Gloria Romero on Schools Named After Civil Rights Leaders
Gloria
Romero echoes Matt Miller’s points about millions of students, year
after year, languishing in failing schools, many ironically named after civil rights leaders:
... we have a habit of naming schools after
civil rights legends. But should a school that bears such a name also be
among our state's chronically lowest-performing schools?
Last May, the Navy launched a new cargo
ship, the USNS Cesar Chavez. What reaction would there be if that ship
had sunk on its maiden voyage? Would we tolerate the drowning of its
crewmembers? Surely, there would be an immediate
call for a commission to "get to the roots" of this tragedy.
Yet, we allow schools named after heroic
leaders to sink, year after year. Our students "drown" in chronically
underperforming schools. Where are the inquiries?
This question is particularly relevant as we
await release of California's Department of Education's List of 1,000
chronically underperforming schools. This compilation is based on a law I
wrote that mandated giving parents access
to these "watch lists," which previously were compiled by bureaucrats
and then just left on a shelf in Sacramento. The idea behind the law was
to spotlight underperforming schools, to begin their transformation
with parental knowledge and participation.
There are some 35 California schools named
after Cesar Chavez. Almost all are identified as "Program Improvement"
(PI) schools – which is a bureaucratic label meaning "failing." Tens of
thousands of students are "drowning" in these
chronically underperforming schools. No whistles are blown. We just step
back and watch them sink; and we also seem to blame the students for
the educational equivalent of not knowing how to swim.
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