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The Way We Learn Separate and Unequal in Metropolitan Detroit Schools.

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Presentation on theme: "The Way We Learn Separate and Unequal in Metropolitan Detroit Schools."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Way We Learn Separate and Unequal in Metropolitan Detroit Schools

2 Brown v. Board of Education May 17, 1954, the United States Supreme Court declared that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal."

3 Excerpts from Brown v. Board of Education Does segregation of children in public schools solely on the basis of race, even though the physical facilities and other "tangible" factors may be equal, deprive the children of the minority group of equal educational opportunities? We believe that it does. …… We conclude that, in the field of public education, the doctrine of "separate but equal" has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal. Therefore, we hold that the plaintiffs and others similarly situated for whom the actions have been brought are, by reason of the segregation complained of, deprived of the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.

4 Metro Detroit is the greatest center of school segregation in the nation.

5 Segregation in Metro Detroit The Detroit school district is 91% black and 3.7% white (2003).

6 Metro Detroit by Race % white% black % other Detroit12.381.66.2 Grosse Pointe Township93.90.65.5 West Bloomfield Township84.25.210.6 Bloomfield Hills90.71.67.7 Farmington Hills82.96.910.1 Birmingham96.10.93.0

7 The schools that say separate but equal is the most extensive social experiment in the United States history. Weve tried it in thousands of places for many generations. It never worked anywhere as far as I can tell…There never was a separate but equal school system… …a suburban teacher would call me and say, you know, weve read your study, we decided to actually go in and see what the same exact class looked [like] in a counter- part school in Chicago…it was like a different planet, a different society. From the testimony of Gary Orfield, witness for United for Equality and Affirmative Action (UEAA) in Grutter v. Bollinger

8 Exteriors

9 Northern High School, Detroit, MI

10 Marquette Middle School Detroit, MI

11 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

12 Grosse Pointe South High School Grosse Pointe, MI

13 Farmington High School Farmington, MI

14 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

15 Interiors/Halls

16 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

17 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

18 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

19 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

20 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

21 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

22 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

23 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

24 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

25 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

26 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

27 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

28 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

29 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

30 Marquette Middle School Detroit, MI

31 Northern High School, Detroit, MI

32 Northern High School Detroit, MI

33 Northern High School Detroit, MI

34 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

35 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

36 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

37 Classrooms

38 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

39 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

40 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

41 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

42 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

43 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

44 Martin Luther King, Jr. Senior High School Detroit, MI

45 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

46 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

47 Harrison High School Farmington Hills, MI

48 Libraries

49 Northern High School Detroit, MI

50 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

51 Roeper High School Birmingham, MI

52 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Point, MI

53 Cafeterias

54 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

55 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

56 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Pointe, MI

57 Bathrooms

58 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

59 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

60 Cass Technical High School Detroit, MI

61 Northern High School Detroit, MI

62 Northern High School Detroit, MI

63 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

64 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

65 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

66 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

67 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

68 Roeper High School Birmingham, MI

69 Athletic Facilities

70 Marquette Middle School Detroit, MI

71 Crockett Technical High School Detroit, MI

72 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Point, MI

73 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Point, MI

74 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Point, MI

75 Grosse Pointe North High School Grosse Point, MI

76 Metro Detroit is the greatest center of school segregation in the nation.

77 Over one quarter of black students in the Northeast and Midwest attend 99-100% minority schools. (2003)

78 62.5% of black students in Michigan go to schools that are 90-100% minority. This is the highest rate in the nation. (2003)

79 25% of Latino students in the Midwest are in schools that are 90-100% minority. (2003)

80 Nationally, almost half of all schools have less than 10% black and Latino students; by contrast, one-tenth of all schools were 90-100% black and Latino. (2003)

81 115 of the 185 cities and townships in the six-county Detroit region are more than 95% white. (Detroit News 1/14/02)

82 Segregated Magnet Schools Excerpt from Testimony of Gary Orfield, witness for United for Equality and Affirmative Action (UEAA) in Grutter v. Bollinger Q.Let me ask you about a slightly different category of schools, a school thats somewhat more privileged but its still a segregated school, maybe like Cass Tech or like a segregated suburban school with an overwhelmingly black or Latino population? A.Yes.

83 Q.What are the implications for college, first access, and second achievement GPA for students from schools like that? A.Well, I have a special interest in magnet schools, magnet from out of desegregation plans and I have studied them in Chicago and all other places. Magnet schools give you a chance, but even though it may look like a very elite school inside the city, it really looks like a very average or low average school in suburban terms.

84 So, my own children went to a school that was a magnet school in Chicago Public Schools which was predominately African American, and had some wonderful teachers and programs in it. And that school was recruited, the colleges do recruit from schools like that pretty intensively. There are students who do make it, but theyre not nearly as well prepared as they should be. Basically that school as best I could tell, was equivalent to a lower level of suburban school. That school had the only debate team that was left out of 65 Chicago high schools at that time.

85 When the debate team went off to a suburban school, they would see paid staff person working with them, hey would see a library, and they see kids going to debate camp, they see this and that and the other thing. And this school had none of those things there. They had a volunteer, they had no materials, they had no room, they didnt have a media center to support them, they had nothing. And they were the only ones in the city who could even amount a debate team at that point. So you have these inequalities even in the elite schools. We found that magnet schools really on average offered a lot better set of opportunities and teachers and background and so forth than the non-magnet schools. But they were not competitive with good suburban schools in terms of the offerings. They had a lot of remarkable and talented young people in them though. […]

86 2000-2001 School Statistics (Detroit News) Drop OutACT Student/$ Per RateScore Teacher RatioStudent Detroit18.416.6 19.66.584 Grosse Pointe1.023.3 17.99,394 Farmington2.722.7 18.49,568 West Bloomfield2.323.6 18.48,386 Birmingham1.223.9 16.5 11,378

87 Realize the promise of Brown v. Board of Education!

88 Integration Now!

89 April 1 st, 2003 Supreme Court hearing of Grutter v. Bollinger

90

91

92 Shanta Driver, BAMN National Spokesperson Speaking at 40 year anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington

93 Join the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action & Integration and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) www.bamn.com

94 Photographers: Maricruz Lopez, Edward Cole, Liana Mulholland, Attie Pollard, Ebony Ross (L-R)


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