With Charter Schools, A Step Back to Segregation

With Charter Schools, A Step Back to Segregation

Considering the rapid growth of charter schools, it’s important for the public conversations about school choice to distinguish fact from rhetoric and sloganeering. For instance, proponents of charter schools, such as Success Academy CEO Eva Moskowitz, claim charter schools advance racial integration of children and give parents options for “voluntary integration.” Is this true?

More than sixty years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously in the Brown vs. Board of Education decision to abolish the separate but equal legal doctrine and Jim Crow segregation by race.

The ruling was a watershed moment for the United States because it contradicted the prevailing wisdom and popular opinion in many quarters. In sum, the Supreme Court sought to change an inherently racist society by ruling that segregation in schools violated students’ right to equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Members of the civil rights community have expressed that charters have turned back the clock on segregation to pre-Brown levels. At the 2017 NAACP national convention, more than 2,000 delegates passed a new resolution entitled Public and Charter Schools Fulfilling the Promise of Brown v. Board that decries the segregation of African American students into under-resourced public schools and charters. The intensification of segregation in charters is especially important for the African American community because a new report by the NAACP’s Task Force on Quality Education found that one in eight African American students in the United States now attends a charter school.

Even though the popularity of charter schools has plummeted, the rise in the number of charters has been particularly rapid during the past ten years. Many states have lifted caps on the number of charter schools contained within the original state legislation, owing in part to millions of dollars in financial incentives created by federal grant programs. Funding encouraging charter growth has also poured in from state grant programs and funding from private foundations, especially the Walton Family Foundation (of Walmart fame) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

The predominance of peer-reviewed research examining national and local data on the segregation of students in charter schools over the past ten years has demonstrated that school choice is exacerbating existing patterns of segregation. The research has actually shown this for about two decades. For example, using three national data sets, one research study found that charter schools are “more racially isolated than traditional public schools in virtually every state and large metropolitan area in the nation.” What this means in practice is that in schools where white students are overrepresented, white students have little exposure to minority students.

Research conducted by Vanderbilt University and Mathematica argued that charters are not “creating greater segregation,” but a careful reading of this study reveals that in the majority of states examined, white and African American students were more likely to choose even more homogenous charter schools.

Thus, one of the big problems with school choice is the peer-reviewed research demonstrating the finding that “Parents choose to leave more racially integrated district schools to attend more racially segregated charter schools.” Peer-reviewed research has also demonstrated that the choice of African American and white families for schools with homogenous racial compositions “helps to explain why there are so few racially balanced charter schools.”

The same study found that choice was also bad for achievement on average as, “the relatively large negative effects of charter schools on the achievement of African America students is driven by students who transfer into charter schools that are more racially isolated than the schools they have left.”

In contravention of Brown, charters are influencing and intensifying racial segregation across the nation. After several decades, the promise of charter schools to foster integration and a less balkanized society is clearly not being realized.

The article appear here at The Progressive

Please Facebook Like, Tweet, etc below and/or reblog to share this discussion with others.

Check out and follow my YouTube channel here.

Twitter: @ProfessorJVH

Click here for Vitae.

#edinsights


Katrina was a major step backwards for New Orleans in 2007; we wrote behind glass oracles what was acceptable and unacceptable but when regimes change the transitioning teams flex and do more bad than good; For years I was disrespected by selfish high school counsellors that gave us the run around; when I was in school the counsellors went out their way to help you! I mean really; we was not dressing adults but they wanted 1st pick when the Hornets wives desolved the organization they sent us dresses we restructured them to aprons to sell so teens could make money to pay off budget most just wanted a car to transport back and forward to school; its dangerous for young ladies to walk at dusk ir dawn in New Orleans; the counsellors refuse to accommodate us; as if we wanted their job; our foundation was built on prayer and LOVING locals caring for our children's now totally unqualified strangers with no wisdom, morals or knowledge of folks upbringing; no prayers in school; I recall as a kid my cousin substitute teacher at Hoffman my teacher was sick family filled in and got paid also now current school system: *more science *less prayer *no respect *no compassion *KIDS ARE CHECKS *no productive *NO investing sects; *No real true knowledge *NO wisdom *no morals! Just degrees and feminism at its finest; Everything is fast accept it, it don't benefit you get in line and wait; no MY DEAR dream and something will break soon; your body is not yours the counsel is encouraging our boys and girls to become HoeBitches in videos and movies for free; working at the Jewish Community Center and being exposed to Newman High School private investing sects; and volunteering working with SPCA when they was auctioning the bead dogs taught me how to move production; thank you ??Blaine & ??Barry Kern for your many years of inspiration ??Barry i love you Im working on the mold??! I pray leaders that's in charge back up away from the table they have ate enough the people is perishing we must encourage our babies to build wealth and teach them a trade; what good is our WOMEN if they have no wisdom. Awesome post dear ????

Cheryl A. Madden

Historian and Bibliographer of the Stalinist Holodomor Genocide of 1932-33.

6 年

Indeed. Some churches are cult-like in that they worship, work, school, marry, do business, and live all within the same small group. Problem being that the real world exists, and by hiding away in gated communities and so forth, what happens when real life hits home? How do people learn to accept and appreciate others? Empathy development goes right out the window and xenophobia thrives. Ugh!

回复
Kelly E. Kraemer

Human Resources Management

6 年

In every place I've ever taught, volunteered, worked, worshipped, and played, I have found that multicultural settings make the environment better and more whole. I know if a little girl named Ruby Bridges can walk to school facing many angry people, I can also stand up to prejudice wherever I am and not accept it. Walk like a giant and honor diversity: it makes us a better human race!

Catherine Gravil

enseignante chez Education Nationale

6 年

A two tier school system. Nothing new? Whose fault is it?

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了