And so the Departments of Education and Justice have launched a campaign against disproportionate minority discipline rates, which show up in virtually every school district with significant numbers of black and Hispanic students. The possibility that students’ behavior, not educators’ racism, drives those rates lies outside the Obama administration’s conceptual universe. But the country will pay a high price for the feds’ blindness, as the cascade of red tape and lawsuits emanating from Washington will depress student achievement and enrich advocates and attorneys for years to come.
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The feds have reached their conclusions, however, without answering the obvious question: Are black students suspended more often because they misbehave more? Arne Duncan, of all people, should be aware of inner-city students’ self-discipline problems, having headed the Chicago school system before becoming secretary of education. Chicago’s minority youth murder one another with abandon. Since 2008, more than 530 people under the age of 21 have been killed in the city, mostly by their peers, according to the Chicago Reporter; virtually all the perpetrators were black or Hispanic. In 2009, the widely publicized beating death of 16-year-old Derrion Albert by his fellow students sent Duncan hurrying back to the Windy City, accompanied by Attorney General Eric Holder, to try to contain the fallout in advance of Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics (see “Chicago’s Real Crime Story,” Winter 2010). Between September 2011 and February 2012, 25 times more black Chicago students than white ones were arrested at school, mostly for battery; black students outnumbered whites by four to one. (In response to the inevitable outcry over the arrest data, a Chicago teacher commented: “I feel bad for kids being arrested, . . . but I feel worse seeing a kid get his head smashed on the floor and almost die. Or a teacher being threatened with his life.”) So when Duncan lamented, upon the release of the 2012 discipline report, that “some of the worst [discipline] discrepancies are in my hometown of Chicago,” one could only ask: What does he expect?
Friday, August 10, 2012
Professional race-mongers miss the reality boat
Again. From Heather MacDonald’s article:
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This is one reason I no longer call myself a conservative. I am a realist, and therefore can only see the real truth behind the curtain.
ReplyDeleteThis is one reason I no longer call myself a conservative. I am a realist, and therefore can only see the real truth behind the curtain.
ReplyDeleteGot to keep the storm troopers of the future revved up.
ReplyDeleteNo one should be surprised at the epic failure that we know as Chicago. It's kept running only by massive infusions of state and federal cash.
ReplyDeleteThe city itself is one of the last bastions of patronage government, a dying corpse stuffed with bureaucrats, and propped up by cronies and mobsters.
JeffS - Chicago...and Honolulu. Twins in their patronage government models...both home to the Current Occupant.
ReplyDeleteWhy do I not think that's a coincidence...