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Brown v. Board of Education
Illinois still faces segregation issue
by Beverley Scobell
After five decades of increasing integration, American schools are
now moving in the other direction, toward more segregation for African-American
and Latino students. In fact, the new study out of Harvard University
making that contention names Illinois among the states that continue
to have the most segregated schools.
This
month marks a half century of the countrys attempts to realize
educational equality. On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in Brown v. Board of Education that the policy of separate,
but equal, which had been law since 1896, was unconstitutional.
In the 50 years since, public schools are no longer segregated by
race as policy.
The
driving force behind inequality now is poverty.
We
are celebrating a victory over segregation at a time when schools
across the nation are becoming increasingly segregated, say
the authors Gary Orfield and Chungmei Lee in their report, Brown
at 50: Kings Dream or Plessys Nightmare?
Even
as Illinois celebrates the Brown decision in commemo-rative events
throughout the year, government data show the land of Abraham Lincoln
has made little progress toward equality in its schools. Orfield
and Lee report that in 2001 Illinois was among the four most segregated
states, along with California, Michigan and New York.
Chicago
was and is one of the nations most segregated metropolitan
communities; the Midwest and the state of Illinois have been consistently
among the nations most segregated in terms of their schools.
In 2001, 61 percent of black students and 40 percent of Latinos
in Illinois were in intensely segregated schools, according
to the report.
Federal
statistics show that poverty and segregation by race are inextricably
linked. The report points out that a great many black and Latino
students attend schools in areas of concentrated poverty. Children
in these schools, it says, tend to be less healthy, to have weaker
preschool experiences, to have only one parent, to move frequently
and to have unstable educational experiences.
Their teachers are likely to be less experienced or unqualified;
their classmates are likely to be lower achieving; and their class
offerings are likely to include many remedial and few demanding
precollegiate courses. These schools tend to have higher teacher
turnover, and many schools are deteriorated and lack resources.
Current state and federal education policies often brand these schools
as failing and threaten sanctions.
Future
historians, write Orfield and Lee, will doubtless be
incredulous that much of the energy in this period was devoted to
dismantling desegregation where it was a clear success and in developing
ways to harshly sanction segregated minority schools, which almost
always had concentrated poverty and many forms of educational inequality,
when their test scores were lower than middle-class white suburban
schools.
Moving
to those suburbs to place children in better, more competitive schools
has not always been the answer either.
The
report found that, nationwide, theres been a massive
migration of Latino and black families to the suburbs, which
has produced newly segregated and unequal schools. Charter and private
schools are more segregated than public schools.
We
have embarked on major expansions of educational choice, write
Orfield and Lee, but without the basic civil rights tools
developed nearly 40 years ago that are essential to assuring that
choice fosters rather than undermines the goal of the Brown decision.
Illinois
Issues, May 2004
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