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August 23, 2009

Low expectations result in cancerous achievement gap

By ADAEZE OKOLI and DEIDRE GREEN

Okoli, 15, and Green, 18, write for The Simpson Street Free Press, a local newspaper for Dane County teenagers.


Who first decided that being intelligent had a direct relation to being white?

That may seem like a harsh question. But it's one many high-achieving minority students face every day. When a young minority student chooses to study after school, rather than play basketball, he or she is often ridiculed for "acting white." This is just plain wrong. And it is an idea born of low expectations.

It's time we admit the truth. Low expectations damage the chances for success for many kids -- especially minority kids. And it's something we need to guard against here in Dane County.

Many government-funded after-school programs lack substance. They focus on recreation rather than academic achievement. At their core, these programs try to keep students busy and off the streets. That's OK. But it's not helping them build a promising future.

Academic success, on the other hand, does. Academic support should be the top priority for after-school programs and in local neighborhood centers.

The same principle should apply in our schools. We don't have the dollars anymore to spend on fluff. Schools should focus as much time as possible on core subjects. Those who are behind should spend the bulk of their time studying math, science, history, books, music and arts.

To proceed otherwise is to reinforce low expectations, which are a cancer. The achievement gap is just a symptom.

By the time many minority students reach high school, they are behind and unlikely to catch up. Students sense the low expectations. Some teachers stop talking to the kids they believe don't have potential. The whole nasty reality just keeps repeating itself and discourages these students.

Not all will go to college. But all will benefit from regular exposure to books, science and writing. This means continued high expectations for all students in the critical high school years. It's never, ever too late to benefit from education.

Brigadier General Marcia Anderson recently told The Simpson Street Press about a trip she took to Ethiopia. She and her colleagues handed out candy to school children until it was gone. Then Anderson gave them pens.

She said the kids were extremely grateful for their pens -- much more so than they had been for the candy.

There's an important and obvious message in this story. Anderson noticed quickly how important school was to these kids. They carried their textbooks so preciously.

These Ethiopian kids share the same dreams as our forefathers. It's a dream shared by millions of immigrants from all over the world who came to the United States to find a better life.

This dream they believed so fiercely is often called the American dream. It's a dream that promised equal opportunity and a chance to succeed.

Many kids today have lost sight of that dream. And that's a shame, given how much our ancestors sacrificed so that we could have a shot at that dream.

Being a hard worker and attaining high goals is in the fabric of our American heritage. All the people who came to America came here with a dream of success. Those who were brought here in chains worked even harder to pursue the American dream.

Success does not come without hard work. And no one should ever be ridiculed for trying to attain an education.

Related posts:

http://www.schoolinfosystem.org/archives/2006/07/acting_white_1.php

http://www.schoolinfosystem.org/archives/2006/01/theyre_all_rich.php


And of course, the new MMSD TAG Plan has -- as one of its highest priorities -- the early identification and ongoing support of high potential/high ability students of color and poverty --

http://www.schoolinfosystem.org/archives/2009/08/madison_school_136.php

Posted by Laurie Frost at August 23, 2009 1:39 PM
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