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Mich. Case May Affect Primary Education
AP ^ | April 5, 2003

Posted on 04/05/2003 10:44:20 AM PST by sarcasm

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court's upcoming ruling on affirmative action in college admissions has the potential to subtly or significantly affect the nation's 15,000 school districts, many of which have long considered race in shaping student enrollment plans.

Already, lower court rulings in recent years have directed some districts -- and led many others -- to abandon race-based plans. The Supreme Court's higher education ruling could invite schools to revisit that use of race or to eliminate it as a factor.

``Everybody sees the handwriting on the wall,'' said Michael Simpson, assistant general counsel for the National Education Association. ``If the court says diversity is not a sufficiently compelling state interest to justify race-based admissions, there is every reason to expect that principle would apply to student assignment at the K-12 level.''

The Supreme Court heard arguments last week on two University of Michigan cases that challenge whether admissions policies favoring minorities are constitutional. Dozens of K-12 groups expressed their opinions in court papers, from teacher unions and black educators to school principals and state education boards.

Most took the university's side, arguing that diversity provides essential benefits and that schools should have authority to ensure it exists in the classroom. For elementary and secondary schools, the implications of the court decision, expected by July, will depend not just on its substance but also on how broadly is it worded.

``The worst-case scenario would be a sweeping opinion that would resegregate higher education,'' said Julie Underwood, general counsel for the National School Boards Association. ``The worse worst-case scenario would not allow any kind of race consideration in K-12. We would see a resegregated society very quickly.''

An increasing number of federal courts has lifted mandatory school desegregation plans and ruled in favor of those who believe K-12 race preferences are wrong.

In Maryland's Montgomery County, just outside Washington, a court struck down a diversity policy that kept a white student from transferring from his minority-dominated school to a largely white school. Allowing him to transfer, school officials contended, would only fuel the increasing ``racial isolation'' of a school that had mostly black and Hispanic students.

In San Francisco, school officials changed course to settle a lawsuit by Chinese-American students who were not admitted to their preferred schools. The district repealed 45 percent caps for racial or ethnic groups at each school and 40 percent caps at magnet schools.

In a Boston case, a court threw out a policy that weighed race in determining half the students admitted to a prestigious public school for grades seven to 12.

Boston now faces another race-based court fight over its attendance plan for elementary and middle schools. That plan reserves half a school's spots for students in walking distance and half for students throughout a larger zone. That has led some white families to complain that the district has denied their children access to a neighborhood school in the name of diversity.

``I'd like to see the Supreme Court say racism is wrong, to say people should not be refused admission on the basis of race,'' said Gary Kreep of the United States Justice Foundation, which represents California families challenging race-based school admissions in Pasadena. ``It's just wrong. It's un-American.''

The Michigan cases are not expected to affect schools that remain under federally ordered desegregation plans based on past discrimination, lawyers said.

The social and educational benefits of diverse classrooms -- especially in early grades, when students begin to form attitudes -- have been embraced by most in the debate. How to achieve that diversity is the challenge.

Magnet schools, which stress subjects such as language or science, have been a tool to lure white students into minority communities. But more schools now use legally safer ``race-neutral'' methods to ensure diversity, such as socio-economic status and geography, said Maree Sneed, a lawyer who represents many large school districts on federal issues.

In Nashville, Tenn., school officials eliminated race as a factor in school admissions a few years ago. As a result, magnet schools became much less diverse, said professor Ellen Goldring of Vanderbilt University, who researches desegregation and magnets schools.

A high court ruling in favor of race-based diversity measures would ``provide a great sense of purpose to the K-12 community, especially those who think diversity is an important goal in and of itself,'' Goldring said. ``Frankly, that's being lost.''

A ruling against Michigan would add to the obstacles facing disadvantaged minority youngsters for whom affirmative action has been a help, said Kati Haycock, director of The Education Trust, which advocates for poor students.

``Poor minority kids are far more likely to have less-qualified teachers, far more likely to have watered-down curriculum. Those problems will only fester more openly if this cushion goes away,'' Haycock said.

``We would prefer over the long term -- I think most people of color would -- that we get good education to begin with so that all of this would go away.''

^----

On The Net:

Lawsuits against the University of Michigan: http://www.umich.edu/urel/admissions/

National Education Association: http://www.nea.org/

United States Justice Foundation: http://www.usjf.net/


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: affirmativeaction; k12education

1 posted on 04/05/2003 10:44:20 AM PST by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
Here's the plan. Pay attention in school and respect your teacher. When she says do your homework, do your homework. Study hard and get good grades.

That's the plan. Let the other dopes worry about their "rights" while you are going off to college with good grades.

2 posted on 04/05/2003 10:52:15 AM PST by Thebaddog (Fetch this)
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To: sarcasm
Poor minority kids are far more likely to have less-qualified teachers, far more likely to have watered-down curriculum.

And racial preferences are going to produce "more qualified" teachers?

A college graduate who speaks ebonics is hardly going to improve the lot of America's poor.

3 posted on 04/05/2003 10:55:51 AM PST by Amerigomag
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To: Amerigomag
...less qualified than what? People with Education degrees are consistenlty in the bottom 20% of every graduating class, and the public school teachers unions require degrees in education.

Making it an issue of race instead of one of need is like teaching a pig to sing so that he tastes better when you eat him. It's a waste of time, and doesn't address the real issue at all.

4 posted on 04/05/2003 11:24:14 AM PST by tcostell
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