Transcript Slide 1

Race and Education
in Connecticut:
Historical Overview & Policy Questions
Jack Dougherty
Education Reform, Past & Present
Trinity College
http://commons.trincoll.edu/edreform
updated March 2012
1830s A Northern State’s White Opposition
to Black Education
1831 New Haven, CT citizens vote 700-4 against
proposal to open first college for Black men
1833 White teacher Prudence Crandall opens
private boarding school for African-American girls
in Canterbury CT, but local whites respond
violently and shut it down
1834 Additional controversies prompt CT
legislature to pass “Black laws,” banning the
teaching of out-of-state Black students (only state
above Mason-Dixon line to do so at that time)
1917 Whites officials propose segregating
Black students in Hartford
Evening Post (Hartford)
Hartford school superintendent Thomas Weaver
proposed segregated evening schools for older students
to retain Blacks who were “slighted and ignored” by
Whites;
Black pastors form Ministerial Alliance to oppose
segregation; Weaver drops plan
1965 Hartford and civil rights activists
focus on reorganizing school system
Hartford total non-Whites (1960)
Report targets “racial
imbalance and poverty”
Hartford School
Population, 1964
Grade % Non-White
K-9
50%
9-12
32%
1965 Hartford and civil rights activists
focus on reorganizing school system
Hartford total non-Whites (1960)
Recommended solutions:
Locate new HPS schools
to promote city-wide
desegregation
Suburban schools enroll
some low-income
city students (1-2 per
suburban classroom)
1966 Project Concern voluntary city-tosuburb desegregation sparks controversy
Some suburban districts voted to accept city
students, with state funding; others refused
Hartford Times 1968, Hartford Public Library
1966 Project Concern voluntary city-tosuburb desegregation sparks controversy
Some suburban districts voted to accept city
students, with state funding; others refused
Hartford Times 1968, Hartford Public Library
1966 Project Concern voluntary city-tosuburb desegregation sparks controversy
Project Choice
enrollment
Some suburban districts voted to accept city
students, with state funding; others refused
Hartford Times 1968, Hartford Public Library
1989 Activists file Sheff v O’Neill deseg lawsuit
Ten-year-old Milo Sheff and sixteen other
plaintiffs filed suit against then-Governor
O’Neill, charging that Hartford’s segregated
school system deprived them of equal
opportunity under Connecticut constitution
Milo Sheff and mother,
Elizabeth Horton Sheff,
Hartford Courant
Since 1974 Milliken v
Bradley federal ruling in
Detroit blocked mandatory
city-suburban desegregation
remedies, Sheff plaintiffs
turned to Connecticut state
courts instead
Hartford 91% minority
students (1988-89)
1992 Sheff lawsuit finally goes to trial
11 week trial
1,000 pieces of
evidence; 50 witnesses
State defended its
position by arguing that
government action did
not create segregated
schools; individual
decisions in housing
market were to blame
Hartford Courant
1996
1996
What the court did (and did NOT) rule:
• racial segregation in schools violates state constitution, but no
specific remedy for legislature to follow, and no deadline
• school boundary lines have caused unconstitutional segregation,
but no mandate to change boundaries in Hartford or metro region
Republican Gov. Rowland and Democratic legislative leaders
agree not to force suburban districts to integrate; voluntary only
2003
The Settlement emphasized:
• voluntary city-suburban
enrollment through magnet
schools
• voluntary city-suburban transfers
through Project Choice
(formerly Project Concern)
• raise Hartford minority student
enrollment in voluntary deseg
from 10 to 30 percent by 2007
Sheff attorney Horton, Atty Gen Blumenthal &
Comm of Ed Sergi with Sheff plaintiffs, H Courant
2007 - Our report found that
existing voluntary desegregation
efforts served only 17% of
Hartford minority children, not
30% goal
2007 - Our report found that
existing voluntary desegregation
efforts served only 17% of
Hartford minority children, not
30% goal
2007 - Our report found that
existing voluntary desegregation
efforts served only 17% of
Hartford minority children, not
30% goal
2008 - Sheff II agreement sets
new voluntary desegregation
5-year goals & strategy:
Expanded options
to raise Hartford
minority student
enrollment in
desegregated
settings to 41% (by
2012-13), or meet
80% of demand
Five policy questions to discuss:
Q1: Are voluntary measures sufficient to
meet Sheff goals? And the other 70%?
• voluntary city-suburb
enrollment in 22
magnet schools
Q1: Are voluntary measures sufficient to
meet Sheff goals? And the other 70%?
• voluntary city-suburb
enrollment in 22
magnet schools
• voluntary city-suburb
transfers through
Project Choice
Q1: Are voluntary measures sufficient to
meet Sheff goals? And the other 70%?
Sheff legal settlements did NOT
redraw city-suburban district
boundaries, nor did they require
suburban districts to participate in
Project Choice or magnet school
programs.
Are mandatory measures the
answer?
Q1: Are voluntary measures sufficient to
meet Sheff goals? And the other 70%?
Sheff legal settlements did NOT
redraw city-suburban district
boundaries, nor did they require
suburban districts to participate in
Project Choice or magnet school
programs.
Are mandatory measures the
answer?
Should the State erase the
boundary lines that separate
school districts? And/or should
they require some degree of
suburban program participation?
Q2: Does system promote free choice -or forced choice -- for Hartford parents?
Magnet application
waiting lists:
Breakthrough (Spr 2007)
1,681 applications
43 enrolled (2.5%)
235 admitted to others
Distant suburbs more likely to participate in Project Choice:
Q2: Does system promote free choice -or forced choice -- for Hartford parents?
Magnet application
waiting lists:
Breakthrough (Spr 2007)
1,681 applications
43 enrolled (2.5%)
235 admitted to others
Distant suburbs more likely to participate in Project Choice
Project Concern alumni oral history interview: "If you are stuck, as a parent. . .
and you can’t put yourself in the neighborhood that you want your kids to go to
school in, then you have no choice but to be in the city-to-suburb desegregation
program.” (Banks & Dougherty, 2004)
Q3: How do selected high-achieving, highminority schools fit into Sheff?
Jumoke Academy, public K-8 charter school
located in Hartford’s North End
On CT “failing school” list 2002-05, but
recently on top list of high-achieving elem
schools for Af-Am and low-income students
4th grade CMT Percent minority Free lunch SYE
avg 2007
SYE 2007
2007
State avg
62
34
27
Montessori Magnet
57
78
28
Jumoke charter
56
100
>95
UHart Magnet
45
74
30
Breakthrough Magnet
41
73
34
Hartford Pub Sch avg
20
94
70
MD Fox elem
18
94
66
Moylan elem
16
99
69
McDonough elem
10
98
74
Q3: How do selected high-achieving, highminority schools fit into Sheff?
Jumoke Academy, public K-8 charter school
located in Hartford’s North End
On CT “failing school” list 2002-05, but
recently on top list of high-achieving elem
schools for Af-Am and low-income students
4th grade CMT Percent minority Free lunch SYE
avg 2007
SYE 2007
2007
State avg
62
34
27
Montessori Magnet
57
78
28
Jumoke charter
56
100
>95
UHart Magnet
45
74
30
Breakthrough Magnet
41
73
34
Hartford Pub Sch avg
20
94
70
MD Fox elem
18
94
66
Moylan elem
16
99
69
McDonough elem
10
98
74
Q4: Will housing desegregation gradually
solve school segregation by itself? Or not?
Q4: Will housing desegregation gradually
solve school segregation by itself? Or not?
Q5: Should we expand Sheff beyond race to
include social class integration?
1989 original Sheff lawsuit targeted segregation along
“racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic lines”
1996 Sheff court ruling for plaintiffs on grounds that
“extreme racial and ethnic isolation” in public schools
violated state constitution
Current Sheff remedy formula focuses entirely on race
Q5: Should we expand Sheff beyond race to
include social class integration?
2007 Seattle & Louisville cases at US Supreme Court
Context: both districts voluntarily created integration plans to promote
racial balance goals
Question: Does the US constitution prohibit school boards from using raceconscious criteria in a limited way to achieve racial diversity and
integration in K-12 schools?
US Supreme Court divided in a 4 -1 - 4 decision
Breyer, Stevens
Kennedy
Ginsburg, Souter
Roberts, Scalia
Thomas, Alito
School districts may consider race <----->
Seattle and Louisville plans
violate constitution because they act in
“non-individualized, mechanical way” on race
Five policy questions to discuss:
Q1: Are voluntary measures sufficient to meet Sheff goals?
Q2: Does the system promote free choice -- or forced choice -- for
Hartford parents?
Q3: How do selected high-achieving, high-minority schools fit into
Sheff?
Q4: Will housing desegregation gradually solve school segregation
by itself? Or not?
Q5: Should we expand Sheff beyond race to focus on social class
integration? If so, what would that look like?