(NAME-MCE) "Heritage rallies" offend some students, parents
Anselmo Villanueva
anselmo.villanueva at gmail.com
Fri Apr 24 12:49:50 CDT 2009
"Heritage rallies" offend some students, parents
Race-based assemblies used in some schools in the Sacramento, Calif., area
to encourage better performance on state tests are troubling some students
and parents. The principal at one of the schools said the groupings were
used to prevent students from feeling singled out, but others felt the
rallies sent the wrong message.
http://www.sacbee.com/education/story/1799186.html
Sacramento-area schools use race-based assemblies to push standardized tests By
Diana Lambert The Sacramento Bee
dlambert at sacbee.com
Published: Wednesday, Apr. 22, 2009 - 12:00 am | Page 1B
The bleachers in the Laguna Creek High School gym were filled earlier this
week with students gazing at an outline of Africa on a big screen.
Almost all of them were African American, called together for one of five
"Heritage Assemblies" high school administrators organized to pump up kids
for STAR testing this week.
"Last year we scored the highest percentage increase of any group," Vice
Principal Hasan Abdulmalik hollered at the crowd.
Most students cheered back in response, but a handful were unhappy they'd
been divided along racial lines. And so are some parents.
Students at Laguna could go to any rally they wanted, but the gatherings
were designated for specific races – African Americans in the gym, Pacific
Islanders <http://topics.sacbee.com/Pacific+Islanders/> in the theater,
Latinos in the multipurpose room.
Laguna Creek Principal Doug Craig said dividing the students by race allowed
staff to talk about test scores
<http://topics.sacbee.com/test+scores/>without making any one ethnic
group feel singled out in a negative manner.
"Is it racist? I don't believe it is," Craig said.
Schools are under increasing pressure to help students do well on
"Standardized Testing and Reporting." It's actually a battery of tests that
gauge how well schools are teaching their students collectively and in
subsets that include race and special needs.
If a school falls short of federal benchmarks for more than two years, it
could face sanctions under the federal No Child Left Behind Act and
ultimately can be taken over by the state.
"No Child Left Behind is a double-edged sword," said Craig. "We're doing
things as a school that we never had to do. We're being held accountable."
California schools are required to make huge increases on test scores over
the next four years, a reality that has some schools and their districts
feeling desperate.
"There is a lot of pressure from the high-stakes testing going on," said Elk
Grove Superintendent Steven Ladd.
He said the pressure is increased because there is little incentive for
students to take the test and schools are required to have at least 95
percent of students participate.
But the pressure is no excuse, some families say.
Tracy and Herbert Houston said they were angry when their son Kyle was asked
to pick an assembly based on race. The mixed-race couple have taught their
children that skin color doesn't matter.
"My son texted me and asked me which one to go to," said Tracy Houston. "He
didn't know where to go because I've never raised him to be black or white.
… I tell my children they are part of the human race."
Laguna Creek ninth-grader Kevion Claiborne attended the African American
assembly Monday; he wasn't happy about the groupings.
"We should all go together," he said. "It doesn't matter if you are black,
white or any race."
Senior Camille Watts, who headed up the student presentation at the rally,
said separate assemblies make sense because the tests measure and compare
the students based on race.
"It ultimately sends the wrong message," said Sharroky Hollie, a professor
of teacher education <http://topics.sacbee.com/teacher+education/> at
California State University, Dominguez Hills, and the owner of the Center
for Culturally Responsive Teaching and Learning in Inglewood. "The intent is
important, but there are many other ways you can do that and have everybody
in the same room."
He said the practice, however, is becoming more common up and down the
state.
"I think schools are trying really hard, but not having success," Sharkey
said. "But they are not addressing the students' culture instructionally,
instead waiting until two weeks before the test and doing heritage rallies."
Laguna Creek isn't the only school in Elk Grove Unified to hold
race-specific STAR assemblies. Florin High School and James Rutter Middle
School are doing it.
Monterey Trail High School held STAR assemblies based on ethnicity last
year, but students this year asked administrators to divide them by grade
level instead, said Elizabeth Graswich, district spokeswoman.
Most schools in the region hold rallies or assemblies to motivate students
before they take the tests. And most are offering incentives for high
scores.
Students at Arlington Heights Elementary School in San Juan Unified School
District are celebrating Sweet Success Week this week – five days of
motivating activities leading up to STAR testing.
"When our testing schedule is finished, we reward ourselves with a whole
school ice cream party," said third-grade teacher Lynne Sharpe via e-mail.
Folsom Cordova Unified School District just took delivery on passes to the
Esquire Imax Theater, some of which will be used as incentives for students
on STAR testing, said Stephen
Nichols,<http://topics.sacbee.com/Stephen+Nichols/>spokesman for the
district.
Laguna Creek isn't limiting its efforts to assemblies either. Staff members
are offering "STAR Cards" that earn high-scoring students homework passes or
an extra point on a test, among other things. The school also has a fall
barbecue for the class with the biggest improvement in scores.
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