are no more phone booths. How about a diner?
Kind of Ironic that you would ask that…..I actually still have an old fashioned phone, wi. red to my wall. I am not sure whether Jeff Bryant spoke to me on his cell phone, but we talked almost an hour. I sent him as much info and contacts as I thought might help, and stayed out of the way, otherwise. You featured his Washington Post article about St. Louis which eventually resulted. Lots of educators in St. Louis read it and discussed it…..but zero media reaction, which left the Post Dispatch in the position of refusing to address their historical inaccuracy problems…and the only political reaction was from school board members both local and state. Make enough noise about it, and the democrats will notice……but do it with an attitude of notice or else, not fail to notice and we know we will still have you. In my state that goes for Claire McCaskill who is capable of refusing to answer questions which require her to take a stand.
Love themspellcheck
I love the edit button . Or shall I say, I more than most need the 5 minute edit button.
Note that my list does not just include what happens in schools, but housing and tax policy, as well as infrastructure development and jobs at decent wages. So, of course, neither integration nor a more equitable society will happen in schools alone, but rather as a part of a movement for a more humane, just, and equitable country.
Absolutely and yes. The funding of schools is a critical piece of that formula. As is our tax structure in general . Our trade policy that seeks to protect “intellectual property rights “. Patents being in effect tariffs that funnel wealth to the elite. , rather than protect labor consumer and environmental standards .
My favorite description of the plight of many American cities and towns
coming from John Angelos COO Baltimore Orioles . So if the Civil rights acts effectively ended slavery by providing equal access to jobs . What good was it if those jobs that enabled that standard of living was disappearing at the very same time. What good, if labor laws that protected workers and gave them voice were attacked as well . If the access to Higher Ed became limited by cost as Government abandoned that commitment. . . … …
“http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/04/orioles-john-angelos-baltimore-protests-mlb
Southerners before the civil war used to use the wage slavery argument to prod the north to accept their “peculiar institution”. They discarded such protestations when share tenancy replaced chattel slavery. In some places, there was a discernible difference. In other places, everything looked the same, seemingly dictated by the geographic determinism U. B. Phillips wrote about in life and Labor of the Old South.
Until minimum wage laws began to underpin the wages paid to workers, it was difficult to argue that there was much difference between one form of exploitation or another. Nic Hanauer thinks a 15 dollar min would be a good start. Not so sure it would help myself. No natural economy works without a good balance between wages and profits. Perhaps there is no such thing as a natural economy outside of the aboriginal trading of bygone days.
As long as Trump is president, and as long as the Republican Party is controlled by the Koch brothers, none of this will happen.
Yes. I agree Diane. So, we need to elect people who will fight for equity not wealth and divisiveness. Our work in education is one place to identify what that means and to begin to build that movement.