In a message dated 11/28/2001 5:06:40 PM Central Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 
>  I don't agree with Mr. Mann on this point.  I don't believe that 
desegregation has helped improve the quality of education (although it might 
have minimally improved it for Black students, but the gap will never be 
completely eliminated solely by integration).  Generally, it has just 
promoted a demographic shift out of urban areas to the suburbs... [snip] 

There is credible evidence that the desegregation of racially segregated 
school districts helped to improve the quality of education for nearly all 
students.  For example, after the Norfolk, VA schools were integrated, scores 
on the Iowa Test of Basic Skills increased by nearly 20 points for white 
students, and by more than 20 points for black students.  The achievement gap 
between black and white students began to increase after the Norfolk public 
schools were resegregated in the late 1980s. (Source: Christina Meldrum and 
Susan E. Eaton, "Desegregation in Norfolk, Virginia: Does Restoring 
Neighborhood Schools Work?"  Harvard Project on School Desegregation, May 
1994.)

About white flight.  The hypothesis that desegregation caused white flight to 
the suburbs
was used by the Minneapolis Public Schools to support its community schools 
plan. It is probable that some whites moved to the suburbs to minimize the 
amount of contact their children would have with blacks, but not all. Some 
white parents prefer to have their children attend schools with black 
children, but are highly dissatisfied with the quality of education their 
children receive in the Minneapolis Public Schools.

It is also likely that white flight would have happened without school 
desegregation.  The proportion of nonwhite students attending the Minneapolis 
Public Schools was increasing before the schools were desegregated in the 
early 1970s and continued to increase after the community school plan was 
implemented in 1996.  

Black people also began to move to the suburbs to escape the public school 
system in Minneapolis in the early 1970s. However, blacks have been competing 
with whites for housing in the suburban housing market, and much of the 
available housing is simply not available to black people. 

>...I believe that forced integration has failed as a social experiment.  I 
think we need to move on and focus on insuring a quality education for all 
students regardless of race and geographic location.  I think that 
Minneapolis WAS going in the right direction with it's emphasis on community 
schools, and I still believe that there are ways that it can be done 
economically (if one thinks outside of the box). [snip]

The State Board of Education allowed the Minneapolis Public Schools to 
implement the Community School Plan on the basis of promises to minimize the 
segregative effect of the Community School Plan, and a pledge by the Mayor of 
Minneapolis to desegregate the neighborhoods in Minneapolis.  Neither the 
Mayor nor the School Board kept their promises.
  
The doctrine of 'separate but equal,' i.e., that separate accommodations are 
OK as long as they are equal, is currently the legal basis for racially 
segregated schools in Minneapolis. "iii. In the desegregation context, 'equal 
educational opportunity' is often defined in terms of whether educational 
resources are equitably distributed and accessible without regard to race 
(Statement of Need and Reasonableness in the Matter of the Proposed Rules 
relating to Desegregation: Minnesota Rules, Chapter 3535, November 1998, page 
43-44)."   

However, no where and at no time has a policy of racial separation ever been 
accompanied by 'equal accommodations.'  In racially segregated school 
systems, there have always been huge disparities in the allocation of 
educational resources between black and white schools.  John Marshall Harlan, 
the lone dissenting US Supreme Court Justice in the 1896 Plessy decision, 
which sanctioned separate public accommodations for blacks and whites, said 
"The thin disguise of 'equal' accommodations...will not mislead anyone, nor 
atone for the wrong done this day." (Orfield, Gary and Eaton, Susan; 1996; 
Dismantling Desegregation: The Quiet Reversal of Brown v. Board of Education, 
page 28) 

-Doug Mann, King Field
<educationright.tripod.com>  
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