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BOOK REVIEW: What Begat the Achievement Gap?
By Nathan Glazer
History of Chicago schools provides few answers
Schools Betrayed: Roots of Failure in
Inner-city Education
By Kathryn M. Neckerman
University of Chicago Press, 2007, $29; 252
pages.
As reviewed by Nathan Glazer
The most urgent issue in American education for
the last half century has been the failure of large numbers of
African American children and older students to complete their
education and reach an average level of competence. It is 10 years
since the publication of The
Black-White Test Score Gap, the
collection of studies edited by Christopher Jencks and Meredith
Phillips, in which the education deficit was labeled starkly as the
single most important obstacle to black advancement. Progress since
then has not been marked.
At the beginning of Schools Betrayed, Kathryn Neckerman cites psychologist Kenneth Clark,
who 40 years ago wrote in Dark Ghetto, “The dominant and disturbing fact about
ghetto schools is that the teachers and the students regard each
other as adversaries. Under these conditions the teachers are
reluctant to teach and the students resist learning.”
Clark’s research had been cited in the key Supreme Court
decision banning state-imposed segregation in public schools, but
one suspects on the basis of this quotation that he was already
doubtful that desegregation alone would solve the problem of an
adequate education for urban blacks. Not, of course, that
desegregation was simple: it turned out to be awfully complicated
and has never been substantially achieved in northern and
midwestern cities.
Neckerman explores the origins of the
black-white education gap in Chicago between 1900 and 1960, and for
half of its length her book reads like
a detective story. She examines three explanations
of why inner-city schools failed blacks, and to each she says, no,
that’s not it.
The first is the economic decline of northern
and midwestern cities, which heightened financial pressures on the
schools. In a word, they simply didn’t have enough money to
deal properly with growing numbers of poor and black students. The
second is racial barriers to employment in the North, “more
subtle but no less real” than in the South. The third
possibility is the rise of an “oppositional culture,”
in which “academic effort [was framed] as a betrayal of
racial identity—‘acting white.’”
On the issue of resources, she documents rising
expenditure for the schools (in 1980 dollars) during this entire
period; rising salaries for teachers, particularly in the 1950s;
and declining numbers of students per teacher. Her conclusion is
that “the urban decline thesis cannot by itself account for
the problems of inner-city schooling that emerged…in the
1940’s and 1950’s.”
She notes that during most of the first half of
the 20th century the issue
in the Chicago schools was European immigrant
children. Early on, black students had an advantage in enrollment over
immigrant students, and a small advantage in graduation from high
school. Immigrant parents often opposed continuing education for their
children, as status could be earned in their communities through hard
work and employment in small business. There were also routes to
achievement through the labor union office, the Roman Catholic Church,
and the Democratic Party, all hardly available for blacks.
In the postwar period she documents a widening
education gap between black and immigrant students. Did
insufficient or poor jobs for blacks give them less reason to stay
in school? Neckerman points to the opportunities in the public
sector and the civil service, where there was much less
discrimination, and in the independent professions, namely law,
medicine, dentistry, and the clergy, which “offered a chance
to avoid some of the discrimination that private-sector employees
faced,” and all of which required education. She does not
dispute the widespread degree and depth of discrimination, but
holds that in this situation education offered some advantage, some
hope: “The economic returns to education…was [sic]
similar for black and immigrant workers.” Yet the gap in
taking advantage of educational opportunities grew.
We can measure urban decline and labor market
discrimination to some extent through quantitative research.
Tackling the “oppositional culture” explanation is
harder. Neckerman asks why an oppositional culture should have
arisen, as in black communities education was almost the only route
to achievement. (She does not refer to the underworld,
sports, and entertainment as alternatives routes
to status in black communities, but surely they played a role in
shaping attitudes toward education.)
So where does Neckerman find the answer? Her
research into the Chicago schools leads her to three theories of
her own.
First is the growth of segregation in the
Chicago schools. Clearly, this was related to immigration from the
South and the resulting areas of black concentration, which were
shaped by residential and labor market discrimination. At the
least, the Chicago school authorities countenanced this
development, but in response to community pressures they also
facilitated it through school assignment and school districting.
She writes that “the public schools lost legitimacy in the
eyes of the black community.”
The second is the failure of vocational
education to do much for black children. Vocational education began
as an effort to connect to the world of work those children not
headed for college, but in time it diverged between a higher track
that afforded training that led to jobs, and a lower track that was
simply an alternative to expected academic failure. Access to the
top tier required at least basic numerical and language skills. She
writes that vocational education “offers one example of how
black students could be disadvantaged by policies that were
ostensibly race neutral.” One reason blacks were denied the
upper tier was that discriminatory trade unions would prevent them
from using the skills they learned.
The third is that the Chicago schools’
programs of remedial education, which developed during this period,
were neither sufficient nor well enough funded. The black schools
were worst off, overcrowded, and with large classes:
“…the schools’ race-neutral remedial policies had
racially disparate effects, because they were implemented in an
environment that—both inside and outside the school—was
profoundly unequal.”
Neckerman returns in her last chapter to
Kenneth Clark’s quotation and the problem of “authority
and engagement.” This theme will be familiar and sad to
school observers. The head of the Chicago Teachers College said in
1940, the black “is warned to beware of the white man and
many of his attitudes…are colored by this caution. Teachers
‘pick on him’ not because he misbehaves but because he
is black.… The Negro boy is drilled on what his rights are.
Every teacher…knows that the first reaction of a Negro when
she threatens to punish him is to say, ‘The law won’t
let you hit me.’” All this is long before the civil
rights revolution of the 1950s and 1960s and the expansion of the
rights of school children.
This volume is a deep and full exploration of
the schools of our second largest city, as Chicago was during this
period, drawing on bodies of research that go back a hundred years.
I find Neckerman’s distinctions, between the explanations she
finds less supported in the research and those she eventually
alights on, less sharp than she does. Both sets are so dependent on
the web of discrimination in employment, residence, and status that
it is hard to differentiate among them.
Certainly, theories rooted in discrimination
have lost a good deal of explanatory power in the years since the
period she explores. Still, our progress in dealing with the
education gap has not been encouraging in the last decade or so.
Nevertheless there is no alternative to continued effort.
Neckerman’s sober and intensive study offers us little new
guidance, and the only available answer is more of the same, on a
wider and deeper scale.
Nathan Glazer is professor of education and
sociology emeritus at Harvard University.
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