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BOOK REVIEWS: Color Me Purple
By Nathan Glazer
Colormute: Race Talk Dilemmas in an American School by MICA POLLOCK
Colormute: Race Talk Dilemmas
in an American School
By Mica Pollock.
Princeton University Press, 2004,
$39.95; 268 pages.
Reviewed by Nathan Glazer
Mica Pollock taught in a California high school
for a year in the mid-1990s, then spent another two years in
research in the same school as a graduate student in what appears
to be social anthropology. (She is now on the faculty of the
Harvard Graduate School of Education.) Those were hectic times in
this multiracial and multiethnic high school, which she calls
“Columbus,” and which is located in an otherwise
unnamed “California City”—though it is clear from
the details of the court case under which all “California
City” schools then labored that the city is San Francisco.
While she taught there, the high school, as a
failing school, was being “reconstituted” by the
central administration. When she returned as a researcher, it was
already reconstituted, with a new principal and staff. But these
problems did not seem to affect the issues she was studying.
Her concern was with how teachers,
administrators, and students talk, or do not talk, about race, and
how race comes into their thinking and acting about school issues.
Surprisingly, there is very little about how race comes up in
classroom teaching, which is a central issue in other books on race
in schools. A typical issue is what to do when “nigger”
shows up in a class reading from Huckleberry
Finn. But Columbus High is a rather
sophisticated setting when it comes to race: it comprises six ethnic groups (no fewer than nine are
identified under the citywide court order, and all nine must be
considered in the making of administrative decisions), and its student
body is, for all practical purposes, all minority. Officially, the
school is 28 percent Filipino, 29 percent Latino, 22 percent African
American, 8 percent Chinese, 8 percent other nonwhite (mostly Samoan),
and 5 percent other white (just white in common parlance).
The students seem to be of two distinct minds
about the subject, and they are quite comfortable with both. On the
one hand, their notions about their own race are complex, mixed,
and shifting. Many of the students are of mixed origin (this is,
after all, the San Francisco region), and they seem to take delight
in the fact that their race is often not easily identifiable to
others. They are very direct in talking about race, their
own and that of others, and one supposes that “nigger”
would not have caused much of a stir at Columbus if it came up in a
classroom reading. On the other hand, they accept that the school is
composed of the six defined groups and that those groups are often in
conflict over such matters as how many of each appear in a
representative school event, or in what order, which students become
officers in the school, and the like.
Avoiding the R Word
Such sophistication on the part of the students
makes the inhibitions of the teachers and administrators seem odd,
but especially evocative. The adults are reluctant to speak about
race differences in achievement and behavior, and this, the
author believes, contributes to the continuance of racial problems.
Pollock seems to be asking for more openness in the discussion of
these issues, but matters are more complicated than that, and just
how one is to be open to questions of race is not easy to discern
from her account.
Pollock notes that for the teachers race
matters when they talk about students, but not when they talk about
their own problems as teachers. They do not seem to take much
notice that a majority-white teaching force is teaching a student
body with minuscule numbers of “other white” students,
nor do they consider what problems this might create for their
teaching. Or if they do, it is only in sub
rosa discussion.
At the city administrative level, where
Columbus was considered a failing school, there also seems to be a
problem talking about race directly. If Columbus is failing, it is
clearly because its black, Latino, and Samoan students graduate in small numbers. There is no
great problem with the Filipinos, the second-largest ethnic group in
the school, and the group dominant in school government and in school
achievement. There is no problem with the Chinese, a small group in
this school, but dominant academically in the school system citywide.
But the problem of who is failing is concealed by the rhetoric of
“all students”: “all students” can and must
learn. The racial issue is left unremarked in the rancorous public
meetings over reconstitution, even though it is, in fact, the racial
difference in failure that started the whole process.
Between a Rock and Racism
In her extended and interesting accounts of
how teachers view the matter, Pollock teeters between acknowledging
a range of factors aside from race in accounting for academic
success and failure and taking the teachers to task for not
directly acknowledging and addressing racial and ethnic groups in
those outcomes. But it is not easy to see just what the author
would consider a proper response. Consider her reference to
research on group inequality in achievement. That research is
certainly not mute about race, but that very directness raises
problems for Pollock: “Researchers rarely admit that their
own matter-of-fact research questions about racial patterns,
launched from a distance, are themselves evidence of culturally
scripted expectations that achievement be racially
ordered—and more important, that such research questions
routinely produce culturally scripted explanations for why racial
patterns exist.”
What is the researchers’ failure? They
“presume certain racial achievement patterns,” Pollock
writes. But is it “presumption” when almost all
research agrees on the matter? At another point in the book Pollock
abashedly notes that these are her own expectations
(“presumptions”?) too. “After two years around
Columbus, I myself would hear a student coming late to class and
anticipate she would be ‘black’; I regularly assumed
the honor roll lists would largely display names that were either
‘Filipino’ or ‘Chinese.’”
But like the other adults in this book,
Pollock too remains silent on the issue: “I just waited
quietly for racial patterns to manifest themselves.…”
In discussing the researchers’ failure, Pollack displays the
tendency of current social science to concentrate on
representations, how matters are seen, as if that were the problem,
rather than the underlying realities that give rise to those
representations. She seems to want the teachers to recognize and be
more straightforward in their talk about racial realities; but she
does not want them to acknowledge straightforwardly that blacks,
Latinos, and Samoans are the problem. If one speaks about
racial failure, it must be within the context of the larger
“racial order.” One senses that teachers reading this
book will think the author gets them coming and going: Be aware of
the “racial order,” but if you speak about it,
you’ll probably be doing so the wrong way. Pollock believes
that black academic failure, if spoken about directly, simply
becomes part of the process of creating and sustaining that
failure.
In the end, Colormute asks a
great deal from teachers and administrators; fair enough. But it
also asks them to take on the burden of an analysis that is itself
questionable. Would evoking the racial order really help in this
situation? Would it not as likely fan resentments and provide
excuses that would make education even more difficult?
Yes, we must recognize the role of race and
group and of complex history, and we must acknowledge that fault
can be variously apportioned. It is a central issue of academic
achievement and academic failure. But then, whatever the ultimate
analysis, is the task not one of effective instruction for the
competencies that society expects from the educated? This, it seems
to me, is what is shortchanged in this otherwise sophisticated
analysis of the problems of talking about race in school. And in
those moments when Mica Pollock recognizes her difficulties in
following her own prescriptions, we recognize not only her honesty
and good will, but the problem of incorporating the weight
of our racial history in our instruction.
Nathan Glazer is professor of education and
sociology emeritus at Harvard University.
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