Ed school dean: Urban school reform is really about land development (not kids)

No1

Retired.
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
31,596
Reputation
5,162
Daps
71,441
Ed school dean: Urban school reform is really about land development (not kids)

By Valerie Strauss, Updated: May 28, 2013

Here is a provocative piece from Leslie T. Fenwick, dean of the Howard University School of Education and a professor of education policy, about what is really behind urban school reform. It’s not about fixing schools, she argues, but, rather, about urban land development. Fenwick has devoted her career to improving educational opportunity and outcomes for African American and other under-served students.

By Leslie T. Fenwick

The truth can be used to tell a lie. The truth is that black parents’ frustration with the quality of public schools is at an all time righteous high. Though black and white parents’ commitment to their child’s schooling is comparable, more black parents report dissatisfaction with the school their child attends. Approximately 90 percent of black and white parents report attending parent teacher association meetings and nearly 80 percent of black and white parents report attending teacher conferences. Despite these similarities, fewer black parents (47 percent) than white parents (64 percent) report being very satisfied with the school their child attends. This dissatisfaction among black parents is so whether these parents are college-educated, high income, or poor.

The lie is that schemes like Teach For America, charter schools backed by venture capitalists, education management organizations (EMOs), and Broad Foundation-prepared superintendents address black parents concerns about the quality of public schools for their children. These schemes are not designed to cure what ails under-performing schools. They are designed to shift tax dollars away from schools serving black and poor students; displace authentic black educational leadership; and erode national commitment to the ideal of public education.

Consider these facts: With a median household income of nearly $75,000, Prince George’s County is the wealthiest majority black county in the United States. Nearly 55 percent of the county’s businesses are black-owned and almost 70 percent of residents own homes, according to the U.S. Census. One of Prince George’s County’s easternmost borders is a mere six minutes from Washington, D.C., which houses the largest population of college-educated blacks in the nation. In the United States, a general rule of thumb is that communities with higher family incomes and parental levels of education have better public schools. So, why is it that black parents living in the upscale Woodmore or Fairwood estates of Prince George’s County or the tony Garden District homes up 16th Street in Washington D.C. struggle to find quality public schools for their children just like black parents in Syphax Gardens, the southwest D.C. public housing community?

The answer is this: Whether they are solidly middle- or upper-income or poor, neither group of blacks controls the critical economic levers shaping school reform. And, this is because urban school reform is not about schools or reform. It is about land development.

In most urban centers like Washington D.C. and Prince George’s County, black political leadership does not have independent access to the capital that drives land development. These resources are still controlled by white male economic elites. Additionally, black elected local officials by necessity must interact with state and national officials. The overwhelming majority of these officials are white males who often enact policies and create funding streams benefiting their interests and not the local black community’s interests.

The authors of “The Color of School Reform” affirm this assertion in their study of school reform in Baltimore, Detroit and Atlanta. They found:

Many key figures promoting broad efficiency-oriented reform initiatives [for urban schools] were whites who either lived in the suburbs or sent their children to private schools (Henig et al, 2010).

Local control of public schools (through elected school boards) is supposed to empower parents and community residents. This rarely happens in school districts serving black and poor students. Too often “predators eager to exploit schools for their own benefit” (Henig et al) short circuit the work of deep and lasting school and community uplift. Mayoral control, Teach for America, education management organizations and venture capital-funded charter schools have not garnered much grassroots support or enthusiasm among lower- and middle-income black parents whose children attend urban schools because these parents often view these schemes as uninformed by their community and disconnected from the best interest of their children.

In the most recent cases of Washington D.C. and Chicago, black parents and other community members point to school closings as verification of their distrust of school “reform” efforts. Indeed, mayoral control has been linked to an emerging pattern of closing and disinvesting in schools that serve black poor students and reopening them as charters operated by education management organizations and backed by venture capitalists. While mayoral control proposes to expand educational opportunities for black and poor students, more-often-than-not new schools are placed in upper-income, gentrifying white areas of town, while more schools are closed and fewer new schools are opened in lower-income, black areas thus increasing the level of educational inequity. Black inner-city residents are suspicious of school reform (particularly when it is attached to neighborhood revitalization) which they view as an imposition from external white elites who are exclusively committed to using schools to recalculate urban land values at the expense of black children, parents and communities.

So, what is the answer to improving schools for black children? Elected officials must advocate for equalizing state funding formula so that urban school districts garner more financial resources to hire credentialed and committed teachers and stabilize principal and superintendent leadership. Funding makes a difference. Black students who attend schools where 50 percent of more of the children are on free/reduced lunch are 70 percent more likely to have an uncertified teacher (or one without a college major or minor in the subject area) teaching them four subjects: math, science, social studies and English. How can the nation continue to raise the bar on what we expect students to know and demonstrate on standardized tests and lower the bar on who teaches them?

As the nation’s inner cities are dotted with coffee shop chains, boutique furniture stores, and the skyline changes from public housing to high-rise condominium buildings, listen to the refrain about school reform sung by some intimidated elected officials and submissive superintendents. That refrain is really about exporting the urban poor, reclaiming inner city land, and using schools to recalculate urban land value. This kind of school reform is not about children, it’s about the business elite gaining access to the nearly $600 billion that supports the nation’s public schools. It’s about money.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...rm-is-really-about-land-development-not-kids/
 

IVS

Superstar
Joined
Jun 22, 2012
Messages
12,489
Reputation
2,831
Daps
39,817
Reppin
In the sky
Wow! It's good to see some of the black elite thinking critically. She may be right.
 

Bud Bundy

A Bundy never cares
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
13,984
Reputation
1,653
Daps
22,478
damn
if this is not a reason for black and brown people to come together i do not know what is.
 

theworldismine13

God Emperor of SOHH
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
22,751
Reputation
570
Daps
22,691
Reppin
Arrakis
sounds like a bunch of BS, it looks like she took 2 different things, gentrification and schools closings, and threw some magic powder on it and voila! its all connected
 

Blackking

Banned
Supporter
Joined
Jun 4, 2012
Messages
21,566
Reputation
2,466
Daps
26,226
sounds like a bunch of BS, it looks like she took 2 different things, gentrification and schools closings, and threw some magic powder on it and voila! its all connected

In most urban centers like Washington D.C. and Prince George’s County, black political leadership does not have independent access to the capital that drives land development. These resources are still controlled by white male economic elites.

So how is it not connected? It's all true about the schools and urban youth... the gentrification is connected because the motivation to improve the areas and the schools doesn't come... until gentrification comes along.
 

theworldismine13

God Emperor of SOHH
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
22,751
Reputation
570
Daps
22,691
Reppin
Arrakis
In most urban centers like Washington D.C. and Prince George’s County, black political leadership does not have independent access to the capital that drives land development. These resources are still controlled by white male economic elites.

So how is it not connected? It's all true about the schools and urban youth... the gentrification is connected because the motivation to improve the areas and the schools doesn't come... until gentrification comes along.

to me it seems that you are showing dots and just saying these dots must connected without actually explaining how they are connected

i think gentrification is a process that happens separately from school reform, i think as an area becomes gentrified the schools become better, but im not seeing how school reform is the cause or the seed of gentrification
 

Blackking

Banned
Supporter
Joined
Jun 4, 2012
Messages
21,566
Reputation
2,466
Daps
26,226
to me it seems that you are showing dots and just saying these dots must connected without actually explaining how they are connected

i think gentrification is a process that happens separately from school reform, i think as an area becomes gentrified the schools become better, but im not seeing how school reform is the cause or the seed of gentrification
And the article didn't say school reform is the cause of gentrification. It's shows that the positive spin is just a result of an underlying agenda. the reforms aren't due to people giving a fukk- that black parents were just as unsatisfied with the public education as white parents. The reforms are just a natural outcome of the gentrification agenda. Many times post gentrification the majority of black parents can't even live in the area - so they aren't even able to take advantage of the reforms.

I don't think this will happen in a place like Prince George’s, but it happens everywhere else. However, the fact remains that these upper class blacks don't get upper class education like upper class whites... they receive sub par BS that is naturally given to majority black areas. There is no incentive to have an educated black population. Government has no interest in that. CAC have no interest in that. The Majority of blacks don't have the means to create that.
 

theworldismine13

God Emperor of SOHH
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
22,751
Reputation
570
Daps
22,691
Reppin
Arrakis
And the article didn't say school reform is the cause of gentrification. It's shows that the positive spin is just a result of an underlying agenda. the reforms aren't due to people giving a fukk- that black parents were just as unsatisfied with the public education as white parents. The reforms are just a natural outcome of the gentrification agenda. Many times post gentrification the majority of black parents can't even live in the area - so they aren't even able to take advantage of the reforms.

I don't think this will happen in a place like Prince George’s, but it happens everywhere else. However, the fact remains that these upper class blacks don't get upper class education like upper class whites... they receive sub par BS that is naturally given to majority black areas. There is no incentive to have an educated black population. Government has no interest in that. CAC have no interest in that. The Majority of blacks don't have the means to create that.

i think that is mumbo jumbo, what i see is that black leaders like this lady do no have a real economic plan for black people
 

The Real

Anti-Ignorance
Joined
May 8, 2012
Messages
6,353
Reputation
725
Daps
10,727
Reppin
NYC
i think that is mumbo jumbo, what i see is that black leaders like this lady do no have a real economic plan for black people

The last few paragraphs of the article constitute an alternative to the status quo. Regardless, as an accomplished academic in the field of education policy, you should at least read some of her scholarship before dismissing her as someone with no ideas peddling "mumbo jumbo."
 

theworldismine13

God Emperor of SOHH
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
22,751
Reputation
570
Daps
22,691
Reppin
Arrakis
The last few paragraphs of the article constitute an alternative to the status quo. Regardless, as an accomplished academic in the field of education policy, you should at least read some of her scholarship before dismissing her as someone with no ideas peddling "mumbo jumbo."

i read it, and granted she is not an economist and wasnt trying to be but nothing nothing she said is a real economic plan
 

theworldismine13

God Emperor of SOHH
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
22,751
Reputation
570
Daps
22,691
Reppin
Arrakis
Yes... she's an educational policy specialist who's recommending things in the field of educational policy. It seems unfair to judge her as anything else.

yeah it wouldnt make sense to judge her on land development issues, i agree
 

Insensitive

Superstar
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
12,385
Reputation
4,845
Daps
41,977
Reppin
NULL
Damn. That's an interesting perspective which makes perfect sense.
Gentrification is more terrifying when it's examined in this manner.
 

Blackking

Banned
Supporter
Joined
Jun 4, 2012
Messages
21,566
Reputation
2,466
Daps
26,226
i think that is mumbo jumbo, what i see is that black leaders like this lady do no have a real economic plan for black people

if I look out my window I can see that what this lady is speaking is true... She is educated on this very subject... apparently it's her specialty. I know you feel her plan should be focused around smacking urban youth for being born in the hood and burning down Nas and JayZ's house... but her perspective should at least be considered.
 

The Real

Anti-Ignorance
Joined
May 8, 2012
Messages
6,353
Reputation
725
Daps
10,727
Reppin
NYC
yeah it wouldnt make sense to judge her on land development issues, i agree

Well, that's a little too vague, but considering that the sociology of education policy has to be part of her background, she certainly is qualified for this kind of analysis, which isn't about land development in itself, but rather, it's intrusion into education policy, which she provides with actual statistics and citations of other studies. That's why I was saying her argument merits more than a simple dismissal as mumbo jumbo.
 
Top