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Gary Orfield

Gary Orfield

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Segregated and Satisfied in the Southland?

Posted: 03/21/11 10:20 PM ET

Southern California is one of the world's most diverse, urbanized communities with people from every part of the globe, no racial majority, and a sense that it is way ahead of the rest of the country. Certainly it is in terms of a diversity of cultures, languages, music and cuisines, as well as the way its population foreshadows the transformation that is taking place now in the rest of the country.

In political terms, Southern California provided a large, progressive victory for the election of Barack Obama as president, and its first Latino mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa. Many places in Southern California pay homage to the region's Mexican origins. People tend to be proud and satisfied about the region's diversity and tend to think it is working out.

But there is a very different story. California is backwards in terms of racial and ethnic justice. The truth is that the civil rights revolution in the South never really arrived in Southern California, home to what is by far the nation's largest population of Latinos, the second largest Asian population and the West's largest population of African Americans. The South was forced to desegregate its schools and became the most integrated region of the country (in terms of schools) for more than a third of a century. But in Los Angeles, they changed the state constitution to block a desegregation plan. Southern California has subsequently done very little since the desegregation of Los Angeles was halted by that state proposition more than three decades ago. L.A. became the first major city in the nation to abandon mandatory desegregation after little more than a year of a limited order. Many nearby communities took no action as racial change and resegregation occurred.

The region has voted for four major anti-civil rights changes to the state constitution, one of which (forbidding fair housing enforcement) was overturned by the Warren Court in the l960s. However, those banning affirmative action, drastically limiting the state constitution's rights to desegregation, and prohibiting affirmative action in hiring and employment have been allowed to stand and limit rights enjoyed in the large majority of U.S. states.

About the time that the Latino population of the state was beginning to explode in the late l970s, a state tax limit, Proposition 13, began to dramatically cut support for what had been a leading state system of well-supported public schools. Since then, California's school system has deteriorated markedly. Between the l970s and the present, California has changed from a state where the average Latino student was enrolled in a substantially integrated school with a white majority to the most segregated state for Latino students, who are dramatically isolated from a rapidly declining but politically powerful white minority. African American students, though now accounting for only one-twelfth of the region's enrollment, are also highly segregated from whites and Asians (who perform better in schools than whites, on average, and are the most integrated population). Black students rarely attend all-black schools, favored by some desegregation critics, but more often enroll in largely Latino neighborhood schools where they are a declining minority in schools doubly disadvantaged by racial and socioeconomic isolation.

People can say sitting next to a white or Asian child makes no difference, but being in a middle-class school -- where most of the students head to college, experienced and expert teachers offer many college credit AP courses, your friends are fluent native English speakers, and colleges and employers seek out their well-prepared students -- actually makes a decisive difference in the educational and life opportunities afforded to students.

There is almost no public discussion of segregation in Southern California though the differences in schools and neighborhoods one or two freeway exits apart are often shocking. If one compares the outcomes in the "dropout factory" schools, where the major product is dropouts or students totally unprepared for college, with the kind of opportunities that exist in schools serving affluent communities, it seems they could be serving different countries. The fact that California's level of public funding for schools has become one of the worst in the U.S. makes the private resources more affluent communities can give their schools all the more important.

Two common reactions to the issue of school segregation typically blunt honest dialogue about its ongoing impact. The first is that desegregation was tried and it failed. It was actually tried far less in Southern California than in many other parts of the country that many Californians would consider less sophisticated. Further, there is increasingly compelling evidence that where desegregation was implemented seriously it succeeded in changing the lives of many students. (Though it certainly did not eliminate the entire achievement gap, much of which remains rooted in very unequal opportunity in the years before kindergarten -- and in homes and neighborhoods of concentrated poverty). The national achievement gap was at its low point in the period when desegregation was at its high point, though of course no one claims that desegregation was the only cause.

The other criticism involves the issue of white flight. Certainly there was white flight when desegregation plans were implemented, but it was often a temporary acceleration in a housing trend that dated back all the way to the emergence of post-war white suburbia. Ending desegregation or never having any desegregation plan (which is true of a great many Southern California communities) did not stop the decline in the percentage of whites in the schools, which is primarily linked to differential birth rates, age structures, spreading residential segregation, and both U.S. and international migration patterns. Experience in the U.S. South shows that desegregation was most stable and long-lasting in areas where it included both the city and the suburbs, exactly the suggestion to the Los Angeles court that precipitated the successful campaign to restrict desegregation rights in California's constitution. White flight has since accelerated in many communities with no desegregation plans, including large segments of what were the whitest communities in the region in the 1970s and 1980s. When racial change goes neighborhood by neighborhood, community by community, first the white middle class exits, and then middle class families of any race often stop moving in. Tracking closely with housing patterns, school resegregation in these communities also accelerates.

Even if desegregation was a good idea, another argument goes, it is too late, since there are simply not enough whites to go around. Obviously it would have been much better if we had been serious about this issue during the civil rights era. If one thinks about making all the schools of Southern California majority white, it is obviously impossible at a time when the entire region has only one-fourth white students. More than a third of the students, however, are white and Asian, and many more are middle class. While all schools cannot become diverse by race, ethnicity and class, a great many could. There are means by which much more could be done through choice mechanisms, such as regional magnet schools. It would be considered absurd to say that because we can cure only a half or a third of patients of a serious disease, we should do nothing.

Segregation is an educational and social disease. Sometimes its impacts are ameliorated for a while in some places, but the broad relationship is clear and strong. Isolation by poverty, language and ethnicity threatens the future opportunities and mobility of students and communities excluded from competitive schools, and increasingly threatens the future of a society where young people are not learning how to live and work effectively across the deep lines of race and class in our region.

Critics say we should just put the money into equalizing the schools where they are and insist that they achieve. That has been California and the nation's basic policy for more than four decades. That is what Headstart, Title I, No Child Left Behind, and a variety of California reforms have tried to do. California adopted the full set of standards and accountability reforms pioneered in the South in the l970s, and then market-based reforms like charter schools in the l990s. We test teachers and students intensely and punish or exclude those who fall behind. Schools are threatened and sanctioned.

These efforts have failed, primarily because they do not equalize the factors that are most strongly related to student learning -- the peer groups of well-prepared and motivated students backed by communities with power to shape school opportunities, and the expert and experienced teachers who very strongly prefer to work with those students in those communities. We must, of course, try everything possible to make our highly stratified schools more equal, especially in terms of excellent teachers, but we also must think very hard about the failures of the past four decades, when virtually no effort has been made to give poor, nonwhite students access to good middle class schools. Integrationists favor a full range of strategies to help the many schools that will remain doubly and triply (race, poverty and language) segregated under any policy scenario at this point in our demographic transformation. But we're foolish not to try to accomplish something that works much better where it is possible.

Effective desegregation is only possible under some circumstances and it will not cure all the inequalities rooted in many aspects of life in our region, but it is reckless to think that we really know how to create and operate "separate but equal" schools on a large scale. That has never been done in the 115 years since Plessy v. Ferguson. The trend in the post-civil rights era has been to point to the rare "break the mold" schools with segregated enrollments and high scores and to ignore how odd it is that we celebrate the one school that succeeds in those terms, as if it shows that the 100 that do not will somehow be transformed. Obviously we should praise and support those unusual schools and their leaders but also recognize that the mold of segregation is a very strong and harsh one that is rarely broken.

Wherever we can, we should produce stably integrated schools in stably integrated communities. This will require serious collaboration between school and housing officials, the enforcement of fair housing law, and the strong commitment of local governments. Right now that means, for example, looking at the hundreds of racially changing suburbs in Southern California, creating schools diverse by race and class in gentrifying urban communities, and reviving and strengthening the magnet schools and integrated dual-language programs in our central cities. It means looking at the impact of our subsidized housing programs on the segregation and resegregation of communities and schools. It means trying to avoid the ghettoization and barrio creation processes, those that transformed many city neighborhoods from middle class to impoverished communities in a decade or less through the resegregation of housing and neighborhood schools. Communities that remain attractive to all and that offer all students the opportunity to prepare both for a good college and for the society in which they will live and work will have great advantages compared to those that do not. In Southern California, clearly those who learn how to operate fluently across social divisions will have a skill invaluable to individuals and essential for communities in the region's future.

I urge readers to set aside their assumptions and presuppositions as they read the stark statistics in a new report issued by the Civil Rights Project called "Divided We Fail: Segregated and Unequal Schools in the Southland," by two young scholars, Genevieve Siegel-Hawley and John Kucsera. These statistics show the scale and the hard realities of the racial transformation and resegregation across Southern California. They show the relationship between those trends and opportunity for students. They show that we are isolating and giving inferior education to the groups that will dominate our region's future.

In race relations, people tend to ignore many signs of inequality as long as possible, until a crisis or a social movement or large community failure makes it explosively apparent. Often it is too late by then for a good solution. People then ask, "Why didn't anyone tell us?" These reports are telling you now.

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The preceding blog comes directly from the foreword of "Divided We Fail: Segregated and Unequal Schools in the Southland," which Gary Orfield contributed to. The report is a product of the Civil Rights Project at UCLA.

 
Southern California is one of the world's most diverse, urbanized communities with people from every part of the globe, no racial majority, and a sense that it is way ahead of the rest of the country.
Southern California is one of the world's most diverse, urbanized communities with people from every part of the globe, no racial majority, and a sense that it is way ahead of the rest of the country.
 
 
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02:51 AM on 03/25/2011
So, I still want to know why the Civil Rights Project moved from Harvard with its 6.6% African American enrollment to UCLA with 2% at the time of the move.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Orfield
02:39 PM on 03/24/2011
From the authors part 4:
Creating a truly integrated school environment—where students of all races are treated equally, where they are given opportunities to work together towards shared goals, where strong leadership supports diversity—is challenging and vital work. The benefits extend beyond academic outcomes. The hard work of creating these successful, diverse learning environments cannot even begin to happen unless we tackle patterns of segregation outside of schools—in districts and in neighborhoods spread across deeply divided communities.

This report repeatedly recognized that desegregation is not possible under many circumstances in our region, but that where it is clearly feasible--for example, in racially changing suburbs, gentrifying neighborhoods, and residentially diverse parts of cities--it should be pursued. School choice policies should clearly foster it where possible. The alternatives to doing nothing -- segregation and resegregation -- are very costly in terms of low graduation rates, underpreparation for college and diminishing levels of educational attainment for the students of color who now make up a majority of the region’s school enrollment. Successful integrated schools would clearly best prepare students to live and work in one of the world’s most diverse regions. Our report is a wake-up call to take up these thorny issues and to begin discussing them seriously, and then decide what we are going to do about them.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Orfield
02:36 PM on 03/24/2011
From the authors part 3:
In another report released last year by the Civil Rights Project, we examined the issue of segregation in charter programs, finding that black students in particular are extremely isolated in charter schools around the country. A full 70% of black charter school students attend a school where 90-100% of their peers are minority (compared to 40% of black students in our already highly segregated regular public schools). The report also showed that charter schools are linked to patterns of white segregation, especially in the most racially diverse regions of the country. In terms of charter school outcomes, research from Stanford University's Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) showed that across 16 states, 83% of students in charters perform at the same level or significantly worse that their peers in traditional public schools. For Latino and black students in charters, learning gains were significantly worse overall compared to their traditional public school peers. In short, besides improving their effectiveness, charter schools need much stronger civil rights policies and more accountability for reporting who they serve in order to truly offer better opportunities to all students.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Orfield
02:34 PM on 03/24/2011
From the authors part 2:
We appreciate the comments. Readers raised many important and controversial issues about segregation and inequality. We offer here a quick response to some of these discussions.
Nothing in our report concludes that white students possess magical qualities. But we do show that schools with a majority of white and Asian students tend to be connected to far better educational opportunities and resources—more qualified teachers, more challenging coursework, less overcrowding—than schools serving a majority of African American and Latino students. It should not be that way, but the fact is that schools segregated along the lines of race, class and language offer fundamentally different resources and learning environments to students. Many people believe that any young student can succeed if they work hard enough. But overall, students attending these segregated and intensely segregated schools (that serves large majorities of black, Latino, and American Indian youth) have to work much, much harder in order to overcome challenging and unequal conditions.

In our report we suggested a variety of policy solutions to help disadvantaged students access higher performing schools. For example, we discussed the importance of considering racial diversity in urban planning. We also discussed how school choice could be an avenue to promote integration in the region when choice options (magnets, pilot schools, and charters) consider and plan for diversity. Without such efforts, choice often increases stratification.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Orfield
02:32 PM on 03/24/2011
From the authors of the report:
As the segregation of schools has simply been accepted in Southern California for years--and because the courts have withdrawn from efforts to enforce desegregation in many of the region’s districts--it is not surprising that our report, which calls for something to be done about these issues, would ignite controversy. The Civil Rights Project’s data showed four major trends in Southern California: 1) segregation is far more intense than in the past, 2) students are segregated by poverty as well as race or ethnicity, 3) segregation is very seriously related both to educational opportunities and outcomes (graduating from high school is an example), and 4) segregation is spreading into many sections of the region. We hoped this report would ignite a serious discussion -- and it seems it is doing just that -- about what could be done to foster more stable and diverse schools and promote access to better schools for the region’s Latino and African American students.
05:47 PM on 03/23/2011
I have worked as a substitute teacher in LAUSD for a few years. Witnessed the plight of public education personally. On one hand you do have many students who do not have active parents..but on the other hand you have freshman high schoolers working after school and on weekends..to help parents make ends meet. I worked at West Adams Prep..which is a fancy new school..a public prep school, and many of those kids had never been to Beverly Hills...the LACK of exposure due to the poverty makes it hard for kids to understand WHY they need to learn. So as new and pretty as the bldgs are doesnt make up for the lack of connection between their world..and the rest of the world. What goes on in these LA schools is just a microcosm of the real world..where the needs of many (poor) are ignored in favor of others maintaining their status quo. All these religious politicians forget the scripture that says "for the one who is least among all of you, this is the one who is great"
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Doug Watt
Not ready for 2012
11:57 PM on 03/22/2011
I wonder if our schools here in Northern CA are any better? I went to integrated schools here in San Jose but that was decades ago.
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Nicole Dixson
10:23 PM on 03/22/2011
One word: Transfer. My son (we are black) has been a transfer student since he started school. In our home district, he would be packed into classes with 45+ students. The district he was accepted to is primarily Asian and strictly adhered to the class size reduction rules of no more than 20 kids per class up the 4th grade. He is in middle school now and the school maintains a decent teacher to pupil ratio. Elementary school was not easy for him due to being the only black at the school for a couple of years. It is better now that he is in middle school. I know that a transfer is not an option for a lot of people, but if you can do it, do it.
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Doug Watt
Not ready for 2012
12:30 AM on 03/23/2011
Yes, you want the best education for you child. I would do the same thing.
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Andrew Wojtkowski
Physengrammer (Physicist/Engineer/Programmer)
11:05 AM on 03/23/2011
My stepson had the same problem when he was living with me. Granted, he's white, but where I live he is BY FAR the minority. A vast majority of my area is a good mix of various Spanish-Speaking cultures. I was very happy to see him interact with people of other races, thought it would bring him a good sense of "We're all the same, just different colored skin."

However, as the year went on, I had noticed that the teacher started becoming more and more of a "parent" to these kids. Their parents are so busy having 3+ jobs that they literally do not have time to take care of these poor kids. I even saw it around my neighborhood.

Against my better judgement, but he has moved up to Michigan to live with his father and is already telling me how much more he learns. He's less bored, class sizes are smaller, and the teachers don't 'talk down' to him. It really put things into focus for me.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
06:32 PM on 03/22/2011
The solution proposed here seems to be to take some of the good students and send them to the bad school and take some of the bad student and send them to the good school. It is an interestin­g experiment in the abstract. It might even work in rasing the average scores.

My question is, why would the good schools and the good students want to participat­e in this?
12:54 PM on 03/23/2011
They wouldn't. They'll have to be forced.
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06:29 PM on 03/22/2011
"first Latino mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa" -- how quickly we forget Cristobal Aguilar....
08:02 AM on 03/23/2011
"...how quickly we forget...."

Oh, I dont know.......hes been dead since 1880 or so.

Not a bad run...all things considered.....heh

P.S. Viva Villaraigosa!
TM
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02:53 PM on 03/23/2011
;)
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
06:23 PM on 03/22/2011
So what? Who cares about the ethnic/racial makeup of the schools in this country? Nobody connected to the left cares about education, because they know they can always lower the requirements and assign quotas to try to get certain groups represented in the workforce, especially in some particular occupations..

http://abc.daytonsnewssource.com/shared/newsroom/top_stories/videos/wkef_vid_6103.shtml

In my own area, this was in the news back a few years ago. The test involved was a MATH test. I didn't know numbers could discriminate!

http://hamptonroads.com/2009/07/portsmouths-settlement-over-firefighter-test-okd

This goes on, and has been going on, all over the country. So why try to inspire certain kids to aspire to achieve on their own? they learn at an early age that they can just accuse someone (an 'ist') of committing an 'ism' against them, and try to collect from that!

And I thought CA was the epitome of (ahem) 'progressive' educational practices? How can racism be connected to progresses? Segregation IS racism, is it not? That's what I've always been told!
09:14 PM on 03/22/2011
always lower the requiremen ts "

Always lower the requirements for people to get a basic education? This statement is kind of an oxymoron and coming from mindsets like this always helps in providing an explanation for why there is always going to be an -ism(s) in this world.
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
11:11 PM on 03/22/2011
'Lowering the requirements' is not something I endorse, I am merely commenting on the reality of what has taken place in recent decades. 'Dumbing down' expectations hurts everyone, but the ones making those decisions don't seem to care about that!
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Doug Watt
Not ready for 2012
12:01 AM on 03/23/2011
Huh, I didn't know Dayton Ohio was part of the Golden State. Didn't know there was a Portsmouth, CA town either.
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
11:35 PM on 03/23/2011
Obviously the points are lost on you. Comprehension is a wonderful thing!
05:27 PM on 03/22/2011
Here in nothern California, resegreation is definitely happening; however, it's happening by choice. In Sacramento, new charter schools are cropping up focusing on a specific race. We now have a Hmong charter school, an ESL charter school, and now we will have many African American charter schools. This is very concerning because everyone is wanting their own bubble in a very diverse place. Sacramento is one of the most socioeconomically and racially diverse cities in the nation, yet minority populations are trying to seperate themselves into their own bubble in order to close the achievement gap. What seems to be happening is that the minority populations that are trying to succeed in school want to get their kids away from the students who are disruptive and who don't value education and use the achievement gap and race as a way to do it. This creates a two-tiered system - segregating those who want to learn from those who aren't interested. It doesn't fix anything, it's just more flight - this time it's not the whites that are fleeing...How can we all coexist if we can't relate to one another?
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Bushido08
Spirit of a Warrior
07:42 PM on 03/22/2011
Well said, however, desegregation never worked anyway. The idea of busing students back and forth out of their districts was ill conceived and eventually those well off enough to move did just that...they moved away from the cities and into the suburbs where they could go right back to being segregated. I was very surprised when we moved to the area that I live in which now numbers over 50,000 that I saw litterly no one of color at all. It was very strange to go to a school football game and look in the crowds and only see white people. The downside I fear is that these children will not be very well adapted to the world at large. And like it or not we are a global community.
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rmarie
09:35 PM on 03/22/2011
Charter schools that focus on a certain heritage are not bad. What is bad is sticking a bunch of diverse kids in a school where the focus in on White achievement, and showcasing the contributions of Whites to our society. Name one public school curriculum in this country that is inclusive of men and women of all races...you can't. The focus is on what White people have done. Kids don't hear about Asian scientists, Black inventors or Latino politicians (unless there's a negative spin on it).

Minority kids need to hear about what their people contributed and continue to contribute to this country.

As for minority kids who don't want to learn...would you if you were placed into a system that automatically assumes you're sub-par? Probably not.
12:25 AM on 03/23/2011
Agreed.
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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
01:43 AM on 03/23/2011
Did you ever attend school? If so, where? I want to retreive the curriculum and paste it to this thread. - Or are you just making this up? Schools do teach about Asian, African-America and Latino contributions quite regularly. Your comments are B S and fashioned to suit your agenda.
04:35 PM on 03/22/2011
The writer makes a fatal flaw in thinking that a particular school, teacher or student can make the difference in creating a better student who happens to be sitting next to them. Utter nonsense, never proven and completely illogical. The reason suburban schools are generally better in the first place has nothing to do with the school or location and everything to do with the kids who attend and WANT to go to school and succeed in school. In other words the onus is on the student, the individual. Do they want to succeed? Do they want to be educated? Plenty of kids do just fine in the schools that he claims are "segregated". The reality is, which he fails to mention, is that kids in LAUSD are allowed to go to whatever school they want to if they're willing to take the bus for 1-2 hours in the morning. Most aren't and I don't blame them. How patronizing is it for this writer to assume that sitting next to a White or Asian kid will somehow make a Black or Mexican kid smarter? Any kid who wants to get an education, get good grades has the opportunity to do so. The ones who don't have made their choice as well. Send the message that the kids need to achieve wherever they may be and they WILL succeed - whoever they are. Stop being a typical patronizing liberal. It gives the label a bad name.
09:16 PM on 03/22/2011
Actually, the biggest factor that determines success in school for kids is socioeconomic status. If you're a poor kid, you don't do as well as a kid from a middle class background. Poverty, food scarcity, joblessness of parents, overcrowding in the home, all these socioeconomic factors play a bigger role in the success of students than the race or ethnicity of the student sitting next to them. That said, usually those students are wealthier and that means the school has more resources to help overcome some of the poverty factors but ultimately if the family can pull itself out of poverty the kids will pull themselves through school and into college.
12:29 AM on 03/23/2011
Teacher to student ratio, the passion of the teacher for the subject taught, the safety of the student in the learning environment and the money spent on quality educational material is what helps to create a successful student.
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jdl51
04:32 PM on 03/22/2011
There is already segregation within each public school. Check out the racial makeup of the AP and advanced classes compared to the racial makeup of the general student body. Just because you go to an integrated school doesn't mean knowledge will rub off on you just by walking down the halls. It takes work and commitment.
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
06:12 PM on 03/22/2011
If anything, the reverse of that is often true. Busing and other means used to increase the racial representation of many schools contributed to them going backwards as far as overall school achievement. Toss in the lowering of various standards to address the usual assertions that things just aren't 'fair' to certain students and you have the makings of a vicious, downward spiral. And, the parents who could put their kids in other schools often did so. It wasn't about having their kids around particular groups, it had everything to do with not wanting to deal with lowered expectations.
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Doug Watt
Not ready for 2012
12:22 AM on 03/23/2011
So which California schools went into a downward spiral because of busing desegregation (and no, schools in Ohio or New Hampshire don't count)?
09:16 PM on 03/22/2011
True. Schools within schools.
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Jehosafats
Body Without Organs
04:31 PM on 03/22/2011
I knew virtually nothing about southern California. Thanks.
05:04 PM on 03/22/2011
the most beautiful place in our country!!!
12:37 AM on 03/23/2011
Beautiful, but static. Not a lot of communal spaces. Too Balkinized and too hot.
08:15 AM on 03/23/2011
Well, I'll just say that there's a lot of competition in that field "CAhye"

It's easy to see WHY 80 gazillion people moved there....
And fun to imagine how pleasant it must have been in, say...the 50's...before they did
TM