T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1065.1 | It isn't all fixed yet. There's a loooong way to go. | WFOV12::APODACA | Little Black Duck | Fri Mar 30 1990 11:21 | 20 |
| Kate,
I believe that much of what you see is side-effects of many things:
poverty, lack of education, etc. Minorties in poverty cannot afford
schooling above rudimentary education and the school system they
attend is less than desirable (after all, who's going to devote
money to a district where the taxes are very low, when you have
other, wealthier districts where the taxes are high?). Without
education, one is doomed to menial jobs for the most part, and menial
pay.
There are other factors, but I think these two have a lot to do
with crime rates, death rate, pregnancy rates, etc - it's a vicious
circle that is hard to break out of.
-kim (who is fortunate that altho she is a part of a minority, shecame
from a middle class family. It also probably helps that I look
"white".)
|
1065.2 | Education for all. | OTOU01::BUCKLAND | and things were going so well... | Fri Mar 30 1990 11:32 | 13 |
| re : .1
The problem with the education system (from an outsiders perspective)
is that schools are funded at a local level. This causes major
disparities in the funding available. If education was instead
funded (fully or partially) at the state or federal level wouldn't
that of itself lead to a more even distribution of education dollars?
And if that is true, then how could you move to get the system changed
(given that the people needing the change are the poor, uneducated,
etc) and the funding where it's needed?
I am of the opinion that education should be a right not a priviledge.
|
1065.3 | Education, YES, but... | FENNEL::GODIN | You an' me, we sweat an' strain. | Fri Mar 30 1990 13:05 | 50 |
| This is delicate ground for me to tread, and I plead with the
minorities addressed by the base note to forgive me for any misstep I
might make out of ignorance. Please believe me when I say my
intentions are good.
I agree that education is a major factor in turning around a system
that appears to be broken in so many ways. But in the late 60s and
early 70s I was a participant in an educational system that ranked, by
any measure, among the leaders. It was a healthily integrated system,
about 40% minority (and a nearly fair share of the teaching and
administrative positions also filled by minorities), and the minority
students were active and respected in all levels of student endeavors,
educational and extracurricular.
Yet---the students who were failing academically were
disproportionately from the minority group. As teachers we wrestled
with this and its probable reasons and causes. At the time drugs were
beginning to be a problem, but in that district at that time they tended
to be a "white" problem due to their relative inavailability and high cost.
Only the wealthy students could get them. The difference we could
identify was the home environment. Many (not all, by any means) of our
minority students came from homes where education wasn't valued and they
weren't encouraged to achieve or excell in their studies.
This is not to say or to imply in any way that society does not owe
minority students _quality_ education. It is to say that access to
education isn't necessarily the same as taking advantage of that
access. There has to be an attitude on the part of the student of "I'm
going to learn this material, because it's valuable to me and to my
future." When that attitude is there, the quality of the education
doesn't make as much of a difference, because such individuals will SEEK
OUT the education rather than waiting for it to be handed to them.
When that attitude isn't there, even the most expensive and
well-staffed schools fail.
IMO, the hardest question is how can we engender this attitude in an
environment that displays every minute of every day and night the lie
that education is necessary to a decent life? Where drug pushers and
criminals live ostentatiously well while the dedicated and the honest
have doors slammed in their faces? How can we prove to that child who
has to struggle to and from school through gang-ruled streets that
attention to studies will win him or her a safe and honorable life at
some point years in the future?
I don't have the answers. But my soul cries for these children every
time I hear that another one has been killed by the guns or the drugs
that rule too many minority neighborhoods.
God(dess) help them, 'cause we sure aren't!
Karen
|
1065.4 | | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Fri Mar 30 1990 13:17 | 7 |
| Part of that problem, Karen, is that the lack of appreciation for
education is, at least in part, grounded in hard reality: education
doesn't buy a black person as much as it does a white. It's only
within your time and mine, in fact, that education has bought blacks
*anything* in the white world.
=maggie
|
1065.5 | sad to see... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the phoenix-flowering dark rose | Fri Mar 30 1990 13:22 | 27 |
|
It just makes me want to scream that, after probably 15 or 20 years of
having black children from Boston come out to the town I grew up in for
schooling (kindergarten through grade 8), the town is trying to squelch
this program. Probably partly because it costs some money - but I
think even moreso that as the budget goes down, the school thinks to
squeeze out the "different" children first - cut their benefits first -
the black children who don't live in the town - the children who are special
needs and need special education.
Actually, it probably does more to educate the primarily-white children
of this fairly-wealthy-fairly-haughty town that ethnic children are
"the same as they are" than anything else that occurs during their
formative years. And this benefit probably even outweighs the
pretty-good-quality education the black children get in return -
although the people of this town would probably be quick to deny it.
They think they're doing these "poor children" such a magnanimous
favor..... >:(.
I wish we could some foresight out there - get some vision on how
people need to learn about each other not just from adulthood, but from
day one. From childhood. When they're minds are still open. Before
prejudices are formed.
-Jody
|
1065.6 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:14 | 26 |
| Jody - What town is trying to dump METCO? In Lexington, most people
value it a good deal. It is a town with somewhat more economic
diversity and considerably more ethnic/racial diversity than many (we
have something like 18 different native languages in our elementary
schools. Every friend my 1st grade son invited to his birthday party
{all classmates} was asian, almost all from different countries). But
we have very few blacks, and this is scarcely improving. So METCO is
vital to our having schools integrated across the spectrum of American
races (and actually, we don't manage that, either; I'm not aware of any
native americans).
But I have another observation perhaps relevant to the basenote. After
discussions nearby recently on last names of spouses and kids, I was
browsing in our elementary school's family phone book, which has last
names of kid and parent(s). It is easy to spot the METCO kids, because
of their Boston addresses. And what was striking was that with no
exception that I noticed (though I didn't go through every page), these
youngsters lived with single mothers. Now, the possible breakdown of
the black family has been suggested as a problem since before Daniel
Patrick Moynahan even heard of politics. And this might even be taken
as counter-argument; here are single black Roxbury/Dorchester mothers
managing to get a first class education for their kids. I'm not
suggesting conclusions. But the uniformity of this phenomenon was
quite striking to me.
- Bruce
|
1065.7 | | BUILDR::CLIFFORD | No Comment | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:28 | 8 |
| FWIW, NH has the lowest percentage of state funding for schools in
the US. I believe the level is under 10%. The next lowest % of state
funding is around 37%. Based on CAT, SAT, and other testing results
NH does a better job than most other states. Two points. More money
is seldom the answer and neither is more of the money coming from the
state.
~Cliff
|
1065.8 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | the phoenix-flowering dark rose | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:33 | 6 |
| I don't really know if I should drag the town through the mud in public
here. My opinion and those of the townspeople obviously differ.....
I would be glad to discuss it offline, though...
-Jody
|
1065.9 | | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:35 | 9 |
|
It all depends on where you live in NH. I was lucky, our school district was
"property rich", and had (at the time) one of the best schools in the state.
Henniker, the school district right next to ours, was not so lucky, their
high school was not accredited.
Lisa
|
1065.10 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Mar 30 1990 15:03 | 9 |
| In re: .7
Your favorable opinion of the typical N.H. school system is not
universally shared. It is true that N.H has low state taxes, but in
consequence it also has the highest dependence on property taxes of any
state, about the most regressive source of revenue one could find.
- Bruce
|
1065.11 | Not necessarily better education | ACESMK::POIRIER | | Fri Mar 30 1990 15:28 | 7 |
| In re: .7
Also remember that a very small percentage of NH students actually take
the SATs and continue on to college. Only NH's best students take any
entrance exams.
Suzanne
|
1065.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No longer fill my head w/ empty dreams | Fri Mar 30 1990 15:51 | 32 |
| re: testing and NH's education
Recently, the CAT tests were administered to all NH students in the (I think
it was) 2nd, 6th, and 10th grades. The results were well above the national
averages in all areas. There was a blurb about this in (I think) last night's
paper.
I agree that the heavy reliance on property taxes is regressive. On the other
hand, is it better to have people from other states pay to educate our children?
By whose yardstick?
re: only the best in NH take the SAT's etc
Could not the same be said for other states as well?
The fact remains that results can be obtained without the traditional "spend
more money" approach that has become so firmly entrenched in our minds that
many people seem to resist any effort to impose fiscal responsibility upon
school budgets.
As far as "education should be a right" goes, I can only say this: the
_opportunity_ to obtain a solid education should be a right, but you cannot
force people who are unwilling to expend effort to learn. You can provide
a student with everything- except effort and willingness to learn. There is
no right to be educated. There is a right to be afforded the tools to be
educated.
Our future prosperity depends on our ability to instill the will to learn and
the importance of proper education in young minds. Lacking that, all of the
money in the world will not matter a whit.
The Doctah
|
1065.13 | | BUILDR::CLIFFORD | No Comment | Fri Mar 30 1990 16:21 | 12 |
| RE: .10 For the record I do not have a favorable opinion of the
typical NH school. It's just that my opinion of NH schools is
higher than that of many other states.
RE: .11 The % of NH hampshire students that take the SAT is higher
than the % in 40-45 other states. It runs about 50%. That's small?
Also ALL NH students take the CAT in public schools. Some private
schools still give others.
RE: .12 I believe that it's 4th, 6th and 10th that take the CATs.
~Cliff
|
1065.14 | "Spend less and complain more" | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Mar 30 1990 16:54 | 35 |
| .12 > is it better to have people from other states pay to educate our
.12 > children?
Who has suggested that?
.12 > The fact remains that results can be obtained without the traditional
.12 > "spend more money" approach that has become so firmly entrenched in
.12 > our minds that many people seem to resist any effort to impose fiscal
.12 > responsibility upon school budgets.
Get serious. The fiction that has become "firmly entrenched in our
minds" is that we have been on an unconstrained spending spree with
escalating taxes. This is nonsense. Take education, specifically. In
the US during the 1980s, spending on public education per $1000 of
personal income declined from $46.48 to $44.20. In Massachusetts it
declined alarmingly from $47.85 to $35.98, 19% below the national
average. I'll bet it went way down in Nude Hampster, but I don't have
data in front of me. Or take the Taxachusetts myth. Taxes as a
proportion of income have been going *down*. Combined state and local
taxes in Mass. are now 42nd out of 50 states on this measure, down from
35th a few years ago, and way below the national average. N.H. has the
dubious distinction of being 50th. It's also about 50th in the quality
of public services. Even at the federal level, only regressive social
security taxes have been going up, rather than down, and the only
budget free of fiscal responsibility during the 80s was the Pentagon's.
It is also very well established that many educational enrichment
programs targeted at the disadvantaged are *extremely* cost effective.
For example, it is well documented that Head Start type pre-school
programs pay back many times over in later decreases in social service
costs for - and increases in income taxes from - those who go through
them. Any banker would kill to get the economic return these programs
provide, disregarding social benefits entirely.
- Bruce
|
1065.15 | "Let's play games with statistics" | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Fri Mar 30 1990 17:16 | 34 |
| > Who has suggested that?
Where does the money come from to pay education in states with sales and
income taxes like Massachusetts? Some of it, believe it or not, comes from
out of staters.
>In
> the US during the 1980s, spending on public education per $1000 of
> personal income declined from $46.48 to $44.20.
Bruce, if you are going to play statistical games, be aware that I know plenty.
You are fond of telling half the story, the half that supports your claims.
What an excellent politician you'd make! It's all well and good to talk about
a change in the amount per $1000 of personal income, but you fail to supply the
information about how much income has risen in the last decade. You also fail to
talk about the effect of declining school enrollments. You also refrain from
telling us what has happened to the cost per student. None of these things
back up your arguments; it's no mystery why you exclude them.
If you want to rant and rave about how horrible things are in the state
of my residence, let's go to a more appropriate forum.
>Even at the federal level, only regressive social
> security taxes have been going up, rather than down, and the only
> budget free of fiscal responsibility during the 80s was the Pentagon's.
Bruce, you know as well as I do that as a percentage of GNP, the pentagon
budget is a fraction of what it was in JFK's time, and fell steadily in the
80's. What does that prove? Not much, except that I am equally adept at
showing only the stats that supprt my claims as you. BFD.
Have a good weekend (seriously)-
The Doctah
|
1065.16 | on track please? | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Mar 30 1990 22:52 | 13 |
| Bruce, Mark etc.
if you want to discuss NH education and taxes please start another
spin off note..
Let is try and keep on the very valuable subject started in the
base note.
Thankyou
Bonnie J
=wn= comod
|
1065.17 | | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Fri Mar 30 1990 23:33 | 4 |
| RE:-1
Thanks,
Bonnie
|
1065.18 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | if you just open _all_ the doors | Sat Mar 31 1990 10:09 | 12 |
| The Civil Rights Movement is now a hundred smaller ones.
'Civil rights' is a lot more than voting rights for Blacks.
It's reproductive freedom, freedom to own firearms, freedom
to wear or not wear seat belts, motorcycle helmets, freedom
from compulsion in every area of our lives. There are a lot
of small movements that could all be called 'civil rights'
movements, but would rather concentrate on their own special
interests.
I'd have to say that the 'movement' now has 'freedom from
government intrusion' as its primary goal, in a hundred forms.
|
1065.19 | I Didn't Mean That | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Sat Mar 31 1990 23:16 | 8 |
| re:-1.
In all do respect I didn't mean it in the generic sence. I meant
the 60's and Martin Luther King.
Thanks,
Kate
|
1065.20 | why are some minority groups succeeding? | XCUSME::KOSKI | This NOTE's for you | Mon Apr 02 1990 16:19 | 11 |
| One thing I have always wondered about when this issue comes up...
Why is it that some minority groups have been able to over come
the discriminatory education process and even excel to the point that
colleges are trying to reduce their numbers that enroll in an attempt
to "save" places for white students? Is it their overall attitudes
toward education? Toward repression? Many of these people are very
recent immigrants who overcome the fact that English is a second
language. They are being motivated to excel from somewhere.
Gail
|
1065.21 | | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Mon Apr 02 1990 16:28 | 6 |
| I think part of it is the number of role models they find, Gail. Most
of the groups who make it not only have an unbroken cultural history
that values education but also find many members of their ethnic group
here who make it once educated.
=maggie
|
1065.22 | | WFOV11::APODACA | It's a Kodak(tm) moment. | Tue Apr 03 1990 10:34 | 24 |
| re .20
I would offer the suggestion that many immigrants to this country
place a HIGH (read; VERY high) value on education. For example,
if you've arrived from a poor, war-torn, chaotic country where
education was skimpy at best, and are suddenly presented with the
opportunity to become schooled in almost anything you desire, AND
your culture places a high value on schooling, then you are likely
to use the United State's school system to the best of your ability.
Many of the people who are born here are far more jaded and blase
about schooling - there are exceptions, but for the most part it
would appear that "natural" citizen's haven't the value and intensity
placed on education as many foreign cultures do (I'm thinking in
particular of Asian immigrants). I'm not sure if the precise wording
would be "cultural conditioning" but that seems to fit.
That's unfortunate for us because the number of foreign born students
in schools leads to such easy prejudice ("Lookit! *THEY'RE* taking
over!"). I might offer that if the American society and predominant
culture placed as high a value on education as some of the foreign
cultures apparantly do, we as a country might be far better off.
---kim
|
1065.23 | Where are Today's Examples? | ASABET::K_HAMILTON | New grandmother | Tue Apr 03 1990 14:55 | 12 |
| IMO, life in general for all of us has gotten harder. The money we
earn is worth less, the basic necessities cost more, many of us are
working two jobs today to maintain a semblance of a standard of living.
Many who are old enough to have marched for Civil Rights (could it
really be?) 20 years ago, today have to work much harder to maintain
the same level of determination, of conviction that things will get
better. The (then) kids (today's adults) don't have the same
conviction because they haven't seen the improvements that we saw. The
rate of improvement for a lot of us has slowed, and for some has lost
ground.
|
1065.24 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Wed Apr 04 1990 17:20 | 22 |
| A few quickies.
1) Immigrants don't need laws and legislation to guarantee their
basic human rights. Black Americans do. A Polish immigrant, for
example, comes to America and his/her most pressing needs are to learn
English and to assimilate. Black Americans, after 400 odd years,
continue the uphill battle for basic human rights.
2) Immigrants have not been coerced into coming to this country,
they come as a result of their own free will. They look forward with
great anticipation to coming to the America the Free. Black Americans
were forcibly brought to this country. Black Americans were slaves in
this country, it has only been some 120-odd years since "emancipation."
Black Americans know that America the Free is a farce. Expectations of
what this mighty country can do for one is vastly different.
3) History of antagonism between Black Americans and the "rest" of
America is a lot longer, deeper and more bitter that the history of any
antagonism between any group of immigrants and the "rest" of America.
Please try to accommodate those factors in your comparisons of Black
Americans and immigrants.
|
1065.25 | from _Lives on the Boundary_ by Mike Rose | HYDRA::LARU | goin' to graceland | Wed Apr 04 1990 17:39 | 39 |
|
This quote might be of interest here:
We are in the middle of an extraordinary social
experiment: the attempt to provide education for
all members of a vast pluralistic society. To have
any prayer of success, we'll need many conceptual
blessings: A philosophy of language and literacy
that affirms the diverse sorces of linguistic
competence and deepens our understandings of the
ways class and culture blind us to the richness of
those sources. A perspective on failure that lays
open the logic of error. An orientation toward the
interaction of poverty and ability that undercuts
simple polarities, that enables us to see
simultaneously the constraints poverty places on
the play of mind and the actual mind at play within
these constraints. We'll need a pedagogy that
encourages us to step back and consider the threat
of the standard classroom and that shows us, having
stepped back, how to step forwrd to invite a
student across the boundaries of that powerful room.
Finally, we'll need a revised store of images of
educational excellence, ones closer to egalitatian
ideals--ones that embody the reward and turmoil of
education in a democracy, that celebrates the
plural, messy human reality of it. At heart, we'll
need a guiding set of principles that do not
encourage us to retreat from, but move closer to,
an understanding of the rich mix of speech and
ritual and story that is America.
An excerpt from _Lives on the Boundary_ by Mike Rose,
The Free Press, $24.95. Paper (Penguin) $8.95.
Reviewed in _The Nation_, April 16, 1990, pp 531-534.
(excerpt copied w/o permission).
|
1065.26 | | BOLT::MINOW | Gregor Samsa, please wake up | Wed Apr 04 1990 20:56 | 11 |
| re: .24:
1) Immigrants don't need laws and legislation to guarantee their
basic human rights. Black Americans do.
Indeed, but I would suggest that many recent immigrants (especially
those from South-East Asia) are as much in need of legislation to
guarantee their basic human rights as Black Americans do. Fortunately,
the "Civil Rights" laws are color-blind.
Martin.
|
1065.27 | | XCUSME::KOSKI | This NOTE's for you | Thu Apr 05 1990 10:12 | 18 |
| re .24
> 2) Immigrants have not been coerced into coming to this country,
>they come as a result of their own free will. They look forward with
>great anticipation to coming to the America the Free. Black Americans
>were forcibly brought to this country.
I don't see the correlation? Do you mean to say that because of
acts that happened to their ancestors Blacks are doomed to have nothing
to look forward to in America?
>Expectations of
>what this mighty country can do for one is vastly different.
Maybe the recent immigrants are focusing on what they can offer
the country (what a concept)
Gail
|
1065.28 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Thu Apr 05 1990 12:45 | 46 |
| re .26
Martin,
It has always been illegal to murder an Irish immigrant or a Polish
immigrant or an Irish immigrant. It hasn't always been illegal to
murder a black American. Anti-lynching laws had to be made to protect
specifically black American CITIZENS. At the time those laws were
being made, immigrants were still coming to America and reciving full
protection under the regular law - thou shall not kill.
Imagine. If this government had to legislate a special law to protect
the lives of South-East Asians, won't that say something about the
"advantages" afforded and "value" of South-East Asians? Imagine, a
nation having to come up with "Civil Rights" laws to protect a certain
sector of its *citizens*!
The "Civil Rights" laws are not color-blind. The "Civil Rights" laws
are some of the more colorist laws on the book. The "Civil Rights"
laws were suppose to magically bring the Negro's human rights up to par
with the rest of America. Thank god South-East Asians and other
immigrants of color don't have to go through the same things black
Americans had to go through in order to experience some semblance of
human rights!
re .24
I did not say, nor did I mean to say, blacks are doomed to have nothing
to look forward to in America because of their history in this country.
I am saying that immigrants often have _great_ expectations. Black
Americans have _different_ expectations having lived through what they
they lived through.
If you don't see a correlation between expectations and the subject at
hand, oh well...
> Maybe the recent immigrants are focusing on what they can offer
> the country (what a concept)
With all due respect let the immigrants buy into the Kennedy
exploitative garbage if they want to.
I'm sure your ancestors came from somewhere else like the rest of all
Americans. What did *they* offer this country? What have *you* done
for your country?
|
1065.29 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Apr 05 1990 16:08 | 4 |
| Another issue is that new immigrants are comming to American and
leaving behind (hopefully) the situation that caused them to leave.
Black Americans are living IN the situation that causes their problems.
Immigrants are given a fresh start. Blacks are not. liesl
|
1065.30 | Culture | MCIS2::NOVELLO | I've fallen, and I can't get up | Fri Apr 06 1990 16:16 | 9 |
|
A Black African once did a report for a writing class comparing
the plight of Blacks, Italians, Irish to the US. He pointed out
that the Italians and Irish kept their culture and identity as
a group, while the blacks were not. It was a great report, and I
think I still have a copy somewhere.
Guy (grandson of an Italian immigrant)
|
1065.31 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Mon Apr 09 1990 12:56 | 31 |
| re .0
>Whatever happened to the civil rights movement? Were there not laws
>passed to aid people of color in employment, housing and education?
"Justice for black people will not flow into society merely from court
decisions nor from fountains of political oratory. Nor will a few
token changes quell all the tempestuous yearnings of millions of
disadvantaged black people. White America must recognize that justice
for black people cannot be achieved without radical changes in the
structure of our society. The comfortable, the entrenched, the
privileged cannot continue to tremble at the prospect of change in the
status quo.
"When millions of people have been cheated for centuries, restitution
is a costly process. Inferior education, poor housing, unemployment,
inadequate health care [*inferior education, housing, unemployment,
still continue. Inadequte health care continues. Blacks are less
likely than their white counterparts to have by-passes, for example.]
-- each is a bitter component of the oppression that has been our
heritage. Each will require billions of dollars to correct. Justice so
long defered has accumulated interest and its cost for this society
will be substantial in financial as well as human terms. This fact has
not been fully grasped, because most of the gains of the past decade
were obtained at bargain rates. The desegregation of public facilities
cost nothing; neither did the election and appointment of a few black
public officials."
_Dr. M.L. King
* - my words.
|