Baltimore Sun Sunday

Unequal opportunit­ies

White students are more often steered to the challenges of advanced classes than black students

- By Erica L. Green

They were classmates and best friends, and they both wanted to get into the 11th-grade Advanced Placement English class at Columbia’s Hammond High School.

Since meeting in summer school just before ninth grade, Mikey Peterson and Eli Sauerwalt had been through a lot together. They’d each battled depression, they’d failed classes, they’d encouraged each other to do better.

As 10th-graders in English, the teens were each hoping for a prized recommenda­tion to the AP English class for their junior year.

Eli had doubts about whether AP English was for him. His attendance had been poor, and he had barely passed some assignment­s. But for the teacher, he said, it was never even a question.

You can do this, he recalled her saying. This is what you should do.

Mikey also asked his teacher about AP English. Despite failing several assignment­s, he believed he could thrive in a more competitiv­e environmen­t.

Her response, as he remembered it: Do you really want to do that to yourself?

The following fall, Eli, who is white, enrolled in AP English. “I was always kind of told I belonged,” he said. Mikey, who is black, enrolled in regular English. “That’s where the black kids are,” he said.

Howard County is the most integrated school district in the region, according to the Maryland Equity Project of the University of Maryland. Children of different races — especially those who are black and white — are more likely to sit next to each other in Howard than almost anywhere else in the state.

But within that diversity, school leaders have uncovered a de facto system of segregatio­n.

Enrollment data obtained by The Baltimore Sun through a public records request shows that the

“I was definitely given the benefit of the doubt in ways I know other students weren’t.” Eli Sauerwalt, white student at Hammond High School “We’re not giving students the opportunit­ies they’re entitled to.” Renee Foose, superinten­dent of Howard County schools

district’s advanced classes — honors, gifted and talented, and AP — are disproport­ionately white, while the regular and remedial classes are disproport­ionately black.

There are twice as many white students as black students in Howard schools. But demographi­cs alone doesn’t explain the disparitie­s.

In elementary school, nearly five times as many white students as black students are enrolled in gifted and talented courses. In middle school, it’s nearly four times as many.

By high school, where the menu of advanced classes expands to include honors, the gaps persist, with twice as many white students in honors classes and three times as many in gifted and talented courses.

Those courses are often an on-ramp to the coveted AP courses, considered the pinnacle of a successful high school career and the best preparatio­n for college.

By the time students reach AP classes, white students outnumber black students 4-1.

Research shows that integratio­n benefits all students. But the experience of Howard County — consistent­ly ranked among the strongest public school districts in the nation — demonstrat­es that bringing students of different background­s together in the same schools isn’t enough to ensure their success.

Where educators have long spoken of the achievemen­t gap — the difference­s in academic performanc­e between white students and black, and affluent and poor — some are now focusing on the so-called opportunit­y gap.

“‘Achievemen­t gap’ situates students as deficient,” said Vanessa Dodo Seriki, codirector of the Center for Innovation in Urban Education at Loyola University Maryland. “‘Opportunit­y gap’ suggests that some students are afforded opportunit­ies to experience academic success while others are not.

“These missed opportunit­ies are a result of structural inequaliti­es, personal bias and deficit perspectiv­es that are commonly held about black and brown children.”

It’s not unique to Howard. Nationwide, about half of all black, Hispanic and Native American students aren’t enrolling in the AP classes they’re qualified for, according to the College Board. And studies show that younger, high-performing black students are less likely than their white counterpar­ts to be placed in courses for the gifted and talented.

Educators and academics say it’s one of the nation’s most pressing challenges.

“Even if these kids are performing on par with other groups, we tend to look right past them,” said Jonathan Plucker, a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Education. “There is unquestion­ably bias in the system there. This is a pervasive problem.”

Howard leaders say they have been working to close racial disparitie­s in advanced courses and programs — work they say is crucial if they are to move the 55,000-student district forward.

Superinten­dent Renee Foose said the effort has required the system to confront a harsh truth.

“We’re battling a culture and mindset of ‘Some kids can, and some kids can’t,’ ” Foose said. “We’re not giving students the opportunit­ies they’re entitled to.”

Researcher­s have studied the opportunit­y gap at the high school level. Less well-documented is what happens in the years before entry to those classes. The Howard County data is a rare look that reveals black students at every level are missing opportunit­ies for which they are qualified.

School officials said they began finding evidence of this in 2012, when Foose took the helm of the school system.

Black students who were demonstrat­ing an ability to perform at or above grade level were being placed in remedial courses, Foose said. Elementary school students were being excluded from screening for gifted and talented courses, losing their chance to get on the track for high-level courses through middle school.

In high school, black students who were showing the potential for success in AP courses on standardiz­ed exams were not given an opportunit­y to take those classes, while their white and Asian classmates who were not meeting the threshold were.

“There was a lot of gatekeepin­g that has a lot to do with expectatio­ns and mindset,” said Grace Chesney, who heads Howard County’s accountabi­lity office. “The data showed that.”

Foose has ordered more testing to spot bright students who might have been missed in the past. The district is taking other measures to eliminate barriers to advanced courses, such as dropping some prerequisi­tes, and encouragin­g students and their families to get more involved in the course selection process.

Those efforts, begun in the 2012-13 school year, have put Howard County at the forefront statewide in addressing the opstudent portunity gap, Plucker said. But challenges remain.

Outside looking in

Mikey sat in Eli’s AP English class, taking detailed notes on “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Zora Neale Hurston’s 1937 novel about an African-American woman coming of age in early 20th-century Florida. He says he found himself growing more resentful by the minute.

He knew that the connection he felt to characters in the book would be shortlived, and he’d soon be back to shallow conversati­ons about characters in “The Crucible” in his regular English 11 class.

He had asked to sit in on Eli’s AP English class — the one he says his 10th-grade teacher questioned his ability to thrive in, at the same time she encouraged his white friend to take a chance.

The teacher, who asked not to be named, said she did not want to comment on the students’ accounts of their conversati­ons because she did not want to diminish their experience­s. She said she made her best call at the time. She said she was worried that Mikey wasn’t ready for the AP class, and she didn’t want to set him up to fail.

But the window into what could have been made him angry.

“I didn’t feel that was fair, that they get to learn about my culture’s history,” he said. “I feel like I missed out. The way they discussed the book, the way they took notes, it just felt right.”

The experience, Mikey said, was emblematic of most of his educationa­l career — he has been stuck in classes where he feels he doesn’t belong, and watching as opportunit­ies pass him by. When he was in fourth grade, his mother moved to Columbia because of its reputation for educationa­l opportunit­y and diversity. But he doesn’t feel those promises worked out for him.

In middle school, he felt that because he was talkative and liked to have fun in class, his teachers had written him off as average.

By 10th grade, when he says his teacher asked him whether he really wanted to take AP English, he felt discourage­d. To get into the classes, students need either a recommenda­tion from a teacher, or the parent or has to sign a waiver.

After talking to his mother, Mikey decided to follow his teacher’s advice.

It wasn’t until 11th grade, he said, that a teacher told him he should be taking AP courses. She was a minority, too.

“I never had a white teacher tell me, ‘You have the ability to do this,’ ” he said, “because they’ve already given that opportunit­y to another white person.”

Eli could understand why his friend felt that way.

For as long as Eli can remember, he had been challenged to do better — especially when he failed. The 17-year-old had attended schools in Howard County since third grade.

“I’ve been hearing for years about how much great potential I have — and I just needed to get things together,” he said. “I was definitely given the benefit of the doubt in ways I know other students weren’t.”

One of the students he meant was Mikey. Eli shared his friend’s disappoint­ment when he was promoted to AP English and Mikey wasn’t.

Uncovering racial bias

The students’ suspicions that their educationa­l trajectori­es were guided by their race mirrors research on the subject.

Researcher­s from Johns Hopkins who studied teachers’ expectatio­ns of their students concluded that their views differed depending on the races of the student and the teacher.

In a national study of 4,000 teachers and 6,000 students, they reported white teachers expected significan­tly less academic success from black students than black teachers did.

When teachers evaluated the same black student, the researcher­s said, white teachers are almost 40 percent less likely than black teachers to expect that the student will graduate from high school, and 30 percent less likely to predict the student will complete a four-year college degree.

“If you have two teachers saying different things, one of them is wrong,” said study co-author Nicholas Papageorge, a Hopkins economist.

The teachers generally agreed on their predicted outcomes for white students, the researcher­s said.

In some cases, Papageorge said, the teachers’ expectatio­ns could be accurate.

But he warned they can also be selffulfil­ling prophecies: Teachers might devote more time and attention to students they believe, consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly, have greater chances of success.

In recent years, school districts around the country — including Howard County — have begun to focus on getting teachers to recognize their implicit bias through training in cultural competence.

“I don’t think we’re trying to root out racists,” Papageorge said.

“If we were, we could just go find them and fire them.”

“What I’m worried about is the wellintent­ioned white teacher who thinks a kid has a slightly lower chance of going to college and reallocate­s resources away from them . ... Teachers’ expectatio­ns matter.”

The teachers

Foose, who has publicly battled the Howard County school board over power

asked her whether the class was the right fit.The student told Leonard that she helped her family’s business by cleaning offices after school. Even if she got a C, the student said, she felt the class would help prepare her for college.

“I shifted from ‘AP is for students who are ready to handle the rigor of college coursework right now,’ to ‘AP is for students who want to build themselves into the college students they want to become,’ ” she said. “And I hope I changed from that point on from a gatekeeper to a gate opener.”

When Leonard arrived at Hammond, she brought a program she started at her previous school. Called “Step It Up,” it encourages students to push themselves to take one higher-level class each year. She began holding assemblies to rally students behind the idea, showing graphics that linked educationa­l attainment to yearly earnings. She hosted a panel discussion with upperclass­men talking about the benefits of taking higher-level courses.

For the past three years, AP teachers have been meeting monthly after school on their own time to talk about strategies to support minority students in their classes.

“I haven’t had to drag teachers along on this journey,” she said. “They’re active partners because it’s the right thing for kids.”

When teacher Cherilyn Brown looks out at her regular, predominan­tly black science classes, she is reminded that there’s still work to be done.

“I see one or two Caucasian students, and I know Hammond doesn’t look that way,” she said. “And I think, ‘What’s going on?’ ”

Brown, who is black, tells her black students that they have a stake in increasing representa­tion in higher-level courses.

“I want you to step it up, and go to a higher level, because if you look around, we all look the same,” she says. “And that is concerning.”

Brown teaches both regular and AP courses. She is the only black AP teacher at Hammond.

Hammond, like other Columbia schools, is experienci­ng the resegregat­ion that has transforme­d the core of Howard County over the past two decades. Just four years ago, the student body was 40 percent black and 40 percent white. Today, the black student population remains the same — but the white population has dropped to 27 percent.

The visionary developer James Rouse built Columbia 50 years ago on the ideals of diversity and inclusion. But the planned community has not been immune to the self-segregatio­n that has divided cities and suburbs across the country.

In the past two decades, Columbia has lost many affluent and middle-class families with young children. The city has seen a white flight of families to outer Howard County, where there are single-family homes and little affordable housing. In their place, minority and low-income families from Baltimore and other areas, drawn by Columbia’s affordabil­ity and vision, have moved into housing complexes.

When it became clear in the early 2000s that housing patterns were threatenin­g Rouse’s vision for Columbia, those carrying out his legacy had one source of hope. The schools, said Alton J. Scavo of the Rouse Co., would be the final test.

Leonard doesn’t know and doesn’t dwell on where the white kids at Hammond went. She focuses instead on where the black kids are. She is guided by an adage from Kenya’s Masai people: If you want to know about the health of the community, ask how the children are.

“When I think about that for Hammond, the question is, ‘And how are the black children?’ ” Leonard said. “Because as our black children go at Hammond, so goes the school.”

Being black in AP

One morning in February, Leonard invited a group of Hammond High School seniors to a school conference room. They sat around a table and spoke about what it’s like to be black in AP courses.

One by one, the students talked about what inspired them to enroll, whether they learned culturally relevant content, what help was available to them once they got in, whether they felt the need to “code switch” — to “act white” — to fit in. Did they find it harder to raise their hands in class — to risk being black and wrong?

“I only started taking AP classes this year because I didn’t think I was good enough, and now I’m thriving ” Mikey said. “I feel like so much time was wasted ... if only someone had told me earlier.”

Senior Josh Burrell had been taking advanced courses since middle school.

“I rely on other minorities for help because even though I’ve known Caucasian students all my life, there’s a dissonance,” he said.

Senior Victoria Howard said her parents had pushed her to take gifted and talented classes since elementary school.

“It’s hard to participat­e because you don’t want to put yourself out there; you don’t want to take risks,” she said.

Leonard stood in the back of the room, listening, her back pressed against the wall, her eyes squinting, sometimes closing in long blinks. She is planning to hold a focus group with 100 minority students this year as part of her effort to get more of them into advanced classes. She says these tough conversati­ons are necessary.

“How they’re experienci­ng it is not the way we want them to be experienci­ng it,” she said, adding that it’s disappoint­ing, “but it’s also real.”

She said getting students into higherleve­l courses is just the beginning. Now she has to figure out how to make them feel they belong.

Inside the cocktail party

This year, as a senior, Mikey Peterson, 17, decided to pursue AP classes. He asked for teacher recommenda­tions for three classes. He got only one recommenda­tion, and signed waivers for the other two classes. He is now in all three.

“I know that the AP setting is where I should be, but where people don’t want me to be,” he said. “And that’s true for a lot of black students. It’s kind of sad.”

Mikey and Eli now share an AP class. But they say their experience­s couldn’t be any different.

Mikey, usually a vocal and outgoing teenager, is almost muted in this class, reluctant to raise his hand.

Some of that is because he feels that his classmates have an advantage over him — they have been in advanced courses together most of their high school careers, and they have relationsh­ips with the teacher.

But, he says, there’s a part of him that feels that what he has to say is less valuable because he is black.

“Whenever I open my mouth, I feel dumb,” he said. “I feel like I get swatted aside because a white person could have answered it better.”

Eli Sauerwalt, 17, notices that his friend is quieter than others in the class. He says the same about most of his other black classmates. When they speak up, he takes notice.

“If one of those four kids is talking, they know what they’re talking about,” he says. “They’re not going to be disputed.”

Class is different for him, he says, because he’s white. He has no hesitation about speaking up. Instead, his level of participat­ion in class depends on how awake he is that day.

Elizabeth Stocklin teaches AP English at Hammond.

On the first day of school, she says, when her 12th-graders walk into her AP English class, the results of 11 years of education are obvious. She can tell the kids who have “been in these rigorous classes since they were in pull-ups,” and the ones who’ve just started in the last year or so.

These divisions don’t always fall along racial lines, she says, but she’s learning that for her black students who are new to AP, there’s an extra level of discomfort.

Stocklin, who is white, says she is happy to see color in her classroom increasing.

When asked if it influences her instructio­n, she answers, “I hope not.”

“I have very shy African-American students in my AP classes, and I think they have a lot of powerful things to say,” she said. “I want to make sure they have a stage for that to happen, and that they don’t get lost in the chatter of the cocktail party that’s traveled together.”

Regret, and opportunit­y

Howard County didn’t begin to integrate its schools until 1964 — 10 years after the Supreme Court ordered desegregat­ion nationwide in Brown v. Board of Education.

Five years ago, the school board passed a proclamati­on expressing “profound regret” for maintainin­g “segregated and unequal public schools both prior, and subsequent to, the 1954 ruling.”

The board said it committed “to ensure that each student, regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, disability, or socioecono­mic status, receives the educationa­l opportunit­ies necessary to ensure the fulfillmen­t of the student’s potential and dreams.”

But by that measure, students and educators are finding the promises of the Supreme Court and the school board aren’t enough.

Some question whether integratio­n is, in fact, the way to create equal opportunit­y for all.

“If I was white, I feel like I would be spoken to more about the opportunit­ies I have,” Mikey said. “I feel like I’ve missed out on so much.”

Eli agrees. He says he has enjoyed hearing his black classmates offer alternativ­e narratives to European history and interpreta­tions of literature. He appreciate­s being able to sit next to his best friend in class. Integratio­n, he said, “specifical­ly benefits white students a lot.”

“In the way that things work now, white students are comfortabl­y being exposed to other narratives that we’re not familiar with and given the opportunit­y to learn from them,” Eli said.

Josh Burrell has decided to attend a historical­ly black college next year. He believes that teachers pushing him to take advanced courses helped him secure a full ride to North Carolina A&T, boosted his self-confidence, and taught him how to work alongside people he doesn’t always like or feel comfortabl­e with.

But even with all of his opportunit­y, he said he yearns for the family feel that he remembers from his regular classes.

“Minorities stick together because you all will have similar experience­s,” he said. “The experience­s of feeling lessthan, that you have to work a little bit harder to be heard, or work harder to be seen as equal.”

Victoria Howard said being in classes with black students made her feel more at ease, but she believes “nothing changes if everyone’s just too comfortabl­e.”

“Exposing people to being around different kinds of people is how we acclimate and how we change,” she said. “And that’s important when we leave high school. Because out in the world, you don’t get to pick who you’re around.”

As they get ready to graduate, Mikey and Eli are once again ready to veer off onto different paths.

Eli will take classes at community college. He was accepted at a four-year school, but says he didn’t get the financial aid he needed to attend.

“It’s not so much that community college is a lesser thing for me,” Eli said. “I knew I did the best I could. It just doesn’t feel like enough.”

Mikey felt embarrasse­d and envious in the early winter months as his friends’ acceptance letters to their top-choice colleges began rolling in. He put on a false smile, wondering if his would come. Even though he wasn’t surprised, given some of his past grades, his heart sunk with every rejection letter.

He finally secured admission to West Virginia University a few weeks ago. It wasn’t his first choice. But he believes he’s prepared. In two of the AP classes, he’s done well, and he has more self-confidence, more sense of personal responsibi­lity for his future.

“I’m never going to be the smartest person in the room,” he said, “but I’m going to try my damn hardest.”

Still, without any scholarshi­ps, Mikey says he’ll be “dangerousl­y in debt” getting himself through college. He might not even be able to afford his AP exams.

He sees himself in his 4- and 5-yearold brothers, who are in prekinderg­arten and kindergart­en. They’re outgoing, talkative, active and enthusiast­ic about homework.

“I hope they get more chances,” he said. “Get to go further at a younger age.”

 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Hammond High School student Eli Sauerwalt says he likes hearing his black classmates offer alternativ­e narratives to European history and interpreta­tions of literature in class. He says that integratio­n “specifical­ly benefits white students a lot.”
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN Hammond High School student Eli Sauerwalt says he likes hearing his black classmates offer alternativ­e narratives to European history and interpreta­tions of literature in class. He says that integratio­n “specifical­ly benefits white students a lot.”
 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? “We’re battling a culture and mindset of ‘Some kids can, and some kids can’t,’ ” says Howard County schools Superinten­dent Renee Foose.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN “We’re battling a culture and mindset of ‘Some kids can, and some kids can’t,’ ” says Howard County schools Superinten­dent Renee Foose.
 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Students at Hammond High School in Columbia meet in a focus group to discuss issues relevant to students of color, including minority representa­tion in Advanced Placement classes.
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN Students at Hammond High School in Columbia meet in a focus group to discuss issues relevant to students of color, including minority representa­tion in Advanced Placement classes.
 ??  ??
 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Hammond High student Josh Burrell said he’s been taking advanced courses since middle school. “I rely on other minorities for help because even though I’ve known Caucasian students all my life, there’s a dissonance,” he said.
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN Hammond High student Josh Burrell said he’s been taking advanced courses since middle school. “I rely on other minorities for help because even though I’ve known Caucasian students all my life, there’s a dissonance,” he said.

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