Obama's Educational Excellence Initiative
by
Walter E. Williams
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President Barack
Obama recently wrote an executive order that established a White
House initiative on educational excellence for black Americans that
will be housed in the Department of Education. It proposes "to identify
evidence-based best practices" to improve black achievement in school
and college. Though black education is in desperate straits, the
president's executive order will accomplish absolutely nothing to
improve black education. The reason is that it does not address
the root causes of educational rot among black Americans. It's not
rocket science; let's look at it.
The president's
initiative contains not one word about rampant inner-city school
violence, which makes educational excellence impossible. During
the past five years, Philadelphia's 268 schools had 30,000 serious
criminal incidents, including assaults – 4,000 of which were on
teachers – robberies and rapes. Prior to recent layoffs, Philadelphia's
school district employed about 500 police officers. In Chicago last
year, 700 young people were gunfire victims, and dozens of them
lost their lives. Similar stories of street and school violence
can be told in other large, predominantly black cities, such as
Baltimore, Detroit, Cleveland, Oakland and Newark.
If rampant
school crime is not eliminated, academic excellence will be unachievable.
If anything, the president's initiative will help undermine school
discipline, because it advocates "promoting a positive school climate
that does not rely on methods that result in disparate use of disciplinary
tools." That means, for example, if black students are suspended
or expelled at greater rates than, say, Asian students, it's a "disparate
use of disciplinary tools." Thus, even if blacks are causing a disproportionate
part of disciplinary problems, they cannot be disciplined disproportionately.
Whether a student
is black, white, orange or polka-dot and whether he's poor or rich,
there are some minimum requirements that must be met in order to
do well in school. Someone must make the student do his homework,
see to it that he gets a good night's rest, fix a breakfast, make
sure he gets to school on time and make sure he respects and obeys
his teachers. Here's my question: Which one of those requirements
can be accomplished by a presidential executive order, a congressional
mandate or the edict of a mayor? If those minimal requirements aren't
met, whatever else is done is for naught.
Spending more
money on education cannot replace poor parenting. If it could, black
academic achievement wouldn't be a problem. Washington, D.C., for
example, spends $18,667 per student per year, more than any state,
but comes in dead last in terms of student achievement. Paul Laurence
Dunbar High School was established in 1870 in Washington, D.C.,
as the nation's first black public high school. From 1870 to 1955,
most of its graduates went off to college, earning degrees from
Harvard, Princeton, Williams, Wesleyan and others. As early as 1899,
Dunbar students scored higher on citywide tests than students at
any of the district's white schools. Its attendance and tardiness
records were generally better than those of white schools. During
this era of high achievement, there was no school violence. It wasn't
racially integrated. It didn't have a big budget. It didn't even
have a lunchroom or all those other things that today's education
establishment says are necessary for black academic achievement.
Numerous
studies show that children raised in stable two-parent households
do far better educationally and otherwise than those raised in single-parent
households. Historically, black families have been relatively stable.
From 1880 to 1960, the proportion of black children raised in two-parent
families held steady at about 70 percent; in 1925 Harlem, it was
85 percent. Today only 33 percent of black children benefit from
two-parent families. In 1940, black illegitimacy was 19 percent;
today it's 72 percent.
Too many young
blacks have become virtually useless in an increasingly high-tech
economy. The only bright outlook is the trickle of more and more
black parents realizing this and taking their children out of public
schools. The president's initiative will help enrich the education
establishment but do nothing for black youngsters in desperate educational
need.
August
14, 2012
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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