Can Race Be Removed from the Charter School Issue?
By Christian Braunlich • Mar 17th, 2010 • Category: Education, Top Story
Which statement does not belong with the others?
A. “One of the places where much of that innovation occurs is in our most effective charter schools.” – President Barack Obama
B. “High-performing urban charter schools such as the KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) schools are showing that minority students can close the achievement gap if given access to high-quality instruction.” – Rev. Al Sharpton
C. “(Charters operate) six days a week. Tutoring services. Parents being called in on conferences on a regular basis. Each child furnished with a computer. Are there results shown? Yeah. And who’s asking for it more than anyone else? African-Americans.” – Former Governor J. Douglas Wilder
D. “Members expressed extreme concern and objection to the most radical change in public education since Massive Resistance….A lifetime of work to ensure equal access to education, democratic local control of our schools, and the opportunity for every child to succeed is under attack.” – Statement of the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus opposing proposed charter school legislation.
Reading that, it would be easy to dismiss the Black Caucus as political cranks. But it would be wrong.
For starters, part of their response was strategic; an attempt to underscore budgetary concerns about proposed decreased state funding for education in low-income areas.
But part of it was also the result of what Dr. Morris Massey calls the imprint period of our lives – the time before ages eight or nine when we absorb everything around us; and the modeling period – the time before age 13 when we copy adults around us. Both are part of Massey’s view that “What we are is what we were when …,” and that we develop our value systems through the prism of our early experiences.
Nine of the 12 Black Caucus members born and raised in Virginia came to age during that period of Massive Resistance to integration. Four of the other six members not born in Virginia grew up in similarly segregated schools. Virginia had “vouchers” back then: if you were white and your school came under a federal desegregation order, you received a state voucher to go to the all-white private school of your choice. Those schools were frequently called “charter schools.” Meanwhile, public schools were legally authorized to shut down, and black children had few options under a state law that claimed the “mixing of white and colored children constitutes a clear and present danger.”
For that generation, the phrase “school choice” is defined by Massive Resistance. Is it any wonder why?
But holding to that view of the past has hurt the present, and endangers the future. The students who would most likely benefit from being given new options for their education are the ones most likely represented by caucus members. In the cities they represent – all of them in the mid-range of education spending – more than one out of four ninth graders fail to graduate on time. Nine of the 17 schools identified by the state as the “persistently lowest-achieving schools” are in those same communities. The percentage of students in these schools unable to read or do math on grade level can run 30 or 40 percent and even higher at some grades.
If the views of current caucus members were formed by their experiences as children, what experiences are forming the views of these children today?
The generational divide among black voters is already evident. Polls consistently show younger African Americans supporting school choice by 20 points more than their elders. Those numbers are echoed in Virginia, where a November 2009 Braun Research poll showed support for charter schools at 68-19 among black voters under age 45, but support levels dropping to 49-40 among those over age 45. That trend will only accelerate as a younger generation replaces the older.
President Barack Obama long ago recognized these changes and advocated new directions in education reform – from supporting strong turn-around measures, to developing quality charter schools, to a “no excuses” philosophy when it comes to school failure. He’s responded to the need by taking charge of this new mindset and molding it with laser-like focus, and he’s been willing to take on a traditional ally – teachers’ unions – to do it.
Now that the General Assembly session is over, Virginia’s Black Caucus is in the same position. They have the opportunity to define and create innovative new directions for educationally at-risk children, and mold those options to ensure they address paramount equity issues. They might even find some untraditional allies in the process.
And taking control of those issues not only avoids the risk of political change as demographics transform, it helps ensure that the prism of experience for today’s children will be a better one than those of the past.
Christian Braunlich Christian N. Braunlich is vice president of the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, Virginia’s premier non-partisan public policy foundation. He served eight years on the Fairfax County School Board, the nation’s 12th largest school system, where he was a strong advocate of educational accountability and research-based reading programs.
Mr. Braunlich has served as Chief of Staff to Congressman John LeBoutillier, Assistant Vice President of Public Affairs for the National Association of Manufacturers, president of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, and vice president of the Center for Education Reform. His articles have appeared in dozens of publications, including The Washington Post, The Northern Virginia Journal, The Washington Times, and The Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star.
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Can a proposal be generated with the help of those concerned to address the concerns?
I’ll be honest. I don’t think separating out the older folks is a collaborative approach to arriving at a consensus and while they may be beaten back in a numbers game – it won’t be a unifying solution but a divisive one –
Unless I totally don’t understand and/or the position of the older group is fixed and unyielding.. or previous attempts to unify have been rebuffed.. I say.. it’s always worth trying to develop a consensus and even winning votes over opposition is not a winning strategy longer term.
If there is a problem or problems – they need to be addressed not swept under the rug an than have that rug pulled out from under those with objections.
I’m white and a product of massive resistance and I want to see the black people embrace an approach – young and old.
One of the basic problems is this. what happens to the at-risk kids who do not have strong parental advocates?
Everyone likes to think that every kid should have a strong parent and they should but the reality is that some do not – for a variety of reasons – and what happens to these kids?
We already knows what happens to these kids in a world without NCLB – they get left behind – we know this – the numbers we see – the numbers that NCLB requires us to keep – show a continuing problem – a 20 point difference between white and black scores and we can argue about the why behind it but what we cannot do is put together a charter school system on the PREMISE that it will deal with this issue but with no accountability to actually assure those results are achieved.
Charter schools in my view need to be held to the same exact NCLB standards and not become a back-door way of evading accountability – for the sub groups.
If that is one of the concerns of the older black folks – I’m in there corner on this
A lot of important points here, Larry.
To take your last point first: Charter schools ARE held to the same NCLB standards (and take the same tests) as traditional public schools. That’s the law — it always has been and I’m certain it always will be.
I guess the point I was trying to make here was that polls show that the younger generation of African Americans (those under about age 45) are more open to ideas like charter schools and school choice — not only more open, but actually SUPPORT the concepts. A politician reading those tea leaves should figure out real soon that they need to be on board with the rising tide of voters — while making certain that real concerns about equity and equal access are taken into account.
Virginia’s tortured race relations have created a situation in which the nation’s first black president, the first black governor, and one of the leading civil rights advocates are on one side — and Virginia’s Legislative Black Caucus is on the other. The resulting divide is only managing to hurt children.
Something ain’t right here, and we need to be fixing it.