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Whom Shall We Blame?

By Rev. Donald L. Perryman, D.Min.
The Truth Contributor

A little learning is a dangerous thing in its application to Negroes. The educated among them are the most dangerous class in the community, as they exercise a malign and blighting influence over the future prospects of their race. – 1875 Congressional committee report; quoted by Nicolas Lemann in Redemption: The Last Battle of the Civil War

 

Rev. Donald L. Perryman, D.Min.

Bob Vasquez, TPS’ own “Flava Flav,” served as hype man last week to pump up the district at a news conference on its “Destiny” tax levy tour and to discuss TPS’ latest report card findings. 

The district’s results were portrayed as “Victory” in this “fake-it-til-you-make-it” celebration performed primarily for the media. Yet for many, Toledo Public Schools is more “Bad,” “Dangerous” or “Thriller” than triumphant as it continues to systemically deprive African-American children of the opportunity to learn.

Despite the ‘great cry and little wool’ of this poorly-disquised promo plan, the harsh reality is that nearly all of the inner-city schools (nine) are in academic emergency and that wide racial achievement gaps exist in a school district that satisfactorily met a mere four of 26 performance indicators.

The comments made by TPS board president Bob Vasquez concerning the district’s performance are an affront to the black community’s historical “holy cause of education” and unmasks the district’s unwillingness or even hostility towards providing equal quality education for people of color.

“You should all be proud and remain proud. We’re a very proud district, we’re very proud of you. We’re very proud of our students,”  Vasquez reportedly blustered.

In a contemporary educational culture fixated on teaching to tests and thus conditioned to focus on answers at the expense of questions, and predisposed to the ingestion of data rather than being equipped with the ability to analyze and reflect information, Vasquez’s cheers were an attempt to misdirect attention away from the gutter educational experiences of the inner-city.

Several questions beg to be answered.

Why is there a lack of commitment to educate black children and an absent urgency resulting from the failure to reach all children?

Why does the fair opportunity to learn depend upon the race or zip code one lives or attends school?

Why does the school rating increase when the percentage of black students decrease?

Why are inner-city schools failing miserably when there are extremely successful schools within the same district? Or why are some educators able to be successful with black children while others who work with the same children fail?

Elucidate the profound district tolerance for low expectations for black achievement and that of black children within TPS.

What explains the disproportion of teachers in predominantly African-American schools who have been trained in one discipline but who teach in an area for which they have had little exposure? The result ensuring that experienced, competent, respected and caring teachers are assigned to high-achieving schools while vacancies in low-achieving schools are filled with inexperienced, less culturally-aware, incompetent and often frightened teachers.

Why are graduation rates, reading and math scores for black males so far behind that of white students? And why is segregation, evidenced by a disproportionate number of black students in special education classes, allowed to exist within an “integrated” school system?

Yet the most enduring and relevant question is where should blame be assigned or how to identify responsibility for the disparities and dysfunction concerning African-American students.

We have been told over and over that it is our fault because there is a connection between “our assumption of moral responsibility and academic achievement.” Our children are more interested in gangs and drugs and we do not value education in our families, we are told. Too many irresponsible fathers and welfare moms are having babies out of wedlock. Or its the peer pressure that portrays learning as a “white thing” and a host of other socioeconomic challenges to educational achievement including poverty, family dysfunction or community impotence that have all been used as excuses for poor student performance.

But the truth is that racism, while “extra-legal, closeted and covert,” still exists and undoubtedly comes out in the policies of school districts and in the attitudes of its employees as evidenced in the obvious disparities and one-sided educational outcomes.

We have for too long sat back and relied on the failed strategy of benevolent others to “do right by us” instead of using what the late educator Barbara Sizemore, Ph.D. called, “levers of power.”

We do have recourse that includes not merely blaming others, but also assuming the responsibility for change, ourselves.

How?

“Our money should never support businesses or organizations that support white privilege in hiring, issuing contracts, or in the failure to provide educational equity. We should always vote in large numbers in order to make a difference and support our own politiians,”  wrote Sizemore, because “power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will.”

We should demand implementation of culturally responsive pedagogies that create a sense of family and caring, honor and respect of the children’s culture and fosters a sense of community and connection to something greater in the children than themselves (Delpit, 2010).

Rather than teaching “less content to poor, urban children; more should be taught. Critical thinking should be a priority and  racist societal views of the competence and worthiness of children and their families should be challenged.”

If we fail to use the power that we already hold in our hands and available to address the inequalities and inequities in the educational system then we have no one to blame but ourselves.

Contact Rev. Dr. Donald Perryman at drdlperryman@centerofhopebaptist.org

 

 
  

Copyright © 2010 by [The Sojourner's Truth]. All rights reserved.
Revised: 10/15/10 08:48:44 -0700.

 

 


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