In a message dated 8/15/2003 3:34:31 AM Central Daylight Time, Jim Mork 
writes:

> Is there really any reason anymore to believe that just putting students of 
>  different races in the same school will magically wipe away the 
differences? 
> 
Integrating black and white students eliminated part of the education 
achievement gap during the 1970s and 80s. It wasn't magic.  The black and 
predominantly black schools were generally inferior to the white schools because the 
school districts spent a lot more money on the white schools.  When the students 
and teaching staff were integrated, differences in average test scores between 
blacks and whites decreased. Why? Instead of blacks and whites going to 
separate and unequal schools, blacks and whites were going to the same schools, 
although when it came to integrating the better middle class white schools in SW 
Minneapolis, the Minneapolis School Board had a "go slow policy" (not an 
unusual policy for big city school boards). 
---------------------------------
The Star-Tribune published an article in its Thursday, August 14, 2003 
edition entitled "Schools Face Alarming Racial Gap."  Reverend Albert Gallmon, who 
is extensively quoted, is identified as President of the Minneapolis NAACP 
branch, and is quoted as saying 

"Some people will say you are blaming the victim" he said "But from where I 
sit, being on the school board, being a pastor, we have gotten away from the 
African American community having a culture, an environment that says education 
is important."

Some people will say that Gallmon is blaming people who are being victimized 
by the system for their victimization because he is!  

Gallmon is also singing praises to the limited "school choice" programs 
offered by the state of Minnesota. Perhaps Gallmon is unaware that the Statement of 
Need and Reasonableness for Minnesota's voluntary Desegregation Rule reads 
like a white supremacist tract (in my opinion) and that Minnesota's school 
choice programs, including the "choice is yours" program (which is part of the 
settlement of the NAACP's educational adequacy lawsuit) are remarkably similar to 
"choice" programs run by states in the Deep South during the early to 
mid-1960s.  

The New Crisis (the NAACP's magazine) published an article in the October 
2001 issue (Long Division) which noted that differences between black and white 
students in average scores in tests of reading and math proficiency declined 
significantly and steadily between 1971 and the mid-to-late 1980s, then steadily 
increased during the late 1980s and the 1990s (Data from National Assessment 
of Education Progress Exams).  Averages differences in NAEP reading scores for 
black and white 13 year olds declined by about 50% between 1971 and 1988, 
then increased by about 75% by the late 1990s (using 1988 as the baseline).

Somehow I think it is unlikely that the NAACP national leadership would 
publicly endorse Gallmon's view that public schools in Minnesota face an alarming 
racial gap because black people don't value education as much as they did a 
generation ago. 
In my opinion, Gallmon's statements are at odds with formal positions of the 
national NAACP that relate to the impact of school policy on academic 
achievement. Gallmon, who identifies himself as a member of the school board, sounds 
like a spokesman for the Minneapolis Public Schools, not a spokesman for the 
NAACP.  

It is also a matter of public record that Gallmon is planning to open NAACP 
Parent Information Centers without authorization from the Minneapolis NAACP 
branch and despite the vote of a 2/3 majority of the branch in favor of a motion 
to not open the centers and to return the money it received from the state to 
open the centers. 

At minimum the NAACP should completely disassociate itself from the parent 
information center project. Gallmon and branch executive committee members who 
want to promote and / or participate in the operation of the parent information 
centers should resign (or be kicked out of) their positions as NAACP 
officers. 

An open letter to the NAACP about the parent information centers can be found 
in the current issue of One Nation News (August 13, 2003, page 2): "NAACP 
member tells the president, board to do the right thing." There is also a link to 
the open letter on the home page of my web site, Mann for School Board, 
http://educationright.tripod.com

-Doug Mann, King Field
has served on the Minneapolis NAACP Branch K-12 education committee 
TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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