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Editorial
Another
Middle-Class Exodus?
By Martin Harris
Here’s
an easy one: what do Wake County NC (Raleigh is the big city there) and
Chittenden County VT (Burlington is the not-quite-so-big city here) have
in common? Answer: both have school districts eager to assault the next
beachhead in the diversity wars; having defeated racial segregation (sort
of) in public education, the next objective is economic segregation. The
new catch-phrase is Socio-Economic Status, or SES. The new idea is that
it’s society’s duty to make sure that rich kids and not-rich kids are suitably
mixed in the classroom and on the playground.
Actually, the same initiatives
are under way elsewhere: Baltimore, San Francisco, Las Vegas. And always
the argument is the same: that poor kids benefit from sitting within the
radiated aura of rich kids, and that rich kids benefit from doing the radiation
and observing the resulting changes. Those with fairly long memories will
remember the same arguments underlying Brown v. Board of Education, the
1954 Supreme Court decision which ended de jure (but not de facto) racial
segregation in schools but set in motion waves of middle-class white flight
from cities across the country as parents made their own decisions about
how much radiation they wanted in their own kids’ classrooms. Boston, for
example, saw much of its middle class vote with its feet and leave, resulting
in its minority school enrollment growing from 30% of the total before
the court-ordered bussing which triggered first small-scale riots in the
‘70’s and then white flight, to 86% today. If you’re interested, you can
find the statistics on larger urban school district minority enrollment
percentages in the annual National Digest of Educational Statistics. In
the 2005 edition, for example, Wake County NC shows up as 41.7% minority.
Burlington is too small to be included but would be, statistically, near
zero; therefore, it’s safe to say, Burlington experienced statistically
near zero white flight as a result of the Brown decision.
It’s not my intent here to
comment, favorably or adversely, on the middle-class white flight to the
suburbs which ensued from Brown; it is my intent to observe that it did
happen, and to predict that the same forces which triggered it will emerge,
again, when parents are forced to confront the new face of mandatory classroom
diversity, SES. This time, I’d predict, Burlington won’t get off as easily
as it did last time. With 22.6% of its school enrollment coming from Food-Stamp-entitled
families (the State average is 10.8%) Burlington is already statistically
poorer than the rest of the State; like Raleigh, NC, already having experienced
middle-class flight for one integration reason, its magnet-school program
having failed to attract the middle-class back to city schools, and now
facing more of the same exodus for another diversity-theory reason, one
might reasonably ask whether it’s prudent for a school district to, knowingly,
engage in forms of social engineering it has already been told by past
history, will result in fewer of the students it considers to have "radiant
auras" to remain enrolled.
One might well ask why public
schools should be in the "radiant aura" business anyway;
Just that question was recently
posed by Abigail Thernstrom, presently Vice-Chairman of the US Commission
on Civil Rights and author of a number of studies on school integration
and its various outcomes, ranging from middle-class flight (observed) to
changes in student achievement (not observed). Here’s her rhetorical question
–beforehand, you know the answer is no. "Did moving kids around the city
to get the racial numbers right have a positive impact on how much math
kids learned? Surely that is the bottom line that truly matters. The Seattle
School Board simply ignored that question."
My prediction is that, regarding
"moving kids around the city to get the SES numbers right", the Burlington
School Board will do likewise, history to the contrary notwithstanding.
And in response, middle-class families will flee.
Martin Harris is a former
Chairman of Citizens for Property Rights
Related: There
They Go Again
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