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Last week the JournalNews and the Echo ran a series of stories
about the efforts in our school district and others to address the
issues of racial equity and diversity in our schools. I appreciate
all the time and effort that reporters Lindsey Hilty, Megan Gildow
and Linda Ebbing put into the series, and I commend their editors
for devoting what I know are scarce resources to this important
subject.
It’s important because it’s the subject people don’t want to talk
about. The racial achievement gap is the big unmentionable in
today’s education system. The truth is: Our students of color –
African American and Hispanic children – do not do as well in
schools as white students. Often people want to explain that away by
talking about socio-economic levels, parenting, early childhood
experiences and other factors. But even when you adjust for those
factors and compare groups of students from similar circumstances,
the students from racial minority groups don’t do as well in school
as their white peers.
Addressing this is difficult for administrators and teachers. It
means turning upside down everything we were taught about teaching,
especially that we should be “color blind.” Now, we have to learn to
be aware of our biases, understand how they can create a learning
barrier in the classroom, and what we can do to remove that barrier.
We have to understand and believe that teachers’ and administrators’
expectations for minority students can have a direct effect on those
students’ achievement.
We aren’t doing this as a feel-good effort. Federal laws,
especially the No Child Left Behind Act, require us to measure – and
improve – the academic performance of specified subgroups. But even
more importantly, it’s the right thing to do. It’s also good for all
our students. The research shows that when you increase the
achievement of subgroups of students, all scores go up, for all
students.
As the series of articles detailed, our school district is part
of the Consortium on Racial Equity, which is working with Miami
University to remove racial barriers in schools. This year the team
from our district included, in addition to myself, our school board
president, Dr. Mark Morris, and selected administrators and
teachers. We have spent many, many hours learning about these
issues, talking about them – which, I can assure you, can be very
uncomfortable – and developing a plan that will bring this effort
into our classrooms, beginning this fall.
We will start at Central Elementary, which is our most diverse
school. Its principal, Dick Wood, is part of our racial equity team
in the consortium. I want to emphasize, Central Elementary is
already rated “excellent” by the state, just like our other four
elementaries. But not every subgroup there has achieved the state
standards, and it faces the same racial achievement gap that all our
schools face. So we will be working with our staff there to remove
any racial bias from our teaching, our practices, our policies and
procedures…everything we do that impacts students. At the same time,
we’ll be preparing to bring this same effort to every school in our
district.
It is not something, though, that we can implement from the top
down. It has to be done in a way that all of our employees and
schools can embrace. I am very optimistic that can be accomplished,
because I know the employees of the Fairfield School District and
their desire to always do what is best for all of our students.
Published in the Fairfield Echo, May 29, 2008.
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