A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Black Education
"Hard
Times at Douglass High," is an HBO documentary that aired last June. It
captured much of the 2004-2005 school year at Baltimore's predominantly black
Frederick Douglass High School. The tragedy is that what is seen in the
documentary is typical of most predominantly black urban schools.
Douglass'
students are four to five years below grade level. Most of its ninth-graders
read at the third-, fourth- or fifth-grade levels. In 2006, only 24 percent of
its students tested proficient in reading, in math just 11 percent, and that's
an improvement over previous years. Only one student managed to score above
1,000 on the SAT and another student scored 440 out of 1,600. You get 400
points for just writing in your name. Out of its 1,100 students, 200 to 300 are
absent each day. Many of those who do show up don't do so on time; they roam
the hallways and leave the school during the day. Only one-half of the school's
500 incoming freshmen ninth-graders return for their sophomore year and far
fewer remain for graduation
Sixty-six
percent of the teachers are uncertified. Even if there were no certified
teacher shortage, I doubt whether many teachers with attractive alternatives
would want to teach at the school. Douglass High School is not a place for
teachers with high expectations for their students. English teacher Mr.
McDermott resigned in the middle of the school year saying, "Teaching
becomes secondary, and discipline is the main thing that goes on. I don't feel
like I'm making a difference anymore."
Cameras
followed then-principal Isabelle Grant on her visit to the home of a
chronically absent student. The student who reads at the fifth- or sixth-grade
level is promised that if she attends school regularly she'll be promoted to
the 11th grade. It is impossible to eliminate such a reading deficit in a
semester. Teachers are pressured into passing failing students. The documentary
showed that within a few days of graduation time the school went from having
138 eligible graduates to 200. Promoting and graduating students who haven't
made the grade is nothing short of academic fraud.
Douglass High
School teachers and staff appeared to be concerned and caring people, but the
poor quality educational outcomes demonstrate that concern and caring is not
enough. The virtually empty classrooms, filmed on back-to-school night,
suggested little parental interest in their children's education. School day
behavior demonstrated little student interest. Some students spent class time
laughing, joking and tussling with one another. Others had their heads lying on
their desks or appeared uninterested in the teacher's discussion. Many of those
engaged in student-teacher exchange on academic topics showed very limited
reasoning ability.
Frederick
Douglass was founded in 1883 as the Colored High and Training School before it
was renamed. It is one of the nation's oldest historically black high schools.
It was a draw for Baltimore's brightest black students. Success stories among
its alumni include Thurgood Marshall, Cab Calloway, as well as several judges,
congressmen and civil rights leaders. I guarantee you that if Douglass High
student test scores of that earlier era were available, they wouldn't show
today's achievement gap. Also, a 1940s or '50s Douglass High graduate would
find no comparison between student behavior during their school years and that
shown in the documentary.
Politicians
and the teaching establishment say more money, smaller classes and newer
buildings are necessary for black academic excellence. At Frederick Douglass'
founding, it didn't have the resources available today. If blacks can achieve
at a time when there was far greater poverty, gross discrimination and fewer
opportunities, what says blacks cannot achieve today? Whether we want to own up
to it or not, the welfare state has done what Jim Crow, gross discrimination
and poverty could not have done. It has contributed to the breakdown of the black
family structure and has helped establish a set of values alien to traditional
values of high moral standards, hard work and achievement.
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at
www.creators.com.
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2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.