An uneasy amalgam of pride and discontent, Caroline Mitchell sat amid the balloons and beach chairs on the front lawn of Princeton High School, watching the Class of 2004 graduate. Her pride was for the seniors' average SAT score of 1237, third-highest in the state, and their admission to elite universities like Harvard, Yale and Duke. As president of the high school alumni association and community liaison for the school district, Ms. Mitchell deserved to bask in the tradition of public-education excellence.
Discontent, though, was what she felt about Blake, her own son. He was receiving his diploma on this June afternoon only after years of struggle - the failed English class in ninth grade, the science teacher who said he was capable only of C's, the assignment to a remedial "basic skills" class. Even at that, Ms. Mitchell realized, Blake had fared better than several friends who were nowhere to be seen in the procession of gowns and mortarboards. They were headed instead for summer school.
"I said to myself: 'Oh, no. Please, no,' " Ms. Mitchell recalled. "I was so hurt. These were bright kids. This shouldn't have been happening."
It did not escape Ms. Mitchell's perception that her son and most of those faltering classmates were black. They were the evidence of a prosperous, accomplished school district's dirty little secret, a racial achievement gap that has been observed, acknowledged and left uncorrected for decades. Now that pattern just may have to change under the pressure of the federal No Child Left Behind law.
Several months after Blake graduated, Princeton High School (and thus the district as a whole) ran afoul of the statute for the first time, based on the lagging scores of African-American students on a standardized English test given to 11th graders. Last month, the school was cited for the second year in a row, this time because 37 percent of black students failed to meet standards in English, and 55 percent of blacks and 40 percent of Hispanics failed in math.
One of the standard complaints about No Child Left Behind by its critics in public education is that it punishes urban schools that are chronically underfinanced and already contending with a concentration of poor, nonwhite, bilingual and special-education pupils. Princeton could hardly be more different. It is an Ivy League town with a minority population of slightly more than 10 percent and per-student spending well above the state average. The high school sends 94 percent of its graduates to four-year colleges and offers 29 different Advanced Placement courses. Over all, 98 percent of Princeton High School students exceed the math and English standards required by No Child Left Behind.
So is the problem with the district, or is the problem with the law?
The answer seems clear to those parents - mostly black, but some white and Hispanic - who have been raising the issue of the achievement gap for years. While the Princeton community includes a slice of black bourgeoisie attached to the university or nearby corporations, most of the African-American population came here a century or more ago to serve as the butlers, maids, cooks and chauffeurs of a university and town with a nearly Southern fondness for segregation. The high school, for instance, did not integrate for nearly 20 years after its founding in 1898, and the elementary schools waited until they were compelled by state law in 1947.
As far back as the 1960's, according to the local historical society, black students suffered from "low expectations from teachers" and a high dropout rate. In the early 1990's, an interracial body calling itself the Robeson Group - in homage to Paul Robeson, the most famous product of black Princeton - mobilized to recruit more black teachers and help elect the first black member to the school board.
Despite such efforts, the achievement gap remained. A tracking system for math separates students in middle school. The high school, while not formally tracked, has such a demand for seats in Advanced Placement classes and honors sections that a rigid hierarchy exists in effect. Guidance counselors find their time consumed by writing recommendation letters for seniors who routinely apply to 10 or more high-end schools.
And until the No Child Left Behind law was enacted there were no concrete consequences for failing to address the resulting disparity. Which may be why a number of black parents here credit the federal law with forcing attention on the underside of public education in Princeton. It requires all districts to reveal test results and meet performance standards by various subgroups, including race.
"If you scratch the surface of this town, a lot of contradictions are going to emerge," said Ron Plummer, a project manager for a technology company and a co-chairman of the school district's minority education committee. "I do have some suspicions when measurements come from standardized tests alone. But if it's going to shine a bright light on the inadequacies of the system, especially as it regards children of color, then I'm all in favor."
In any case, there can be a tone of defensiveness, even smugness, among certain school leaders in Princeton. "We're proud of our F," said Lewis Goldstein, the assistant superintendent, referring to the contradiction between the district's overall success and its standing under No Child Left Behind. "It's as if you handed in your homework and the teacher handed it back and you got a 98 on it and an F. That's the situation we're in."
TO be fair to Princeton, it is hardly the only community to include both a large number of superachieving students and a smaller but persistent number of low-income, nonwhite stragglers. Princeton, in fact, belongs to an organization of 25 similar school districts, the Minority Student Achievement Network, which includes Evanston, Ill.; Shaker Heights, Ohio; and Eugene, Ore., among others, that are working to find techniques to address the issue.
Princeton's superintendent, Judith Wilson, has accepted the challenge of reducing the achievement gap. As a newcomer to the district - she arrived last February from the working-class, half-minority district in Woodbury, N.J., near Camden - she sounds less beholden than some of her colleagues to Princeton's exalted sense of itself.
"If the gap can't be narrowed in Princeton," she said in an interview in her office last week, "then where can it be narrowed? There can't be a question here of resources, or of community support, or of quality of staff. So if we can't impact the students who are not born into privilege, then where can it happen?"
Ladies, please let me know if you find these interesting or not. I like to spur debate and discussion on certain topics and I think most of the articles I have posted have done a good job of that. If you don't agree, please feel free to tell me.
Okay, maybe I'm being dim and I might get flamed for this, but I'm not understand the racial connection if all of these kids are attending the same school. Last I checked brain power and intelligence when exposed to the same classes isn't based on race. If everyone has the same resources available to them, how can race be the issue? I can see that if there is segregation in classes or they went to different schools (which obviously wouldn't be the case) that this could be a valid reason, but I'm just not really seeing the validity of the argument.
This is basically my highschool and I have fairly strong feelings on the subject. I went to highschool in the poorest neighborhood of Seattle. Overall Seattle is a fairly wealthy city, so it wasn't like going to school the poorest neighborhood in LA or something, but the majority of the people who lived there were low income blacks. At the same time, my highschool was also the AP magnet school. We had more AP classes than any other school in the district, which lured white kids from richer neighborhoods in the city. This led to the racially makeup being about half white kids (the majority of whom were enrolled in AP and honors classes) and half minorities (mostly blacks, who were enrolled in the regular classes).
Here's a really good article here from my highschool paper (which was EXCELLENT) about the issue and what was being done to fix it on pages 11-13 if anyone's interested. A few facts I pulled out...
African American students are substantially underrepresented in honors and AP courses, have breathtakingly low test scores relative to Garfield’s Asian and white populations—with as many as 65.5% more white students passing that black students in each area--and earn an average GPA a full 0.9 (equivalent to almost two letter grades) lower than their white and Asian classmates. Also, 65% of African American students have at least one ‘D’ or ‘N’ on their transcript.
So that's where I'm coming from on this issue. And I'll try to put my opinion tactfully, but I'll probably get flamed anyway. I think that the change needs to come from within the black community. There are a lot of programs at my high school, and that's all very nice, but I think that realistically they're probably only reaching about 15 kids out of the about 700 black kids there. I think the problem stems from what is expected of the black students at home, by their peers, and to a lesser extent, in the classroom. Black kids who were in honors classes or got good grades would get made fun of by their friends. Apparently intelligence isn't very street. Neither is attending class. I tried to find the statistics on it, but I couldn't. I do know that the rate of unexcused absences is phenomenally higher among black students than white students. At my high school we were all offered the same opportunities. Anyone could enroll in any class, yet I only had one black kid ever in any of my AP classes.
At the same time I think the black community is in a tough position, and I'm not in any way saying, "Why don't they just snap out of it?" I definitely appreciate how history has created this problem and it's not as simple as just changing a whole portion of society's outlook overnight. I know that when your parents weren’t helping you with your homework in elementary school, it’s not as easy as just walking into an AP class in high school. So maybe the answer is earlier intervention? I don’t know. But I think that any real change is going to come when the black community’s priorities are no longer for their children to be either rappers or basketball players. Things like the “oreo” syndrome need to be gotten rid of. Black identity among the masses needs to be redefined so that someone who is well educated isn’t referred to as black on the outside, but white on the inside.
Just wanted to add that this come from my personal experience, and by “the black community” I mean the one that I experienced in the neighborhood of my high school. Not all black people everywhere.
NylaBelle wrote: Okay, maybe I'm being dim and I might get flamed for this, but I'm not understand the racial connection if all of these kids are attending the same school. Last I checked brain power and intelligence when exposed to the same classes isn't based on race. If everyone has the same resources available to them, how can race be the issue? I can see that if there is segregation in classes or they went to different schools (which obviously wouldn't be the case) that this could be a valid reason, but I'm just not really seeing the validity of the argument.
Sorry, but what do you mean by the validity of the argument? I don't think this article is really arguing anything, just stating the facts. Basically there's a lot that happens in life outside of one high school class. There's previous education, family life, the community you were raised in, income, etc., that all affect performance.
Sorry, but what do you mean by the validity of the argument? I don't think this article is really arguing anything, just stating the facts. Basically there's a lot that happens in life outside of one high school class. There's previous education, family life, the community you were raised in, income, etc., that all affect performance.
Well to me it seems like the article is blaming the achievement gap on the school. Phrases such as "They were the evidence of a prosperous, accomplished school district's dirty little secret" and "Guidance counselors find their time consumed by writing recommendation letters for seniors who routinely apply to 10 or more high-end schools." definitely seem biased in that direction.
nyla - it's possible these kids don't have the same resources available to them. i mean, theoretically they do, but maybe the teachers don't pay as much attention to minority students, or don't spend extra time helping them with things they don't understand. maybe they just write them off.
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rocky wrote: Maddie wrote: Sorry, but what do you mean by the validity of the argument? I don't think this article is really arguing anything, just stating the facts. Basically there's a lot that happens in life outside of one high school class. There's previous education, family life, the community you were raised in, income, etc., that all affect performance.
Well to me it seems like the article is blaming the achievement gap on the school. Phrases such as "They were the evidence of a prosperous, accomplished school district's dirty little secret" and "Guidance counselors find their time consumed by writing recommendation letters for seniors who routinely apply to 10 or more high-end schools." definitely seem biased in that direction.
True, it does sound like they're blaming it on the school (which I disagree with), if that was what Nyla was talking about.
nyla - it's possible these kids don't have the same resources available to them. i mean, theoretically they do, but maybe the teachers don't pay as much attention to minority students, or don't spend extra time helping them with things they don't understand. maybe they just write them off.
Right, but that's not what was stated in the article. The article made it sound like Princeton HS was a great school and it was shocking that this was happening.
I'm not going to say anything about race because honestly, i have read very little on this subject. I will say though that so much of your academic values come from outside the school. I went to a good hs, almost all white, but not everyone was driven to be in the ap classes and get great GPAs. I think some of it is just genetical intelligence (haha, which i seem to be lacking right now!), but SO MUCH is out of the schools hands. Why do some kids care about school and why do some kids not? Why is it that I was motivated and always WANTED to be in the very top percentile with my GPA and SATs? I think it has to do with my parents being kinda bookish and stressing education over sports and whatnot. While I agree that some kids are naturally better at certain things- I would never be a sports star in hs- part of me wonders if maybe I could have been if my parents had pushed me in that direction at a young age. I think its so much outside of school- your parents/upbringing, your community, society...
I'm a wee bit sensitive about this subject and I'll explain why.
Education is a very important to my parents. When I was younger we were barely allowed to watch TV, we had tutor sessions to augment what we learned in class, every summer we had a book list we had to complete, the list goes on and on (I use to think they were evil actually).
We all took AP classes in high school (mines was Math because I'm crappy writer :) ). We've all gone to top tier and/or Ivy league schools. Most of us have advance degrees.
Rewind to about 5 years ago, my youngest brother, was attending the same high school I and all my other siblings went to. My brother was in AP English and struggling a bit. A guidance counselor in my school (he happen to have me as a student as well), and the AP English teacher, decided that my brother must have some sort of learning disability (he basically said he was slow, not dyslexic ) and he should be moved to remedial English, Math, History etc. Basically they tried to put him in Special ED.
My mother heard about this and was FURIOUS, she marched down to that school and really dealt with them. After weeks of back and forth they put him back in his proper place. My brother graduated high school with honors and is now finishing up his Bachelor's in Journalism (same kid they said could not write). He's work as already been published, he's won awards for his writing, the kid is pretty darn smart.
All this to say, if it had been any other child who had a parent that might not have been as aware, the outcome might have been very different. I think this happens to a LOT of black or minority children. The don’t have the kind of legacy a lot of their counterparts do, so their parents probably don’t know or understand the type options they have.
In my brother’s case, I know for fact that it was racial motivated. I had the same counselor and I hated the condescending matter in which he would address me. Like he would have to take it really slow for me to get it and (please don’t think I’m bragging) I have a very high IQ. I actually skipped grades in middle school and started college early. I’m not an idiot.
It only takes one bigoted person in a position of power to ruin someone’s chance of a better future.
It might be hard to believe, but there are still plenty of people out there that subscribe to the mentality that black people are not as smart. Heard of the bell curve? I think I heard someone quote this as recently as last month.
It only takes one bigoted person in a position of power to ruin someone’s chance of a better future.
Isn't that the truth! Sadly. Bias is found everywhere - on all sides, though more prevalent on some sides than others. I am afraid the day will never come when people are judged strictly on merit, and not on superficial qualities, like hair color, skin color, gender, etc. :(
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A guidance counselor in my school (he happen to have me as a student as well), and the AP English teacher, decided that my brother must have some sort of learning disability (he basically said he was slow, not dyslexic ) and he should be moved to remedial English, Math, History etc. Basically they tried to put him in Special ED.
I agree with you, this kind of thing can happen so easily. One of my best friends' brothers had something similar happen. They are Korean, and I don't remember whether he was born there or born here shortly after her parents arrived, but the point is, the parents barely knew any English when my friend's brother was really small and so he barely spoke it either. And when he was in elementary school he was doing really badly, so his teachers decided he was mentally disabled and tried to have him moved to special ed classes. In actual fact THE CHILD BARELY SPOKE ENGLISH but somehow it took years for any teacher to realize that that might be the problem. Ridiculous.
It might be hard to believe, but there are still plenty of people out there that subscribe to the mentality that black people are not as smart. Heard of the bell curve? I think I heard someone quote this as recently as last month.
I agree. There are also plenty of people who believe that all blacks are poor. Its a fact that most black people are not poor, welfare recipients who are looking for a handout. I went to a high school that had a good mix of black and white students and grew up in a kinda upper-middle class neighborhood. There were just as many blacks in the AP classes than there were in the regular classes. I believe that its an issue of class more than race.
I know that people are speaking from their own experiences but your experience isnt the poster for every school where non-whites aren't surpassing the white students. Its not ridiculous to think that there's an achievement gap in some schools. I also dont understand why this is an issue for the black community. As an American, if I work in a school system and see that something isn't right, its my job to do something about it regardless of my race or theirs. These are American students lacking in american schools. Why isnt this an American issue?
Shankel I so agree with you to an extent. My situation is probably not the norm, but I don't think it should be dismissed as a rare occurence. I think it happens more often than it should.
I went to school in a fairly affulent area as well (Montgomery County, MD if you are familiar with the area) . My high school was also pretty mixed. There were plenty of minorities in AP classes in fact out valadictorian was a black women. I'm not saying the entire school administration was racist, I'm only certain of that counselor.
While class is often an issue (see New Orleans) you definitely can not make a blanket statement that it is more of an issue than race. The civil rights movement had nothing to do with class.
It might be hard to believe, but there are still plenty of people out there that subscribe to the mentality that black people are not as smart. Heard of the bell curve? I think I heard someone quote this as recently as last month.
I agree. There are also plenty of people who believe that all blacks are poor. Its a fact that most black people are not poor, welfare recipients who are looking for a handout. I went to a high school that had a good mix of black and white students and grew up in a kinda upper-middle class neighborhood. There were just as many blacks in the AP classes than there were in the regular classes. I believe that its an issue of class more than race. I know that people are speaking from their own experiences but your experience isnt the poster for every school where non-whites aren't surpassing the white students. Its not ridiculous to think that there's an achievement gap in some schools. I also dont understand why this is an issue for the black community. As an American, if I work in a school system and see that something isn't right, its my job to do something about it regardless of my race or theirs. These are American students lacking in american schools. Why isnt this an American issue?-- Edited by ShanKel at 17:20, 2005-09-30
Shankel...I do realize that my experience was just that, my experience. I know that what I experienced was not a universal truth, and have seen what you're describing other places. Also, I don't think this is just a black problem, I totally agree with you that it is an American problem. However, I think realistically, no one else is going to do anything so the cimmunity needs to help itself, and a movement from within I think would be more effective. I also think that while this is defintely a class issue, class and race are not so easily separated. People are often in the class they are in because of the racist history of the US.
I actually fail to see the connection that the article was trying to make. I am hugely against the No Child Left Behind law, but I think the gap that is happening here is that the school is not teaching to all types of students. It has been shown in research about SATs that children learn based on their environment. It has also been shown that "race" tends to play a factor, not so much based on a person's skin color or genetics, but just based on the culture around them. For example, word associations tend to become difficult for children that were taught to speak in other languages and English is a second language, they may not have learned root words, or speak English based on their first language's rhetoric.
It seems to me that the teachers in this school are not necessarily reaching out to the other cultures of students- which is a form of racism. If anything this school should come under some heat for the majority of its minority population being ignored, so to speak. This has nothing to do with actual intelligence, but everything to do with cultural ignorance.