Can it really be 50 years since the United
States Supreme Court ruled in Brown v.The Board of Education that
legal race separation was inherently unequal and therefore unconstitutional
in public education? The story and meaning of Brown v. Board is
being told, re-told, analyzed, and in some cases even re-enacted
in numerous anniversary events across the country this spring. Many
of the participants in these events are in "no mood to throw
a birthday bash for Brown," as University of California (San
Diego) law professor Roy L. Brooks recently noted at a May 10th conference
held by The Chicago Urban League.
There are good reasons for the qualified
nature of Brown's celebration. Any honest and accurate assessment
shows that the lessons and legacy of Brown provide little
basis for American self-congratulation.
"With All Deliberate Speed”
The Brown decision was anything but a forthright
assault on racial segregation and inequality. Crafted to achieve
buy-in from moderates and racists within and beyond the bench, it
avoided any direct confrontation with the white-supremacist ideologies
and structures that lay beneath the Big "Separate But Equal" Lie.
Consistent with its tepid language, Brown failed
to mandate a reasonably rapid remedy for the crime of educational
apartheid. Its timid requirement that school desegregation proceed "with
all deliberate speed" bore predictably limited short-term fruit. Just
one percent of southern black children attended even partly desegregated
schools 10 years later.
And Brown only covered education,
not the myriad other and intimately related areas of American life
that remained racially separate and unequal, openly and legally in
the South. It was left to activists, a great subsequent civil rights
movement (sparked in no small part by Brown's promises), and
subsequent rulings and legislation to put public-educational meat
on the legal bones of Brown and to extend the logic of desegregation
beyond public schooling.
There were real integrationist and related
egalitarian victories, especially in the South and during the second
decade out. By Brown's 20-year anniversary, nearly half (46
percent) of black students attended integrated, majority-white schools. Since
this meant greater access for black children to better-funded, better-equipped,
and more "middle-class" schools, African-American kids'
achievement levels and high-school graduation rates rose considerably.
The currently much bemoaned racial "achievement gap" fell
by half between 1954 and 1974.
Still Separate
During the last nearly two and a half decades,
however, the flesh of desegregation has been largely stripped from Brown's legal
skeleton. Public school integration has undergone significant disassembly
on the killing floors of judicial regression and housing segregation.
According to the Harvard
Civil Rights Project (HCRP), "the
proportion of black students in majority white schools" has "fallen
to a lower level than any year since 1968." Less than a third
of African-American students attend integrated schools in "the
world's leading interracial democracy," as American elites like
to describe the U.S. Fifty years out, we are moving back, under the
cover of "color-blind" illusions, towards deeply entrenched,
long-term educational apartheid.
A big part of this has to do with "white-flight" out
of predominantly black and Hispanic cities. Another has to do with
policy. Particularly relevant here is the Supreme Court's decision
during the mid-1970s that Brown could not be interpreted to
require integration across city and suburban lines. That decision
ensured that the racial composition of local school districts would
mirror America's starkly segregated residential landscape, reflecting
and furthering the division of our great metropolitan areas between
predominantly black, brown and poor cities and more affluent, predominantly
white suburbs.
Let me present a few notes from my home
base. The current black-white school "segregation index" for
the Chicago metropolitan area is 84, which means that 84 percent
of black kids in the 6-county region would have to switch school
districts in order for African-American children to be evenly distributed
throughout the area's schools. The black school "isolation
index" is 78, meaning that the average black kid in the area
attends a school that is 78 percent black.
Within Chicago itself, the black-white segregation
index is higher (88 percent) than in the metropolitan area and 54
percent of black students attend schools that do not have a single
white student. With at least some justice, the city's public school
officials note that they don't have enough white students left to
justify the judicial desegregation order they have been (supposedly)
operating under since the early 1980s.
In the Midwest, the HCRP reports, 46 percent
of black kids attend schools that are 90 to 100 percent black. In
Illinois and Michigan, 61 and 63 percent of black kids, respectively,
go to such schools. In California and New York, less than 14 percent
of black students attend majority white schools.
Still Unequal: Preserving Privilege
American schools are still separate. What
about the promise of equality? Many activists and intellectuals argue – with
no small justice – that separate is not in fact inherently unequal
and that black kids don't necessarily have to sit next to white kids
in racially balanced schools to learn. Fair enough, but separation
still translates into inequality under current really existing conditions
of American spatial, racial and socioeconomic stratification.
Let's start with money, understood at two
levels. The first level is the money possessed by the students'
families. Many predominantly black schools are monuments to concentrated
poverty. According to the HCRP, 61 percent of children are
poor in schools that are 50 to 60 percent black and Latino. In schools
that are 90 to 100 percent black and/or Latino, 88 percent of the
kids are poor.
The second level is school funding. According
to the mainstream Education
Trust, a leading establishment Washington
DC think-tank, there is a chronic and widespread funding shortfall
for U.S. school districts with large numbers of black and Hispanic
students. "Thirty-seven out of 48 states," the Trust reports, "provide
fewer cost-adjusted dollars (using the [standard] 40 percent cost
adjustment for lower-income students) to the districts with the most
minority students, with 12 states showing gaps of more than $1000
per student [per year]." In New York, the minority school funding
gap is more than $2000.
This reflects a privilege-preserving school-funding
system that bases per-student expenditures largely on the local property
tax base – a wonderful U.S. formula that is technically "color-blind" but
in fact heavily racialized, thanks to persistent black residential
segregation (and discrimination) and persistent huge racial wealth
disparities that have deepened considerably since 2001.
As one black elementary school student asked
the prolific author and educational justice witness and spokesman
Jonathan Kozol, "why do those who need the most get the least
and those who need the least get the most?"
Indeed. There are rich white districts
in the Chicago suburbs that spend as much as $15 to $18,000 per year
per student. Median household income for families with children under
18 in such communities is well into the six figures. There are poor
black Chicago suburban districts than spend less than $7,000 per
year and yet where median household income is less than $31,000.
Educational Apartheid: Beyond the Funding Gap
As Kozol recently pointed out in an eloquent
keynote speech at a conference I helped organize in Chicago, per-student
spending disparities tell only one part of the story of the "savage
[school] inequalities" that persist under the post-Brown system
of "educational apartheid." Inner-city black and Latino
students' senses of beauty and dignity are still assaulted by rotting
school structures, archaic bathrooms, stinking corridors, and decrepit
school materials. They still suffer from chronic instability and
under-qualification on the part of their teachers. Their chances
for learning are still challenged by overcrowded classrooms with
inordinately high student-teacher ratios. Their aspirations to create
successful and democratic lives are "amputated" by teachers
and school officials who see them as incapable of grasping higher
thoughts, attending college, finding useful work, and participating
as full citizens. Their natural love for learning is crushed on the
wheels of a neo-Dickensian, proto-militarized, and standardized-test-based "skill
and drill" curriculum that values rote memorization over critical
and creative thinking. They have far less access to advanced college-preparatory
high school courses than do students in more affluent and whiter
school districts.
They know more about the names of their
state's prisons than they do about those of their state's universities,
and for good reason. In the spring of 2001, there were 20,000 more
black males in Illinois state prisons than in the bachelors' programs
of the state's public universities. In Chicago, the city schools
chief continually reports a high-school drop rate of 13 percent in
spite of abundant, readily available research showing that the rate
is much higher and that less than half of the city's black 9th graders
make it to graduation. It seems worth noting that half of black male
high school dropouts serve time in prison during their adult
lives.
Even some of the most dedicated and heroic
public school teachers are driven out of urban schools by the soulless,
mind-numbing, test-targeted anti-pedagogy that school systems and
public authorities impose with special vengeance on the urban poor.
The centrally scripted lesson plans that urban school directorates
inflict on "neighborhood" schools are derided by the actual
classroom practitioners as "teacher-proof materials." They
are designed to inoculate young minds against democratic imagination
and to encourage a dangerously bored and authoritarian mindset.
The corporate-Stalinist curriculum is accompanied
by stern lectures on "accountability" from officials who
typically know and care little about the art of teaching and the
challenges faced by staff and pupils in inner city schools. These
lectures are unaccompanied by the resources required to meet the
un-funded mandates set by such legislative atrocities as the perversely
plagiarist "No Child Left Behind Act."
Things are very different, of course, in
shiny white suburban schools that serve as de facto private college
preparatory academies within the "public" system. These
latter schools attract many of the best, most energized teachers
who flock to the opportunity to practice their craft in safe and
pleasing structures with low student-teacher ratios. They enjoy
the best and latest materials and the freedom to challenge students
who expect to spend their late teens and early 20s in higher education,
not ghettoized prisons and prison-like ghettoes.
Sadly, large numbers of black, Latino, and
liberal-white urban education officials, policymakers and civil rights
leaders are all-too-willing to "play ball" with this savagely
unequal and authoritarian system. Having given up on the struggle
for meaningful integration and equality, they sign on with the latest
recommended seven steps to turn inner city and black suburban
ring schools into successful apartheid institutions.
“A Country Which Daydreams About Exporting Its Democracy"
I recently read (for the first time I am
embarrassed to say) Kozol's first classic book, Death at An Early
Age: the Destruction of the Hearts and Minds of Negro Children in
the Boston Public Schools (1967), written as the civil rights
movement was bringing its clarion call for an integrated and just
social order to the urban north and as the United States was escalating
its bloody crucifixion of Vietnamese children and adults. Among many
lines in Death At An Early Age that hold striking contemporary
relevance, one comes on page 53. Kozol has just presented numbers
showing shocking disparity between the amount spent per student in
Boston's all-white schools and the amount spent in the city's under-funded
majority black schools. He has also noted the large number of temporary,
part-time, "fill-in" teachers in the black schools.
"These seem amazing facts," Kozol
writes, "in a country which daydreams about exporting its democracy. Looking
at these figures openly," he concludes, "it is hard not
to wonder whether we did not export our democracy a long time ago
and now don't have very much left for our own people." That
simple and elegant formulation on the intimate relationship between
empire and inequality was written in 1966. It applies to 2004.
Curious Public Priorities and the “Calendar of Improvements”
Later in Death At An Early Age (one
of the great documents of moral witness in modern literature), Kozol
addressed the insipid faith of liberals that "things are changing" in
the right direction for black children. The liberals' "schedule
for correction of grievances," he noted, "was plotted so
slowly. Is there any reason to think it will be different in the
future? Next year some integrated readers in a few schools, maybe. And
then, with luck, some day later on, they may even use ... racially
honest readers in public schools all over town... And then one day
possibly not merely the texts but real children in the real schools
also will be integrated and will no longer go to school separately
but will be sitting in the same classrooms side by side. In that
day, five, twenty years hence, possibly the teachers as well will
begin to think of things differently and will no longer assume that
Negro children are poor material because they will not read books
that deny them and because they will not work out their hearts for
white teachers who despise them. Perhaps, by the time another generation
comes around, the great majority of these things will be corrected. But
if I were the parent of a Negro child in school today I know that
I would not be able to accept a calendar of improvements that was
scaled so slow" (pp. 83-84).
It's a generation later and the masters' "calendar
of improvements" has turned out to be slower than anyone might
have imagined. As Kozol said last Monday in Chicago, there's
no reparation for the betrayal and poisoning of a childhood. Neither
the liberals nor the "conservatives" – better now perhaps
to say "the conservatives and the Radically Regressive Republicans" – have
much to offer the forgotten children of color, contemptuously abandoned
to their own devices in the de-industrialized, hyper-segregated slums
of the inner city and the growing poor black suburban ring that absorbs
a rising share of gentrification's outcasts. For many of those children,
boys especially (but not at all exclusively), school is just a first
step on the path to incarceration and lifelong felony marking. The
average annual cost of incarceration, it seems worth noting, is $30,000 – an
interesting statement of public priorities when compared with the
cost of educating a child.
Fifty years is a fair passage of time even
by the gradualist measure that framed the Brown decision. In the
period when the most progress was attained under Brown, it's also
worth noting, many activists spoke the by-now forgotten language
of revolution as well as reform. Maybe it's time to think more along
the lines of the former term. We've seen where timid faith
in liberal progress and appeasement has brought us. "The schedule
for the correction of grievances" is in need of sharp acceleration.
Paul Street ([email protected])
is an urban social policy researcher in Chicago, Illinois.
He is the author of more than one hundred articles, including "Too Many Children Left Behind: The Case Against School Vouchers," Z
Magazine (September 2002): 46-50.