Pan African News Wire.png

 

 

Detroit Public Schools:

 

A Case Study in American Apartheid

 

 

 
<https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-CQvvZXsb7rY/V3yyy3BEzlI/AAAAAAAAz6k/1jyhPD_pIKQa
5sZkF7aw8uambtE9UZdJwCLcB/s1600/a%2Babayomi%2Bazikiwe%2Bat%2B5920.jpg>
https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-CQvvZXsb7rY/V3yyy3BEzlI/AAAAAAAAz6k/1jyhPD_pIKQa5
sZkF7aw8uambtE9UZdJwCLcB/s400/a%2Babayomi%2Bazikiwe%2Bat%2B5920.jpg

 

Dissolution of an entire educational district exemplifies the colonial
character of race relations in the United States, says Cde Azikiwe




Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire, 6 July 2016

Since 1999 the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) system has been under siege by
successive Republican and Democratic state administrations. Politicians and
business interests have viewed the district as a political and economic
resource to the detriment of the city residents, students and parents.

Under the guise of improving the system, correcting inefficiency and
stamping out corruption, the worst case-scenario has emerged leaving the
largest per capita African American populated major city without an
independent and self-governing school district. When the Michigan state
legislature took control of the DPS in 1999, the district had a $93 million
surplus with a voter-approved $1.5 billion bond issue aimed at school
improvement.

Today after 17 years of undemocratic control and interference, the system is
broken, largely insolvent and incapable of making rudimentary repairs to its
buildings leaving students, teachers and administrators to work in
deplorable conditions. Earlier during 2016, teachers engaged in a series of
"sick-outs" in response to the working conditions where leaking roofs, mole,
mushrooms, heating problems and leaking water have become the norm in what
is supposed to be a modern municipality.

The fragility of the system under a series of emergency managers from 1999
through 2005, and then again under the former Democratic Governor Jenifer
Granholm in 2009, another dictator was appointed, in essence finishing off
the system which has lost approximately 140,000 students. Over 200 school
buildings have been closed along with thousands of teachers, counselors,
social workers, administrators, clerics and other education employees forced
out of their jobs.

In a recent phase of this state-controlled destruction of a school system,
the Republican-dominated legislature has crafted yet another scheme that
will only make matters worse in Detroit. No consideration was given to the
needs and desires of the people of the city in order to perpetuate further
disempowerment and underdevelopment. The entire aim was designed to carry
out its objectives based upon an ideological aversion to public education
and labor unions.

The local NBC affiliate in Detroit reported on June 21 saying "The
Republican-controlled Senate passed a main bill 19-18 earlier this month,
and the GOP-led House followed with a similar razor-thin 55-54 vote. Some
Republicans joined all Democrats in opposition during an emotional debate
that brought some lawmakers to tears. Snyder, who had warned legislators
that insolvency would be disastrous for students and the state if the
district ran short of money this summer - as it would have without further
intervention - said in a statement that the measure is 'fresh start' and an
'unprecedented investment for the education of Detroit's children.'"

Such an assertion could not be further from the truth. The system of public
education in Detroit has been stripped of any viability and quality. This is
by no means an investment in students, educators and their communities but
an act of colonial rule imposed for the purpose of exploitation and national
oppression.

Aspects of Apartheid Education in Michigan

The emergency management system which has been imposed on school districts
across the state as well as municipalities largely impacts majority African
American districts. Systems in cities such as Highland Park, an independent
municipal enclave surrounded by Detroit, and Inkster, a suburb of Detroit,
have been entirely liquidated.

Charter school education which was designed and implemented during the 1990s
has taken away the majority of students within Detroit and other
municipalities. In Highland Park the charter system provides education for
all residents of the city. This also holds true for Inkster where those not
swallowed up by the charter system are sent to neighboring districts.

The charter education system remains unaccountable to the State Board of
Education structures and is allowed to function without adequate monitoring
and controls. By and large charter schools resist unionization and therefore
collective bargaining between the teachers and the administrations.

Consequently, under the charter school model there are extremely high
turnovers of both educators and students. The education system is turned
into an unwieldy "market place" where schools are like revolving doors
failing to provide the stability, consistency and uniformity of standards
that mark any successful teaching and learning system.

A June 28 lengthy article published in the New York Times on the travesties
of charter school education in Detroit begins by focusing on "Ana Rivera
[who] could have had almost any choice when it came to educating her two
sons. For all the abandoned buildings and burned-down houses in her
neighborhood in the southwest part of this city, national charter school
companies had seen a market and were setting up shop within blocks of each
other, making it easier to find a charter school than to buy a carton of
milk. But hers became the story of public education in a city grasping for
its comeback: lots of choice, with no good choice." (Article written by Kate
Zernike)

This same report continues noting that Rivera "enrolled her older son,
Damian, at the charter school across from her house, where she could watch
him walk into the building. He got all A's and said he wanted to be an
engineer. But the summer before seventh grade, he found himself in the back
of a classroom at a science program at the University of Michigan,
struggling to keep up with students from Detroit Public Schools, known as
the worst urban district in the nation. They knew the human body is made up
of many cells; he had never learned that. When his school stopped assigning
homework, Ms. Rivera tried enrolling Damian at other charters, but the
deadlines were past, the applications onerous. Finally, she found him a
scholarship at a Catholic school, where he struggled to rise above D's all
year. 'He doesn't want to hear the word engineering, she said."

The plight of Rivera is quite common in Detroit. Such stories abound amid a
local school district disempowered by right-wing benign neglect coinciding
with the forced subjugation of Detroit residence under financial stability
agreements, emergency management, forced illegal bankruptcy and continuing
"oversight" by an unelected review board appointed by politicians who work
for the banks and multi-national corporations and not the people.

This New York Times article revealed that "Detroit now has a bigger share of
students in charters than any American city except New Orleans, which turned
almost all its schools into charters after Hurricane Katrina. But half the
charters perform only as well, or worse than, Detroit's traditional public
schools. 'The point was to raise all schools,' said Scott Romney, a lawyer
and board member of New Detroit, a civic group formed after the 1967 race
riots here. 'Instead, we've had a total and complete collapse of education
in this city.'"

U.S. Fails to Implement Supreme Court Decision on Segregation 62 Years Later

On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court in its Brown v. Topeka ruling
declared that "separate but equal" education is inherently unequal and a
violation of the constitution. Nonetheless, after six decades the conditions
overall have not improved for African Americans and Latinos.

In a recent decision by the federal courts related to the public school
system in Cleveland, Mississippi, it was found that the district still
maintains segregated education for African American and white students.
However, this district still receives federal and state funds to operate
despite its continuation of the practices of racism.

Consequently, from Michigan to Mississippi, racism in education remains part
and parcel of the nationally oppressive system of racial capitalism and
apartheid. Moreover, these issues are not being discussed by politicians
even during a national election year.

Neither the Democratic or Republican parties address the crisis in education
inside the U.S. This clearly illustrates that the system of American
capitalism cannot provide quality schooling for the growing majority of
students of color which attend the public school systems throughout the
country.

Therefore it is quite clear that the problems of racism and class bias
within education cannot be divorced from the broader questions of national
liberation and social justice. In order to build a viable education system
for all students irrespective of race and class there must be fundamental
transformation of the capitalist system guaranteeing people the right to
learn on an equal basis. This can only be achieved under socialism where all
forms of class exploitation and national oppression are eradicated.

 

 

From: http://panafricannews.blogspot.co.za/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature
database 13764 (20160707) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum.
To view this discussion on the web, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/yclsa-eom-forum/007e01d1d82d%24804ca690%2480e5f3b0%24%40com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to