Wendy Lecker is a civil rights lawyer who writes frequently for the Stamford Advocate in Connecticut.
In this article, she reviews Eve L. Ewing’s marvelous book Ghosts in the Schoolyard.
I finished it a few days ago and can testify that it is a very important book. It is a powerful account of the 2013 mass school closings in Chicago.
Lecker writes:
The increase in racist attacks and voter suppression across the country prompts many whites to claim that this ugliness is “not who we are” as Americans. Sadly, these events merely reinforce how pervasive racism is in American society and policy.
A new book, “Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago’s South Side,” describes how African-American communities experience education reform policies, particularly school closures, in the context of the history of racial segregation and discrimination in Chicago. The author, Eve Ewing, is a professor at the University of Chicago, and a graduate of and former teacher in the Chicago public schools.
In 2013, Mayor Rahm Emmanuel’s administration closed 49 schools, on the pretext that the schools had low test scores and were “under-utilized.” The closures disproportionately affected African-American students in the intensely segregated district.
The questionable standard used to determine “under-utilization” was large class size — 30 children per class. When predominately white Chicago neighborhoods suffered large population declines, CPS never considered school closures there. CPS claimed it would send students to “better” schools, but the receiving schools had test scores just a few points above those slated for closure. From 2000 to 2015, CPS closed 125 neighborhood schools in communities of color, while opening 149 charter schools and selective admission public schools.
“I feel like I’m at a slave auction … Because I’m like, begging you to keep my family together. Don’t take them and separate them.”
This plea was uttered by a Chicago public school principal at one of the public hearings in 2013. Professor Ewing reviewed the testimony of the throngs of community members who came out to oppose gutting their schools. The schools, which had educated generations of the same families, were community institutions. Parents, teachers and students described them as families that provided continuity and stability for the entire neighborhood.
The analogy to a slave auction was not far-fetched. As Ewing notes, “the intentional disruption of the African-American family has been a primary tool of white supremacy.” In Chicago, this is not the first time African-American communities were torn apart by government policy. Wooed to the north by labor recruiters during the great migration, African-Americans were confined to one neighborhood, eventually dubbed Bronzeville, by violence, restrictive covenants and, later, housing policy. The community turned this forcibly segregated neighborhood into a vibrant place — a hub for music and the arts. Public housing policies favored families. Consequently, Bronzeville had a dense concentration of children. Local officials refused to integrate schools, so these children attended predominately African-American neighborhood public schools. Moreover, CPS consistently failed to invest in these segregated schools. Despite local activism and federal intervention over the years, Chicago has done little to address school or residential segregation.
In the late 1990s, Chicago demolished much of Bronzeville’s public housing, ousting many of its residents. Parents who were able sent children to live with relatives who remained in Bronzeville in order to preserve vital school relationships. As Ewing observes, the loss of student population in Bronzeville was the result of overt government policy.
To Bronzeville residents, the 2013 round of school closures was the continuation of a pattern of segregation, displacement and underfunding by Chicago officials. One resident described CPS’s attitude as “I poured gasoline on your house and then it’s your fault it’s on fire.”
There is extensive evidence showing that the 2013 Chicago school closings diminished educational opportunities for the children whose schools closed. Ewing demonstrates that the accompanying loss of relationships, identity and sense of history was just as devastating. The community mourned lost connections with teachers, staff, students, and something larger. Ewing details some of the personalities behind the names of the closed schools — notable African-American professionals from the same community. As one student noted, “That’s how you get black history to go away. Closing schools (especially those named for prominent African-Americans).” In the rare instance where a school slated for closure, Dyett High School, was saved after a community-wide hunger strike, a student declared that “(w)e value our education more because of what people sacrificed.”
“Ghosts in the Schoolyard” illustrates how supposedly objective metrics officials use to judge a school’s quality and fate are far from neutral and fail to account for a host of considerations critical to the community affected. As Ewing concludes, if we fail to consider history, community, race, power and identity when framing and investigating the problems facing our public schools, we will fail to find solutions that serve the best interests of children and communities.
Wendy Lecker is a columnist for the Hearst Connecticut Media Group and is senior attorney at the Education Law Center.

I could not help while reading of this matter but to think of the closing of community schools around the rural parts of America in the 1970s. As agriculture mechanized, rural population took to the highways toward American cities and population dwindled. Proud communities, once the dominant force in the United States, now we’re forced to watch as their children went to new consolidated super schools.
I remember traveling through the agricultural region near Tarkio, MO back in the 1990s. Off the beaten path as usual, my wife and I came upon a church. It was one of those archetypes: white siding, stained-glass windows now penetrated with thick vines pushing their frames apart. Mother Nature was taking back what was hers. All around were square miles of corn and soybeans, products of a new age in American farming. The sons and daughters of this church were gone, many gone to be doctors and lawyers in distant cities where they met people like themselves, once rural, now urban and suburban. Their deserted agricultural communities were ghost towns. Their schools shuttered. Their churches claimed by swelling vines and saplings.
But this story is different, it appears. In this story, a population became useless to a society in place. Somehow the dispersal of people by direct governmental action takes on a more pernicious flavor.
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Roy,
The story you tell is about community whose population abandoned it.
The story Eve Ewing tells is about a community fighting to save its schools, which were closed despite their pleas. The children were then scattered.
Chicago has experienced a dramatic decline in its black population, and school closures may be part of a plan to expand gentrification and expel unwanted people of color.
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Not only are children scattered, but the odds of children from the poorest families dropping out of school goes up. In New Orleans, I estimated that as many as 10,000 children stopped going to school after being driven out by the corporate charters that took over the public schools after Katrina.
If the child wasn’t a great test taker, they were bullied and pressured to leave.
If the child was a challenge to manage, they were bullied and pressured to leave.
And the corporate charters are allowed to be opaque and operate outside of the legislation that required public schools to keep kids in school. They were not required to deal with absentees and so those children were ignored and allowed to get their education on the streets and/or in front of TV and computer screens. And by education, I don’t mean even the scripted videos offered by on-line scam schools. Instead, they could be watching porn and/or the most violent films available.
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In New Orleans, after the storm, enrollment fell from 68,000 to 45,000
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Quite so. What I meant with my last paragraph was to contrast these two experiences in a way that would highlight the tragedy of the latter.
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Diane: not only is the urban experience different as you pointed out, but the rural experience carried win it the expectation from society that those who left would be venerated by their cultures as successful. If it pained the farming communities to lose their schools, how much more must it pain populated urban communities robbed of this institution not by population decline but by public policy.
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Bravo Wendy! This ugly story and the long history of similar stories needs to stay alive.
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Diane Three books that resonate with this note and the experience of those reporting what happened in Chicago, as background:
“Rights Talk” by Maryanne Glendon: how the language of community order and culture is lost in the Courts and supplanted by legalese informed by ONLY the language of rights–e.g., the rights of the corporation to takeover and demolish communities over the rights of those living in that community. (In my library somewhere, but I couldn’t find it. Should be easily found.)
“They Closed Their Schools” by Bob Smith: a blow-by-blow incredibly detailed account of what happened in Farmville/Prince Edward County, VA during 1951-1964 (circa Brown vs. Board of Education). The “white schools” closed as a response to Federal integration requirements or, in their own interpretation, as an assault on State sovereignty. Children were left without an education for circa ten years and some were also shipped out to other family members in order to continue their schooling–similarly causing breakup of cohesive, geographically-based communities and their families. (1996, Martha E. Forrester Council of Women, Farmville Va.)
As deep background:
“The Colonizer and the Colonized” by Albert Memmi: A head-spinning quasi-theoretical account of the insidious nature of English colonization. A foundational staple for any course in political philosophy. (1965, The Orion Press/Beacon, Boston. On the cover from the Los Angeles Times: “Confiscated by colonial police throughout the world since its 1957 publication . . . is an important document of our times, an invaluable warning for all future generations.” CBK
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Add to this the book and essay by Paul Thomas “Beware the Road Builders.”
The road builders come to a village to discuss their plans for a new road and explain all the benefits to the locals.
The locals are persuaded.
Then the road builders build a road and bulldoze the village.
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imagine a nation increasingly able to understand what “we must DEcolonize” means
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Reading this post, I was struck by the blind colonialism of “reform.” Instead of holding institutions accountable for the systematic racism, we have attacked the one institution that has held Afro-American communities together, public education. The state of the public schools in Chicago is the result of the refusal of those in charge to equitably fund the schools. They are the result of inequity, not the cause of the problem.
Privatization is not the cure, but another example of inequitable treatment for poor, black communities. Privatization intensifies segregation and allows corporations to siphon off the cheapest and easiest to educate while sending rejected students to under funded, depleted public schools. It also destroys the family ties to the community. However, this may be the goal when there is lots of money to be made in real estate by displacing black families in the path of gentrification.
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Diane Another reference, but in film: “The Rabbit-Proof Fence.” A heart-splitting truth-telling dramatization of the “civilization” of Australian Aborigines. CBK
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EXCELLENT suggestion. An amazing movie.
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And this tragedy was made possible by weaponizing test scores, and possibly some other data in the “Civil Rights” Data Collection (CRDC). I suspect that almost any reason would have done this work given the power invested in Mayor Rahm Emmanuel’s administration.
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Michael Bloomberg did the same in NYC. Parents and students pleaded to save their schools, and they were ignored. I recall one noteworthy meeting during the very brief chancellorship of publisher Cathie Black (who lasted 90 days). As parents, teachers, and students spoke up for their schools, she leaned into the microphone and visibly said, in a mocking tone, “aaaawwwwww.”
Meanwhile the charter groups turned out to chant and demand more closures to make way for their schools.
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You cannot be serious! If a parent were visibly mocked in such a meeting in these parts they would meet with violence. Someone in a related family would take violent revenge.
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