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Look at the boldfaced words and phrases in the background reading. Try to determine their meaning. Match them with the synonyms or definitions below.



doctrine a) defeated; in law, decided against (to reverse) an earlier ruling (decision)
plaintiff b) rejected as unjust
repudiated c) the main way of thinking or acting
overturned d) mostly
momentous e) sections of towns lived in by people who are underprivileged or discriminated against
banned f) outlawed, made illegal
busing g) compete for
predominantly h) transport of children to achieve racial integration
mainstream i) beliefs of a political system, principles
ironic j) segregate again
re-segregate k) in law, a person who brings action against someone in court
ghettos l) having the opposite result from what is expected
role models m) drug sellers
pushers n) something that has both advantages and disadvantages
mixed blessing o) people who can be respected or admired for what they do
vie over p) stimulus
incentive q) important, serious

2. Work in small groups. Summarize the issue presented in the background reading. Take notes to complete the following outline.

1.The issue (state in your own words).

2.Pros and cons of solutions to segregation in U.S. public education

 

  Pros Cons
a) Busing    
b) Magnet schools    
c) Voucher programs    

 

GHDiscussion

1.Has racial segregation been a problem in your country?

2.Study the proposals for integration in the United States presented in your notes from summarizing the issue. What are your reactions to these proposals?

Opinion 1

> Listening

Listen to the commentary. Check the statement that summarizes the commentator’s viewpoint.

1. The African-American community is losing its identity through integration efforts.

2. The Brown v. Board of Education decision was a mistake.

3. New integration efforts must be made to ensure equal opportunity for all students.

Read the following questions and answers. Listen to the commentary again and circle the best answer. Then compare your answers with those of another student. Listen again if necessary.

1. What happened in 1954?

a. All racial segregation was ended in the United States.

b. American public schools were integrated.

c. The Supreme Court ruled out racial segregation.

2. Why isn’t it odd that there are no celebrations for this anniversary, according to

the commentator?

a. There isa sense of weariness at court-imposed busing schemes.

b. Because black children used to have to ride buses past all-white schools.

c. Because integration has been successful.

3. Why was the Brown v. Board of Education decision necessary?

a. It had to explain the doctrine of “separate but equal”

b. The 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision had never been written into law.

c. The country had proclaimed itself a nation of equality.

4. What problem exists in the notion of integration?

a. It assumes that all black and white children must automatically integrate in schools.

b. It assumes that black children can’t learn well without the presence of white children.

c. It results in an inferior education for all children.

5. Why wasn’t integration so ideal for the black community?

a. It cost the black community so much money.

b. Segregation was never really outlawed in some schools.

c. The well-educated blacks left their communities without role models.

6. What happened to predominantly black neighborhoods as a result of integration?

a. They expanded into the suburbs.

b. More ghettos formed.

c. The pushers controlled them.

7. What did African-Americans give up as a result of the Brown v. Board of Education decision?

a. Equality among whites

b. A feeling of self-sufficiency

c. Special help from the government

8. According to Muhammed, what was wrong with the way in which integration was handled?

a. African-Americans allowed the government to lead integration efforts.

b. African-Americans never accepted European-Americans.

d. African-Americans didn’t become part of the country’s mainstream.

 

Read the text of the commentary. Try to fill in the missing words in the text as you remember them. Use your knowledge of text structure, vocabulary, and grammar to help you. Then listen again to the commentary to check your answers, stopping the tape as you fill in the blanks. If you have different answers than the original text, check with your teacher to see if they are acceptable alternatives.

Introduction

This country’s racial segregation in public schools was____ by the Supreme Court on this date in 1954. Commentator Askia Muhammed believes the ruling came as a ____blessing.

Commentary

It’s odd that on this thirty-fifth anniversary of one of the most ____ Supreme Court decisions there are no national celebrations. Or, maybe it’s not so odd.

I think there’s a sense of national weariness at various court-imposed school-integration-by- ____schemes over the years. So who wants to celebrate that anniversary? It’s ____ because the Washington D.C. ____, whose case was joined into the Brown v. Topeka, Kansas, Board of Education suit, were parents who complained that their children had to ride buses ____ an all-white junior high school in their neighborhood. But the whole concept of integration or ____ is full of ironies, as far as I’m concerned.

The Brown v. Board decision had to be, however. Historically, the ____ of “separate but equal” from the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision had to be ____ in U.S. law if the country was to refer to itself sincerely as “one nation under God.”

My only problem with the notion of integration, though, is having to automatically ____ that, unless white children are around, black children cannot possibly be learning anything in school. It breeds unacceptable ____ thinking among blacks, the descendants of slaves in this country.

We paid a dear price for integration. The well-educated blacks were free to move anywhere they chose when segregation was ____. And they chose, increasingly, to leave the masses of suffering people most in need of their presence, their guidance, their stability, their leadership by example. The black communities ____ models, once forced to live in ____ black neighborhoods by segregated housing laws, were at last able to flee to the suburbs. They fled, leaving the ____ to be vied over by the ____ and the poor.

As a nation, we gained as much as we lost when the Supreme Court ____ “separate but equal.” But I, for one, wish we hadn’t so quickly lost the sense of self-____, of pride, of self-help, self-government that African-Americans surrendered. We thought, “Let George (George Bush) do it, ” instead of wanting to do it for ourselves, mostly so we could get along with the majority, the European-Americans, as we integrated into the country’s ____.

Opinion 2

& Reading 2

Read the editorial. Check the statement that summarizes the author’s viewpoint.

1. We must continue to use integrated schooling as a means for ending discrimination.

2. Integration efforts have not been successful in the schools.

3. Choice and excellence may be the best alternatives to integrative schooling.

Defending the Common School

By Michael D. Ford

Education in a democratic society must equip children to develop their potential and to participate fully in American life. For the community at large, the schools have discharged this responsibility well. But for many minorities, and particularly for the children of the ghetto, the schools have failed to provide the educational experience, which could overcome the effects of discrimination and deprivation.

Busing was the principal tool used to remedy educational inequality, and it sparked controversy and resistance in most of the communities where it was employed. Its proponents saw it as an effective remedy for the problems of racial isolation and inadequate educational resources in black communities. Opposition to busing was expressed as a fear of crime and a protest against government intervention in community affairs; it signaled an unwillingness to relinquish the cherished ideal of the neighborhood school. The most telling argument against busing was that it was counterproductive, because whites would abandon the affected schools, resulting in evengreater isolation for blacks.

The phenomenon of “white flight” was andis real. Inner-city school systems have lost significant numbers of white students, thereby increasing the number of predominantly minority schools. But it is equally clear that busing has been effective in reducing or ending school segregation in some communities. In small cities, some suburban areas, and the rural South, racial isolation has been reduced. Numerous surveys reveal that black and white parents whose children have been bused to eliminate school segregation have been overwhelmingly positive about the experience. However, despite its history of mixed success, busing has lost support even among proponents of educational equality.

Conservatives have reformulated the terms of debate on educational issues following a successful campaign to end busing as a focal point of educational reform. Since the early 1980s, they have led a chorus singing the tune of “excellence” in education. They now argue for programs that will lead to measurable improvements in student performance. The danger they underscore is not the unfair burden imposed on black children by educational inequalities but the loss of American global preeminence. In order to ensure that we are producing the ranks of highly skilled, technologically sophisticated students necessary to maintain our nation’s competitive advantage, they advocate national achievement exams, a longer school year, periodic assessments of teacher competency, and privatization of education through school voucher programs.

The American common school was created in order to provide a setting in which children from different backgrounds could learn together, free from the constraints or benefits of family background. It was an environment designed to provide the resources for individual development and an appreciation of the common good. Students were expected to become productive citizens, able to contribute to the polity as well as to the economy. The radical individualism of conservative privatization schemes would likely cripple public education and erode any sense of the public good.

The talk about choice and excellence has preempted attempts to focus on quality in education. Some, in the black community have directed their attention to other issues, like Afro-centric curricula and all-male schools. The diminished national concern for equal educational opportunity is responsible in part for this inward turn. All students should experience programs of study that enhance their self-image. However, a curriculum that insists on only one vantage point for learning, whether it is European or African, will impose burdens on students by limiting their vision.

Curricular issues are important, but they are no substitute for a well-articulated program that directly confronts racial inequality in education and other social arenas. All black children, female and male, deserve good schools; that goal will be realized only if we are willing to press just claims on all appropriate state institutions. Settling those claims will require that we generate a new will—in the words of the Kerner Commission, “a will to tax ourselves to the extent necessary”—to fund programs that target the conditions imposed by racial inequality.

In this vein, one of the most promising developments in American education in recent years is linked to a number of court cases that challenge the disparities in funding among local school districts. Lawsuits seeking redistribution of state funds among local school districts to balance educational resources have been filed in nearly two dozen states, beginning with a suit filed in Texas twenty-three years ago and not settled until 1989.

The intent of these suits is simply to level the playing field. The remedies crafted by state legislatures as a response to successful suits vary. Most have adopted measures that provide increased funding to districts with below-average tax bases. Montana also capped spending in wealthy districts. However, more significant changes in the funding of education will be necessary to tackle the problem generated by the ongoing segregation of our society. Given decreasing state revenues and the lack of support for new taxes, some activists are beginning to talk about a national system of revenue collection and distribution to address educational inequalities.

Efforts to reduce educational inequalities will not in and of themselves end poverty or racism, however well funded they may be; housing and employment discrimination must be eliminated as well. But schools are crucial determinants of social mobility and well-being, organized and administered by the state, not the marketplace, and therefore it is reasonable and feasible to insist that the government act to ensure that they serve all citizens equally.

Poverty and racism have created specific educational needs in the black community. We know where the substandard schools are, and we can assess the critical shortages in human and material resources. It is right to press for more and better teachers in black schools. We should adopt measures that establish more effective links between parents and schools. We should support curricula that open our children to a world of possibilities, not courses of study that wall them in intellectually and culturally. However, we must continue to insist on desegregation as a critical yardstick by which policies and programs are measured.

Desegregating schooling does not signify that black schoolchildren cannot learn outside the company of white children. It emphasizes our recognition that common schooling can be a focal point for confronting racism and for providing children with equitably shared resources. Our increasingly diverse society will have to contend with the multiplying strains that result from difference. The American school has long been viewed as the best meeting ground for the creation of our civic culture; if we are to nurture democratic and egalitarian impulses, no other setting is likely to be as hospitable.

4 Do the following exercises

Read the following statements. Do you think the author would agree or disagree with them? Compare your answers with those of another student. If your answers differ go back to the text to find out why.

1. People who opposed busing had an argument that made sense.

2. The problem of “white flight” from inner-city schools has been exaggerated.

3. Busing has been a successful means of reducing segregation.

4. Conservatives in America are concerned about the educational inequality offered to African-American children.

5. The loss of America’s global preeminence should be the ultimate concern when discussing the country’s educational practices.

6. Increasing the number of private schools will hurt American schooling.

7. Business firms may be a good model for public schooling in the future.

8. African-American communities have become more focused on their own culture with the loss of interest in equal educational opportunity in America.

9. An Afro-centric curriculum gives African-Americans an advantage in learning.

10. Court cases have been an effective means for equalizing state fund for schools.

11. School is the most effective place for the government to combat racial inequalities.

12. Schools should adopt free-market, or business, practices with less control by the state.

13. A school should not always be evaluated by its success or failure to desegregate.

14. The American school is still the best place to integrate society.

2.Find boldfaced words in the essay that have similar meaning to the following:

Nouns/Phrases Verbs Adjectives
in this respect; regarding this topic take action about receptive
society as a political organization activated extremely important
point of view insist on blocking the way of a goal
scenes of interest оr activity further the development of showing a person’s feelings or opinions
excellence above others give up possible (can be done)
sudden wishes to do something make certain  
benefit to society make equal  
  put a limit on  
  correct  
  replaced  

GHDiscussion


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