1947, Maryland, Chicago & some stuff we need to keep hearing…

by | Mar 19, 2017

This we know, but let’s say it again: “Research shows that middle-class students tend to do as well academically in economically mixed schools. But more than that, there’s emerging research […]

This we know, but let’s say it again: “Research shows that middle-class students tend to do as well academically in economically mixed schools. But more than that, there’s emerging research to suggest that, indeed, middle-class students benefit from both economic and racial diversity. As we become a majority-minority nation, more millennial parents are recognizing that it’s a skill to thrive in diverse environments, and employers are looking for people who can get along with individuals from all different backgrounds.”

Yes, opting in to integration is both important for the common good, and the good of your own kid.

 

But Baltimore isn’t down.  This: Part one of a four part series: Bridging the Divide: The Struggle to Move Past Segregated Schools. Reporters Liz Bowie and Erica Green write about the process of redrawing school boundaries and (spoiler alert!) another win for segregation under the guise of “property values” and “discipline issues” etc etc.  No surprise that parents from the largely Black and Latinx school felt that their kids “— the ones they saw as smart and full of potential — were seen only as liabilities” and “as if we are some disease to be avoided.”

But, you know, it’s uncool to “to hold it against parents [who] are looking at what is going to happen to my child, and not the greater good.” But but but…  your child is part of the greater good!  And your child is going to be an adult someday in a world that you’ve helped create… is that going to be a legacy of equity or of more privilege-seeking? And, you know, “middle-class students benefit from economic and racial diversity.”

But I stopped short at this line…  “Baltimore County has never taken that step [toward integration] because no political pressure has been put on leaders to do so.”  We’ve heard from a few folks that the work of integration really *must* take place at the policy level and that fighting this Integrated Schools hearts&minds campaign of ours is nuts. The problem is, though, that WE need to put the pressure on en masse.  WE have to opt in to integrated/ing schools in order to give our electeds and policymakers the courage to make decisions that uplift integration. This is not to say that our work shouldn’t include policy, but until we have raised our parent voices, Baltimore will happen again and again.  And again, it’s on us.

So like Sylvia Mendez says, whose parents fought against Mexican-only schools in California eight years before Brown v. Board of Education, “we have come a long way, but we still have a struggle…”

 

 

Our friend Rebecca Mackinder Wells has been working the struggle hard in Chicago!  The Chicago School District is considering a merger between Odgen (a largely privileged/white overcrowded K-12 school with one campus in the Gold Coast and another in West Town) and Jenner (a neighborhood, predominantly black K-8 school in Cabrini-Green).  Needless to say, there is some, ummmm, resistance.

Here’s the speech Rebecca gave at the most recent forum:

People ask me all the time “Why do you support this merger?” 

I have to admit, sometimes it has been difficult to articulate.

The catalyst for my being involved in this conversation was because I went to an Ogden LSC meeting over a year and a half ago to discuss a potential over-crowding problem….

I jumped in with both feet, working as part of an Exploratory Committee to uncover a variety of solutions and opportunities for our school… which in turn, led us to the discovery of Jenner, just 7 blocks away.

After 18 months of intense research, reading dozens and dozens of articles, having one-on-one discussions with education thought leaders, esteemed professors and politicians, along with continued outreach to parent groups across the city and the country that are working diligently to improve THEIR SCHOOLS …..

It hit me.

Fighting for equitable education for ALL children is so important! And it is something I can make a POSITIVE IMPACT on right here in this community.

Also, through my research, I learned that there are lots of schools within CPS that are in a similar situation as ours….a predominantly white, upper middle class school facing overcrowding with an almost 100% black, low income, bordering school struggling with under enrollment and facing potential closure. 

This is not unique to Ogden and Jenner. 

What IS unique, though, is that we are here tonight to talk about what a successful merging of these 2 schools would look like! 

And I am thrilled that Dr. Jackson and Mr. Claypool consider this potential merger worthy of their time. Even as recently as this morning, I heard Mr. Claypool on NPR talking about how he wants to fight for equitable education for the black and brown students within CPS – he is even part of a newly filed lawsuit against the State of Illinois. 

One of his comments really struck me: “the State treats CPS’ schoolchildren, who are predominantly African American and Hispanic, as second-class children, relegated to the back of the State’s education funding school bus,”. I could not agree more!

Merging these 2 schools, helps not only the 200 students from Jenner gain academic opportunities that were never available to them due to financial constraints, but all of our children will gain increased levels of empathy and academic skills that will position them to be successful in a global economy. The increased diversity in our school community will teach all of the children life skills that they will learn and carry with them for years to come.

We have an opportunity in front of us to make a difference for ALL of our children. This isn’t about me. This isn’t about MY son. We are talking about making a difference in ALL of these children’s lives for generations to come.

These conversations are hard and figuring out the details is going to be messy, 
BUT SO VERY IMPORTANT.

Indeed, these conversations are so very important.  Thanks for sharing this with us, Rebecca! Hope the community meeting you had this weekend went well.

4 Comments

  1. Alli Pedersen

    Great speech Rebecca! Best of luck going forward, changing hearts and minds.

  2. Merger opposing person

    She’s fighting for Jenner and not for Ogden! The truth is that Rebecca is fighting for herself! It’s all about herself and all about winning. It doesn’t matter that hundreds of students, including hers, are gonna lose. As long as she is in the news and her name is being said, she’s happy. You’re so selfish Rebecca! Your fighting to ruin the school and hundreds of kids’ lives! Shame on you! Of course, it’s easy to win on this, because destroying is easier than building. Be proud of yourself when you achieve something good.

    • Lori Smedley

      Wow, “Merger opposing person.” You sound pretty fearful. Here are the arguments that folks tend to have against this merger: 1) it’s all being done to get a high profile for the staff/volunteers in the media; 2) we have to help our own children before we help anyone else’s children; 3) it isn’t my fault that things are the way they are, why punish me or my kids?

      But these are all smokescreens. I think that people are afraid that poverty is contagious, when, in actuality, all research shows the contrary. Your children will not lose. They will still have all the advantages they have now. But more children will be able to benefit from the advantages that your child has. I ask you to look beyond your kid, or even all the kids at Ogden and Jenner, and understand that this is a movement being driven by people who want to see real change in the world.

      I dare you to provide any evidence-based, research-driven piece of information that shows that a merger between two schools of varying economic status would impact children negatively. It just doesn’t happen that way. Visit http://www.jenner-ogden-merger for some research that will help you understand the REAL impacts of desegregating schools of different socio-economic status levels.

      I hope you can find a new perspective. It’s a lot happier over here.

      • cemykytyn

        I was about to respond but you beat me to it, Lori! And I fully agree… there is no research to show that privileged kids attending integrated/integrating schools are suddenly DISadvantaged.

        In fact, if you factor in things beyond test scores (which we all know are but teensy tiny measures of “education”), kids who grow up comfortable in diversity do much, much better later on in their careers. Oh, and they tend to be less prejudiced.

        I, for one, am PROUD that my kids are among the very few white kids/very few middle class kids at their schools (they’re now in middle school). This has been tremendously important for their development not only academically, but as human beings.

        (AND PS, I am the one ASKING Rebecca to share her story. She is not seeking limelight here.)