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Brown vs' Board of Education : Yesterday and Today

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Title: Brown vs' Board of Education : Yesterday and Today


1
Brown vs. Board of Education Yesterday and Today
  • SourceRosen, Jeffrey,The Lost Promise of School
    Integration, The Sunday New York Times, The Week
    in Review Section, 4-2-2000

2
A Retrospective and Update Concerning the Supreme
Courts 1954 Ruling that School Segregation is
Unconstitutional
3
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4
In 1954 the Supreme Court was asked to decide the
following question Does segregation in public
schools deprive students of their right to equal
protection of the laws under the Fourteenth
Amendment?
  • In 1954 the Court unanimously decided that
    Separate educational facilities are inherently
    unequal. By this the Court meant that educating
    children of different races together was the key
    to the crucial project of creating a society less
    divided by race.

5
How was the Brown decision implemented?
  • From the beginning the Courts were willing to
    force integration through mandatory busing.

6
For all intents and purposes mandatory busing
ended in the mid-1990s. Now judges and parents
are questioning the constitutionality and value
of programs that try to create racially balanced
schools, without busing, by restricting who can
go to school where.
7
Has the Promise of School Integration Been Lost?
  • Are efforts to achieve racially integrated public
    schools legally and politically doomed?
  • Will the central premise of the Brown decision -
    that integrated public schools are the most
    important institution in a pluralistic society
    survive the 21st century?

8
In March of this year the Supreme Court upheld a
federal appeals court decision that school
authorities in Montgomery County, Maryland,
violated the Constitution when they tried to
prevent a white student from transferring to a
magnet school from his neighborhood elementary
school, which is predominantly black. The
Montgomery Case is only the most recent in a
series of decisions, going back several years,
that is making it difficult for public schools to
maintain even a semblance of racial diversity in
a judicial and political climate that exalts
choice above all other values.
9
The Problem Today?
  • Today the problem or question appears to be How
    to maintain racial diversity in a climate that
    exalts choice.

10
Background to the Montgomery County, Maryland Case
  • Montgomery County, Maryland is 53 white.

11
Glen Haven Elementary School, Montgomery County,
Maryland
  • White enrollment at the Glen Haven elementary
    school dropped from 40 in 1995 to 24 in 1998.

12
When Montgomery County acted to stop this rapid
decline in white enrollment
  • The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth District
    in Virginia rejected the countys policy that no
    student could transfer out of a school to a
    magnet school, for instance, if the transfer
    would adversely affect racial diversity, unless
    he or she could prove some kind of unique
    personal hardship.
  • In making this decision The Court concluded that
    the Constitution prohibits racial balancing
    from being used as the decisive factor in school
    assignments.

13
The Supreme Court and Racial Balancing?
  • For years now the Supreme Court has restricted
    the use of race to distribute government
    benefits. These decisions have left few
    alternatives open to school districts that value
    integration.

14
CONTROLLED CHOICE?
  • Even one of the few successful efforts to achieve
    integration in school districts as a whole,
    called controlled choice is now in legal
    jeopardy. Controlled choice is a program in
    which all schools are open to everyone,
    regardless of where they live and parents rank
    the schools in order of preference. But each
    school must have a balanced racial mix.
  • Controlled choice programs will be doomed if
    the Supreme Court ultimately decides that racial
    integration for its own sake cant justify
    race-based admissions policies.

15
Control or Entice?
  • In this this new era only strategies that entice
    parental choice, rather than control it, can
    receive constitutional approval.

16
Choice Plans?
  • Choice plans that allow black parents to send
    their children to white suburban schools exist.
    Although 20 states allow this kind of choice, few
    provide for the subsidized transportation that
    would enable minority parents to avail themselves
    of this opportunity.

17
VOUCHERS?
  • Because money is necessary to allow poor parents
    the same opportunity to escape failing inner city
    schools as richer parents enjoy, this perhaps
    accounts for the growing support among minorities
    for school vouchers.

18
Do Vouchers Promote Integration?
  • Voucher schools tend to be more racially
    integrated than the public schools.. In
    Cleveland, for instance, 20 of voucher
    recipients attend private schools that reflect
    the racial composition of the city as a whole,
    while only 5.2 of Cleveland public school
    students are in comparably integrated schools

19
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20
What is more important to Americans, racial
diversity or raising academic standards?
  • In a 1998 survey conducted by Public Agenda
  • 82 of 800 black parents said raising academic
    standards was more important than achieving more
    diversity and integration.
  • Although overwhelming, these numbers do not tell
    the whole story. In the same poll, 80 of black
    parents and 66 of 800 white parents said it was
    very important or somewhat important to them
    that their children attend an integrated school..
  • Conclusion? It appears that only those without
    the means to choose an education that is both
    integrated and adequate are willing to settle for
    quality.

21
To Sum Up
  • The Brown decision ideally assumed that the
    removal of state-enforced segregation would be
    enough to integrate schools around the country
    This view proved to be naïve and untenable.
  • But now that the legal and political tolerance
    for even mildly coercive forms of integration
    appears to be evaporating, the hope of integrated
    public schools may soon be a distant memory.
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