Want Your Kids to Succeed? Send Them to a 'White' High School
The Supreme Court's decision in June to overturn two voluntary school-integration plans in
New research presented at the American Sociological Association's annual meeting Sunday seeks to reframe the conversation. In California, where affirmative-action foe Ward Connerly successfully campaigned to ban affirmative action in public education in 1996, the best way for black and Latino students to get into a top-tier University of California campus is to attend a "white" high school, reports Inside Higher Ed. The Findings The study, led by Teranishi found that 88 percent of Critics of affirmative action and voluntary school-integration plans assume that declining black and Latino admission rates at top universities in states where affirmative action has been outlawed mean that these students can't cut it without a "crutch" of some sort, but Teranishi's findings reveal that re-segregation trends in California--and across the country--handicap them from the start. The research shows that theoretically "merit-based" admissions systems uphold institutionalized white privilege that ends up shortchanging blacks and Latinos, both as students and taxpayers, UCLA professor of higher education Walter Allen told Inside Higher Ed. "The poor folks are subsidizing the educations of wealthy people," he said. These findings are concerning, but they aren't surprising. What We Know About Segregation Schools are at their highest level of re-segregation since the 1960s, and more than 40 percent of the nation's public-school students are people of color, which doesn't bode well for current trends. A few statistics, according to the Civil Rights Project at UCLA:
Why does this matter? Studies consistently show that fewer advanced-placement courses are offered in predominantly black or Latino high schools; there are fewer qualified and experienced teachers, higher teacher-turnover rates, larger class sizes, and fewer basic supplies. Few schools in high-poverty, segregated districts have more than half of their senior class graduate each year, and those who do graduate go to college with significantly less preparation, which diminishes their chances of graduating and getting good jobs. Lifetime earnings, which impact well-being and personal satisfaction, are correlated with college education, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Education pays. Black and Latino students who attend integrated schools are connected to higher-status social networks, which improves their chances of being accepted to selective colleges and getting better jobs. All of this leads to a more educated work force that has the skills that companies need to be competitive in a knowledge-based global economy where most of the world isn't white. Unfortunately, the Constitution doesn't guarantee equal public-school funding, which is why social-science researchers are committed to documenting the benefits of an integrated learning environment. But as Newsweek columnist Ellis Cose, who has written at length on affirmative action, says, it will take more than good research to change the direction of public thought given the composition of our Supreme Court. So where does that leave us? Although certain factions attempt to manipulate public interpretation of social-science research and court decisions, a new Civil Rights Project report explains why we cannot be bullied out of ensuring equity and documents that it has happened far too often. Read the report. "Four years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court powerfully recognized the compelling reasons for universities to educate their students with fellow students who bring into the campus the diversity of experiences and perspectives from all parts of American society," said Gary Orfield, Civil Rights Project co-director and a professor of education at the UCLA Graduate School of Education & Information Studies, upon the release of the report. "The Court concluded that there were major gains from a diverse student body for students of all races and for society and its major institutions. We urge leaders of higher education to resist threats and intimidation and to expand programs to integrate higher education, programs that are more secure now with the recent 2007 decision of the reconstituted Supreme Court." The Educational Diversity Project was also unveiled Sunday and will assess the impact of student diversity in a law-school environment. Initial findings suggest white law students are more likely than law students of color to have been raised by two parents and to have spoken English as the primary language in their homes. Law students of color report more frequent undergraduate encounters with discrimination and expect to work more hours in law school than their white counterparts just to keep up.
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