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Parents, not schools, failed these children
By BILL MAXWELL
Published June 3, 2007
Who's responsible for educating a child?
On its face, this is a simple question. But when we factor in the race of the child, the question becomes one mired in, among other forces, blame, anger, recrimination, self-aggrandizement, history, myth, politics and, of course, litigation.
All of these forces are converging in Pinellas County as the School Board and its attorneys prepare to do battle with Guy Burns, the attorney representing a plaintiff class composed of 20, 000 black children currently attending and who will attend Pinellas schools.
The plaintiffs claim the schools failed to adequately educate black students in violation of Florida law and the state Constitution. Indeed, black students in Pinellas schools consistently score below all other groups on all standardized measures, dubbed the achievement gap, and they have the highest suspension and expulsion rates.
Popularly known as the "Crowley case, " this class-action lawsuit is named for black parent William Crowley. It was filed in August 2000 by Crowley on behalf of his son, Akwete Osoka, then a 7-year-old student at Sawgrass Elementary School in St. Petersburg.
According to the lawsuit, the boy faced academic problems "typical of those difficulties commonly faced by students of African descent." The lawsuit was filed during the time the People's Democratic Uhuru Movement faced obstacles in trying to establish its all-black Marcus Garvey Academy charter school. Crowley had enrolled his son in the Uhuru afterschool tutoring program, and he claimed the boy had begun reading above grade level as a result.
I have no doubt that this is a bogus lawsuit, and the judges who have permitted the case to go forward are patronizing and wrongheaded. They are blaming the wrong side for black children's failure to get a "high-quality" education.
Burns, now supported by a broad group of blacks that includes veteran educators, is blaming the schools for black students' abysmal academic performance. However, a 2005 study by University of Florida professor David N. Figlio and Princeton University professor Cecilia Elena Rouse argues that the moment black children in Pinellas come to kindergarten, they are not as prepared for learning as their peers. The study was commissioned by the Pinellas School District.
The researchers based their findings on precise data the district had collected as it tracked the 8, 400 students who entered kindergarten in 1989 through high school graduation.
Michael W. Kirk, a Washington, D.C.-based attorney for Pinellas schools, summarizes the study's major finding: "Whatever is causing the gap, it, by definition, is something that happened to these children before they set foot in a Pinellas County school."
Everything I know as a teacher and as a parent forces me to agree. Every classroom teacher I know agrees, and every mature, responsible parent I know agrees.
Too many blacks have relinquished their parental duties, a shameful neglect that forces public school teachers and administrators to become surrogate parents to children who have full-blown lives beyond the schoolhouse door.
A few days ago, a white middle school teacher told me that when she tried to speak with black parents about their children's unruly behavior, she faced hostility.
"I can't get through to the kids, and I can't get through to the parents, " she said. "What am I supposed to do?"
I did not have an answer. But I know this much: For sure, the courthouse is not the answer.
I have seen many children born and reared in poor, single-parent households who perform well academically and who do not get suspended or expelled from school. More often than not, these children have caring adults who participate in their intellectual and social lives.
Such adults know the home is life's anchor. They do not wait for strangers to do their job.
Last week, I went to the St. Petersburg Times' archives and read everything that has been written about the Crowley case since it started in 2000. The best thing I read was is the eloquent letter from Margy Kincaid, a high school teacher in Palm Harbor, published this March 28. She discusses the achievement gap in Pinellas schools:
"The achievement gap is bridged in early childhood by the parents, by how cherished the children were, how their questions were answered or how often they were read to at night. It is bridged by how committed the parents are to their education and the value it holds. The children's behavior control starts in early childhood with the way their discipline has been handled by the parents.
"Public school teachers, and administrators and guidance counselors, for the most part, jump through hoops to help these children catch up and learn anger-management and see to it that they get food, clothing or even basic hygiene products. But without the backing of parents the job is next to impossible.
"Graduation rates will not improve, school violence and vandalism will not decrease, the gap will not be bridged until we get the parents to buy into the 24/7 responsibility that began when they created the special and unique individual who is their child."
Guy Burns, the Crowley case attorney, needs to listen to Margy Kincaid and her colleagues instead of listening to parents who fail their own children long before the children enter kindergarten.
[Last modified June 2, 2007, 21:02:42]
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Comments on this article
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by willie
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07/14/07 09:17 PM
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IT IS DIFFICULT FOR ME TO UNDERSTAND HOW A PARENT CAN BLAME SOME ONE ELSE FOR THEIR CHILD;S FAILURE. IF YOU KNOW THAT YOUR CHILD IS FAILING IT IS UP TO YOU TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
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by TJ
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06/26/07 09:06 PM
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I am a black parent. I am educated in spite of my own prior environmental/economic challenges. I am a teacher in the County. Bottom line: an ounce of Parent equals 100 lbs of Teacher. Take responsibility. Who did Benjamin Banneker or GW Carver blame?
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by Josh
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06/25/07 09:25 PM
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I also think that the Crowley case is probably bogus, but I think that as long as teachers allow baggy jeans (see 6/24 article) to dissuage them from truly connecting with black youth that the system is failing. It takes guts to teach. Not easy.
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by Caryl
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06/25/07 10:46 AM
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I agree 100% that parents are key in a child's success in school. What can I do in my community to help with this problem so we can help our black students?
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by cbs
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06/16/07 04:59 PM
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Mr. Maxwell, you have courage.
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by Brittany
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06/13/07 10:24 AM
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I am 22 with an MBA and a full-time job. I am married and planning to have kids within the next 2 years... I am already planning the lessons that I want to teach my children (in regards to education). Education is #1-thats what my mother taught me.
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by The Old Head
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06/13/07 07:38 AM
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Fantastic. Keep up the good work. We over 70 Floridian offsprings will win this battle for the future. The "Achievment Gap" is not a problem, but the resultant of an Environmenal-Socio-Economic (ESE) problem.
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by Gina
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06/10/07 02:49 PM
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Children learn by what they see not what you tell them.
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by EMG
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06/10/07 11:14 AM
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Mother died when I was 10,father left me alone when I was 15. Dropped out of school. Worked at phone company. Married. Had children. Back to school at age 30. Grad.USF age34.Taught English 25 yrs Fla.Pulled self by boot straps.Had motivation.Am white
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by JW
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06/08/07 01:29 PM
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Good parenting is the most important contributor to a childò019s success. Every town has many civic and business leaders that had parental support that overcame barriers such as poverty, poor schools, racism, illness, injury, or learning disability...
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by JW
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06/08/07 01:28 PM
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Fewer leaders, by far, can say schooling overcame bad parents. Thatò019s because most people with bad parents have emotional problems that hold them back. Too many end up with menial jobs, pregnancy without a supportive spouse, or worse, jail time...
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by JW
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06/08/07 01:27 PM
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Clearly, parents have 1st responsibility in raising a successful child. But the FACT is that many children have bad parents. WHAT are we going to DO about it?!? Their dysfunctional kids drag down schools, swell social programs, and fill our jails...
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by JW
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06/08/07 01:26 PM
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Both public and private institutions must act. Public institutions (schools, justice system) must hold bad parents responsible. Private institutions (community groups, parent organizations, churches) need to teach and persuade bad parents to change.
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by Alex is a fool
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06/08/07 07:46 AM
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..generations. School is one thing, real life economics is another. Would you hire a kid with no motivation or one who is motivated by academic success. Socialism doesn't work. Market forces would turn the USA into a 3rd world nation...
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by Alex is a fool
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06/08/07 07:41 AM
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Why does the majority have this so called responsibility? As for your statement about black culture- what is black culture? Hip hop culture? A culture doesn't change with music or fashion- these are fads. True culture is passed down over...
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by j. Strait
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06/07/07 02:44 PM
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Thank you Bill, for having the courage to stand up and speak the truth. That saying "the Truth hurts" is proven out by all the negative defensive comments. Notice how the most negative comments have the worst grammar and spelling.
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by Claudel
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06/07/07 02:01 PM
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A smart child with a parent not involved in their education will end up on the streets. A child with average intelligence and involved parents can end up a doctor (I have seen it in my brief [29 yrs] lifetime).
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by eh
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06/07/07 11:11 AM
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http://www.lagriffedulion.f2s.com/testing.htm
http://www.swivel.com/graphs/show/8136667
Study and classification of test data is not popular because it yields very politically incorrect results, i.e. that point to in part a genetic origin of the gap.
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by glenn
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06/07/07 10:25 AM
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Ms. Kincaid's statements should be incorporated into a certificate of parental responsibility and accountability which should be issued, signed and registered with the birth certificate.
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by Alex
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06/07/07 08:40 AM
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Sandra, success is not conformance. The majority has the responsiblity to help the minority "catch up." Regarding eh's source, I believe it's The Bell Curve.
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by Maggie
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06/06/07 04:34 PM
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If parents do not want to take the responsibility of being a parent (like education, behavior, morals).. THEN DON'T HAVE KIDS!
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by Megan
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06/06/07 04:31 PM
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The same thing continues in college. Black people think that everyone has it out for them. Why would anyone? Education is what you make of it. No one can force a child to learn, but parents at an early age should instill educational values in childre
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by Sandra
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06/06/07 04:00 PM
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Alex, how do you explain Asians outperforming us who don't know anything of "white culture". We are a Western culture, (not white), and any person wanting to succeed has to conform. Notice how African, Mideast societies ... not doing so well?
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by Sandra
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06/06/07 03:55 PM
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eh, please quote your source. I'm very well read and have never come across any such simple "facts".
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by Abraham Kalashnikov
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06/06/07 01:56 PM
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Poor people, no matter what the race, should not be having children in the first place.
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by Joyce
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06/06/07 01:29 PM
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As a retired educator, I can emphatically say, "Right on!"
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by eh
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06/06/07 12:15 PM
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To all the blame whitey folks a simple fact: on average, black kids whose parents have advanced degrees do worse on achievement and intelligence tests than white kids whose parents only finished high school. How do you explain that? Who do you blame?
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by JM
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06/06/07 11:00 AM
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Mr. Maxwell is merely stating what has been true since the beginning of time. We parents are responsible for our children. Don't blame others for holding you down, we're the only one resp. for our children, so do right by them and at least try.
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by Alex
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06/06/07 08:41 AM
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Mr. Maxwell is saying what white people want to hear. I agree with others in this forum that blacks have been oppressed by the white majority. Whites know nothing of black culture in this country. White people must be educated to black culture.
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by Rick
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06/05/07 07:18 PM
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I grew up dirt poor in a non-english speaking home. My dad, a factory worker, sat down with me every night and made me read my lessons. Neither of us knew what we were reading, but I did learn that nothing was more important than my education.
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by David
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06/05/07 06:27 PM
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It's time to give African Americans complete financial, political and legal ownership of their people's education. Only when blacks are de-coupled from the oppressive white majority will they begin to thrive and reach for the stars.
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by Rick
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06/05/07 02:20 PM
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I can't believe this is Maxwell's
article. Kids are reflections of their up bringing at home...Da !
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by JG
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06/05/07 01:52 PM
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It's funny to me how ppl argue about which race is to blame, but when it comes to our education system all Americans are "stupid".Don't believe me just look who's leading the way in advanced technology & where your jobs are been out-sourced too. LOL
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by Louise
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06/05/07 12:19 PM
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This is not a race thing, it is true will all children. My experience says that it's more the parents blame in the elementary years, and more the schoold blame in the high school years, high schools make it hard for parents to be involved.
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by Deirdre
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06/04/07 09:40 PM
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AMEN!! While the achievement gap may be more prevalent among the black community, as a teacher, I have found this "gap" among students of any race not given the proper foundation to enter school: lots of literacy experiences in the home of origin!
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