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The Choice We Face

Page 34

by John N. Hale


  66. “About,” Public Funds Public Schools; Associated Press, “Arizona Proposition 305 Fails, Blocking Expansion of School Vouchers for Families,” ABC 15 Arizona, November 6, 2018, https://www.abc15.com/news/state/arizona-proposition-305-fails-reducing-school-vouchers-available-to-families.

  67. “About,” Public Funds Public Schools.

  68. See Black, Schoolhouse Burning; Richard Kluger, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black Americans’ Struggle for Equality (New York: Vintage Books, 2004).

  69. Gary R. George and Walter C. Farrell Jr., “School Choice and African American Students: A Legislative View,” Journal of Negro Education 59, no. 4 (Autumn 1990): 521–25.

  70. Terrenda White, “From Community Schools to Charter Chains,” in Sanders, Stovall, and White, Twenty-First Century Jim Crow Schools, 104.

  71. Rucker C. Johnson and Alexander Nazaryan, Children of the Dream: Why School Integration Works (New York: Basic Books, 2019), 45, 57–66; John Charles Boger and Gary Orfield eds., School Resegregation: Must the South Turn Back? (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2005), 7–9; David Grissmer, Ann Flanagan, and Stephanie Williamson, “Why Did the Black-White Score Gap Narrow in the 1970s and 1980s,” in The Black-White Test Score Gap, ed. Christopher Jencks and Meredith Phillips (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1998), 185–87; David W. Grissmer, Stephanie Williamson, Sheila Nataraj Kirby, and Mark Berends, “Exploring the Rapid Rise in Black Achievement Scores in the United States (1970–1990),” in The Rising Curve: Long-Term Gains in IQ and Related Measures, ed. Ulric Neisser (Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 1998), 251–85. On the early history of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), see Richard Rothstein, Tamara Wilder, and Rebecca Jacobson, “Early NAEP,” chap. 6 in Grading Education: Getting Accountability Right (New York: Teachers College Press, 2008); Erica Frankenberg, “School Integration—The Time Is Now,” introduction to Lessons in Integration: Realizing the Promise of Racial Diversity in American Schools, ed. Erica Frankenberg and Gary Orfield (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2007); Michelle Burris, “The Benefits of Socioeconomically and Racially Integrated Schools and Classrooms,” Century Foundation, April 26, 2019, https://tcf.org/content/facts/the-benefits-of-socioeconomically-and-racially-integrated-schools-and-classrooms.

  72. Christopher M. Span and Ishwanzya D. Rivers, “Reassessing the Achievement Gap: An Intergenerational Comparison of African American Student Achievement before and after Compensatory Education and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act,” Teachers College Record 114, no. 6 (June 2012): 1–17; Richard Rothstein, “For Public Schools, Segregation Then, Segregation Since: Education and the Unfinished March,” Economic Policy Institute, August 27, 2013, https://www.epi.org/publication/unfinished-march-public-school-segregation; Johnson and Nazaryan, Children of the Dream; Erica Frankenberg and Gary Orfield, Lessons in Integration: Realizing the Promise of Racial Diversity in American Schools (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2007).

  73. Rothstein, “For Public Schools, Segregation Then, Segregation Since.”

  74. Johnson and Nazaryan, Children of the Dream, 63–65; Valerie Straus and Rucker C. Johnson, “Why School Integration Works,” Washington Post, May 16, 2019; Nikole Hannah-Jones, “It Was Never About Busing,” New York Times, July 14, 2019).

  75. Johnson and Nazaryan, Children of the Dream, 65.

  76. Troy LaRaviere interview.

  77. Nikole Hannah-Jones, “Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City,” New York Times Magazine, June 9, 2016.

  INDEX

  Notes are indicated by “n” following the page number.

  Academic Magnet High School (Charleston, South Carolina), 121–23

  accountability movement, 99, 101–2, 103, 105, 107–8

  achievement gap, 144, 169, 211–12

  Achievement School District (Memphis), 154, 158, 167

  Adams, LaTricea, 156

  Agassi, Andre, 131

  Alabama: Brown v. Board of Education, response to, 23; Citizens’ Councils in, 24; racism in, 168; White rights, defense of, 28–29

  Alexander, Lamar, 101, 102, 104

  Alexander v. Holmes County Board of

  Education, 26, 34, 35

  All Children Matter (PAC), 110–11, 182

  Alliance for School Choice, 111, 127, 145

  Almond, J. Lindsay, 24, 30

  alternative school movement, 118–19

  American Alliance for Better Schools, 145

  American Dream, 39, 41–42

  American Federation for Children, 141

  American Housing Act (1949), 53

  America 2000 education goals, 102

  Anderson, Melinda, 135

  Arizona: Cain v. Horne, 209; school performance in, 181; special needs students in, 186; voucher program, defeat of, 209–10

  Asleep at the Wheel (NPE), 200

  Atkins, Thomas, 75

  Baker, Ella, 66, 203

  Baltimore, Algebra Project, 203

  Banks, Valerie, 144

  Barber, William J., II, 201

  Barbic, Chris, 154–55, 156, 158

  Barclay, Arthur, 194

  Barnes, Robin D., 151

  Beals, Melba Pattillo, 20

  Bell, Derrick, 143, 150–51, 152, 153

  Bell, Terrell, 97

  Benson, Keith: activism of, 205, 206; on coalition building, 200; on hybrid schools, 191; NAACP and, 195; on profiteering by charter operators, 174; on resistance to school choice, 202; school choice, critiques of, 193–94

  Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation: on CREDO report, 180, 181; expenditures by, 110, 113, 114, 154, 186; influence of, 171

  Birmingham movement, 142

  Black, Derek, 132

  Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) individuals: in Camden, grassroots organizing of, 195; digital divide and, 137; free school movement and, 118; support for school choice, 12. See also people of color

  Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO), 141, 142

  blackboard jungles, 31, 54, 66

  Black Education for New Orleans, 161

  Black Lives Matter movement, 14, 146

  Black Panther Party, 78

  Bloomberg, Michael, 185

  Blum, Richard, 125

  Board of Education of Oklahoma City

  Public Schools v. Dowell, 106, 147

  Bob Jones University, 97

  Bob Jones University v. United States, 97, 117

  Bolick, Clint, 145

  Booker, Cory, 159

  Boston: busing in, 62–64, 73–75; school privatization in, 75–76; White flight from, 85–86

  Broad, Eli, 110, 185

  Brown, Doris, 86

  Brown, Jitu, 199, 201

  Brown, Millicent, 63, 65, 89

  Brown v. Board of Education: cases comprising, 64; evidence used in,

  67; failures of, 143; Friedman and, 44; Lewis and, 17–18; NAACP and, 7; as precedent, 70; on race and education, 169

  Bryan, Hazel, 20, 88

  Buchanan, James, 47

  Buchanan v. Warley, 50

  Budde, Ray, 128, 129, 131, 133

  Buist Academy (Charleston, South Carolina), 8, 121–23

  Burger, Warren, 94

  Burke High School (Charleston, South Carolina), 1–3, 5–6, 122, 197

  Bush, George H. W., 102, 103

  Bush, George W., 101, 102–3, 107, 127, 140–41, 187

  busing: Black attitudes toward, 77; in Boston, 62–64, 73–75; buses, symbolism of, 64; in Chicago, 69–71; controversy over, media portrayals of, 76–8; New York City school desegregation and, 67–68; Nixon’s attitudes toward, 93; North’s response to, 91; perceptions of, as violent, 76–77; political opposition to, 71–72; Reagan on, 96; suburbs and, 86–88. See also racism and foundations of school choice model

  Byrd, Harry F., Sr., 19

  Byrnes, James “Jimmy,” 22, 25

  Cain v. Horne, 209

  Californi
a: charter schools in, 129, 184–85; governor’s race (2018), 208; school funding in, 173; special needs students in, 186. See also Los Angeles

  Camden, New Jersey: resistance to school choice in, 193–94; state takeover of schools in, 190–92

  Canada, Geoffrey, 12–13, 132

  Cantor, Phil, 204

  Carmichael, Stokely, 79, 140

  Carpenter, Sarah, 158–59, 175

  Carter, Jimmy, 95

  Cash, Kriner, 155

  Catholic schools, 125

  Center for Public Democracy, 174

  Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO, Stanford University), 170, 180–81

  Center on Education Policy, 181 Chamber of Commerce, on Tennessee public schools, 154

  Chaney, James, 96

  Charleston, South Carolina: Buist Academy, 8, 121–23; Burke High School, 1–3, 5–6, 122, 197; magnet schools in, 121–23; pro–school choice lobbying in, 182; racial makeup of, 2; resistance to school choice in, 189, 197

  Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, desegregation efforts in, 106–7

  Charlottesville Education Summit, 102, 104

  Charter School Expansion Act (1998), 105

  charter schools: Charter Schools Program, 114; under Clinton, 105, 106; corporatization of, 179; discussion of, 128–33; expenditures on, 219n12; for-profit charter schools, 13, 130–31, 179; growth of, 9, 111; in Memphis, 154–56, 179; under NCLB Act, 109; Obama on, 111; profit motive and, 173–74; under Race to the Top Program, 113; segregation in, 147–49; single-site schools, 156–57; student suspensions, 187; teachers’ strikes, 204

  Chicago: Chicago Land Clearance Commission, 53; Chicago Urban League, 49–50, 53, 54; community control movement in, 80; direct action in, 203–4; educational justice movement, 189; Redmond Plan, 69, 120; Renaissance 2010 plan, 112, 113, 196, 202; resistance to busing in, 69–70; resistance to school choice in, 192–93, 194, 198, 200, 202; segregation in, 39, 42–43, 49–54; South East Chicago Commission, 56; as stage for school

  choice, 38–39; White flight from, 52, 85, 86

  Chicago, Friedman and school choice in, 38–61; Friedman, rise of, 38–49; segregated public schools in Chicago, 57–61; segregation in

  Chicago, 39, 42–43, 49–54; University of Chicago and, 54–57

  Chico, Gary, 202

  Christie, Chris, 190, 193

  Cicero, Illinois, racism in, 50

  Citizens’ Councils, 24, 26

  Citizens for Educational Freedom, 145

  Citizens League (Minnesota), 129

  civil rights: civil rights activism and freedom of choice, 33–36; civil rights perspective on resistance to school choice, 210–11. See also

  civil rights claim to school choice, racism and

  Civil Rights Act (1964): Friedman’s opposition to, 47, 61; Johnson and, 90; school desegregation, definition of, 71; Title IV, 71; Title VI, 59

  civil rights claim to school choice, racism and, 139–63; charter schools and, 147–49; Fuller and, 139–42, 149–54, 162–63; Memphis, school reform in, 154–57; Milwaukee, school reform in, 150–54; NAACP and, 157–59; New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, 160–61; resegregation and, 147; school choice, bipartisan support for, 104, 111, 159–60; school choice, Black support for, 145–46, 162–63; Wyatt Tee Walker and, 142–45

  Civil Rights Project (UCLA), 147, 166–67, 187

  Clark, Harvey, 50

  Clark, Kenneth and Mamie, 67

  class (social), 8–9, 178

  Cleage, Albert, 80

  Cleveland, voucher system in, 125–26

  Clinton, Bill, 14, 101, 102, 104–6

  Clinton, Hillary, 172

  Coalition for Kids, 182–83

  coalitions, importance of building, 198–203. See also resisting school choice through counternarratives and coalitions

  Cobb, Charlie, 78

  Cody, Anthony, 200

  Cody, John, 70

  Coggs, G. Spencer, 153

  Coggs, Marcia, 152

  Cohen, Muriel, 84

  Coit v. Green, 117

  College of Charleston (South Carolina), 25

  color-blind rhetoric and ideology, 82, 95, 122, 169–70, 175

  Committee for Economic Development (public policy organization), 100

  community control movement, 78–83, 124

  community empowerment, 176, 178–80

  Conant, James, 66

  Congress, creation of Opportunity Zones, 160. See also federal support of school choice movement

  Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), 64, 139

  Connor, Bull, 144

  Constitution, supposed

  color-blindness of, 169

  controlled choice, 5, 116–17

  Coordinating Council of Community Organizations (CCCO), 58–59

  corporate interests, 170–71

  corruption in school choice networks, 182–83

  counternarratives. See resisting school choice through counternarratives and coalitions

  Counts, Dorothy, 20

  COVID-19 pandemic, 136, 137–38

  Cox, John, 185, 208

  CREDO (Center for Research on Education Outcomes, Stanford University), 170, 180–81

  Crespino, Joseph, 73, 96

  cyber schools (virtual schooling, online education), 135–38

  Daley, Richard: anti-desegregation efforts, 69; Civil Rights Act and, 59; Duncan and, 112; on Hyde Park–Kenwood renewal, 56; Johnson and, 91; Little Village school and, 202; Renaissance 2010 plan, 112, 113, 196, 202

  D.C. Parents for School Choice, 144

  Deadrich, Katie, 90

  Debs, Mira, 119

  Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties (Virginia), 28

  defensive localism, 55

  DeLaine, Joseph, 64

  Delmont, Matthew, 55, 70, 76

  Democratic Party, 15, 104

  Democrats for Education Reform, 141

  Dennis, Dave, 165, 210

  Department of Education: creation of, 95; Duncan at, 14, 112–13; Reagan and, 97; reduced funding for, 101; school choice, reliance on, 14, 111; on school choice under NCLB Act, 109

  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW), 33, 59, 69, 94

  Department of Justice, 94, 97, 121–22

  desegregation: benefits of, 211–12; under Clinton, 105; desegregation assistance centers, 97; failure of, 146; as goal of magnet schools, 120; impact on Whites, 212–13; Johnson’s support for, 90–91; New York City efforts on, 66–69; northern views of, 64–66, 70–71; under Reagan, 97–102; school choice and, 4–6, 19; Whites’ attitudes toward, 77, 88–89. See also integration; racism and foundations of school choice model

  Detroit: community control movement in, 80, 82; inner city violence in, 83; school performance in, 181; suburban busing and, 86–87; White flight from, 85

  DeVos, Betsy: All Children Matter and, 182; California gubernatorial race and, 185; Fuller and, 141; as K12 Inc. financial backer, 138; school choice, support for, 14, 110, 127, 159, 171–73; on school choice, 12, 163; school privatization agenda, 162; as secretary of education, appointment of, 114–15

  Dickerson, Ronsha, 190–92, 193–94, 195, 199–200, 205

  disabled/special needs students, 186–88

  District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, Evers v. Jackson Municipal Separate School District, 34

  Dougherty, Jack, 150

  Douglass, Frederick, 7

  Du Bois, W. E. B., 148–49, 163, 165–66, 168

  Duckworth, Angela, 41

  Duncan, Arne: Chicago and, 192–93; educational policies of, 14, 112–13, 204; mentioned, 206; Renaissance 2010 plan, 112, 113, 196, 202; Tennessee public schools and, 154

  Dure, Leon, 30

  Eckford, Elizabeth, 20

  economy and economics: economic argument for choice, 166; economic impact of choice, 172; segrenomics, 174–75. See also Friedman, Milton

  EdChoice (Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation), 9, 114, 123, 164

  educatio
n: as civil right, 17–18, 19; educational justice movement, 189; educators as political actors, 205–8; equalization plans, 22–23; Friedman’s views on, 44–45; politicization of, 7; profit motive in, 13; public opinion of, 11. See also freedom of choice in education; public education (public schools)

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 20

  Elementary and Secondary Education Act (1965), 32, 41, 90, 104, 112, 113, 119

  Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, 171

  Emanuel, Rahm, 192–93, 196, 205, 206

  Emanuel AME Church (Charleston, South Carolina), killings at, 8

  Emergency School Aid Act (1972), 94, 97, 119

  Equal Education Opportunity Act (1974), 71

  equalization plans, 22–23

  Erickson, Ansley, 48–49, 57

  Evers, Tony, 207–8

  Evers v. Jackson Municipal Separate School District, 34

  Every Student Succeeds Act (2015), 113–14

  Fabricant, Michael, 171

  failure of school choice, deterioration of public education and, 164–88; budget shortfalls from school choice, 173–76; choice programs, failures of, 180–82; community empowerment and, 176, 178–80; corporate interests and, 170–71; corruption in school choice networks, 182–83; DeVos and, 171–73; disabled/special needs students and, 186–88; Friedman and, 164–65; in Los Angeles, 184–86; racism’s impact on, 165–70; social and economic capital and, 176–78; teachers’ unions and, 183–84

  Farrell, Walter, 152

  Faubus, Orval, 20, 23–24

  Federal Charter School Program, 105

  Federal Housing Administration, 50

  federal support of school choice movement, 90–115; accountability movement, 101–2; bipartisan nature of, 104; Bush and, 102–3; Clinton and, 104–6; DeVos and, 114–15; Johnson and, 90–91; magnet schools, 103–4; A Nation at Risk and, 98–101; Nixon and, 90–95; No Child Left Behind Act, 107–10; Obama and, 111–14; Reagan and, 95–99, 101; school vouchers, 110–11; Supreme Court and, 106–7

  Ferguson, Herman, 81

  Fine, Michelle, 171

  Finn, Chester, 129, 143, 160

  First to the Top law (Tennessee), 154

  Florida: federal education funding for, 33; school performance in, 181

  Floyd, George, 159

  Ford, Gerald, 95

 

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