Yep.  See Ron Edward's commentary on this in his web log entry #89, at
www.TheMinneapolisStory.com.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, August 17, 2003 2:03 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Mpls] Gallmon's Racist Comments in the Strib


"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." -- Rev. Albert Gallmon, President of the Minneapolis NAACP
branch, as quoted by the Star Tribune, August 1, 2003 in Schools Face
Alarming
Racial Gap.

I know that many African-Americans and even some European-Americans do not
share Albert Gallmon's view that white European-Americans generally place a
higher value on getting a good education than black African-Americans.

Gallmon is simply parroting the central argument used since the mid-1960s by
school districts when the NAACP took them to court. Until recently the NAACP
has taken the position that differences in outcomes between black and white
students are largely a reflection of an unequal distribution of resources
between
black and white schools, unequal effects of curriculum tracking, and other
school policies and practices. Putting blacks and whites together in the
same
schools is a necessary step, but not sufficient to give blacks access to
educational facilities on the same basis as whites. -- See "Evidence that
school
policies matter" http://educationright.tripod.com/id173.htm

In a lawsuit brought by the Minneapolis NAACP branch against the state of
Minnesota in 1995, the NAACP lawyers advanced the theory that black children
were
being denied an adequate education due to a high concentration of poverty
among blacks. That is basically the "culture of poverty" theory which school
boards began to use as defendants in lawsuits brought against them by the
NAACP
during the 1960s. The settlement of the 1995 lawsuit in 2000 also required
the
state and west metro school districts to set up an inter-district program
that
is remarkably similar to the school "choice" programs offered by states in
the
Deep South during the mid-1960s (also know as voluntary desegregation
plans).


In a 1994 essay, "K-12 Education on the Wrong Track," -- published at
http://educationright.tripod.com/id39.htm -- I noted,

"The connection between poverty and low IQ scores was demonstrated by three
educational researchers, Greg Duncan at Northwestern University and Jean
Brooks-Gunn and Pamela Klebanov at Columbia University, in a study of 483
low-birth-weight children from birth to age five. The data indicates that
intellectual
development can be delayed to a large degree by environmental factors
associated with poverty.  The deeper and more persistent the poverty, the
greater the
IQ-lowering effect.  When comparing IQ test scores of Black and White
children
from families with similar economic situations, White children outscored
Black
children by an average of 3 points: not a significant difference.
[Especially
considering average differences in educational attainment]-- Secondary
source: Rowen, Carl T. (1996).  The Coming Race War In America pp. 281,
292-3;
Little, Brown & Company.

"The conclusions reached by Duncan, Brooks-Gunn and Klebanov about the
impact
of a child's environment on their intellectual development runs counter to
the notion promoted by authors of The Bell Curve.  The Bell Curve proposes
that
an IQ score gap of at least 15 points exists between Whites and Blacks
because
of a higher concentration of stupid genes being passed along by Black
people,
and that poverty is mainly a consequence of stupidity."

Duncan, Brooks-Gunn and Klebanov also found no evidence to support the idea
that whites place a higher value than blacks on getting a good education.
They
found that high income parents of all "races" who placed their children in
day
care programs generally chose more expensive day care programs than low
income parents.

-Doug Mann
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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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Subscribe, Un-subscribe, etc. at: http://e-democracy.org/mpls

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