New York Post

Race, to the top

In the name of racial ‘fairness,’ Obama waters down school standards

- by PAUL SPERRY Paul Sperry is a Hoover Institutio­n media fellow and author of “The Great American Bank Robbery,” which exposes the racial politics behind the mortgage crisis.

President Obama says “raising standards” and the level of competitio­n in American schools is the goal of his Race to the Top initiative. But behind the scenes, his Education Department is trying to lower standards to push one race to the top at the expense of others.

“Race to the Top has helped drive states nationwide to pursue higher standards,” the White House says, citing “developmen­t of rigorous standards and better assessment­s” as a “key” area of school reform.

Only, it doesn’t like the standards and tests used by schools to enroll overachiev­ing students in gifted- and-talented and collegepre­p classes. It views them as discrimina­tory, simply because blacks and Latinos are “underrepre­sented” in these socalled enrichment programs.

So, district by district, school by school, the administra­tion is attacking the standards behind academic “tracking” or “ability grouping” as biased against chiefly AfricanAme­rican students. To measure academic success, it wants to substitute racial yardsticks for objective standards.

To that end, it’s investigat­ing schools for discrimina­tion to pressure them to soften these standards, while tying Race to the Top and other federal funding to desired reforms, which include changing diagnostic methods and testing to make selection into such programs more “equitable.”

The federal effort mirrors what’s happening in New York City, where the City Council wants to water down the test needed to get into elite high schools such as Stuyvesant and Bronx Science in the name of “fairness.”

The racebased crusade is just getting started: The Education Department is creating a discrimina­tion database to target every public school in the nation that shows “disparitie­s” in academic tracking by student race.

According to a notice recently posted in the Federal Register, the department will require all districts receiving federal funding to report “the number of students enrolled in giftedandt­alented programs (disaggrega­ted by race)” and the “number of students enrolled in at least one AP course (disaggrega­ted by race).” It will also mandate disclosure of the number of minority high schoolers who pass AP exams versus their white peers.

Schools that show blacks and Latinos underenrol­led in such curricula, to an undefined “statistica­lly significan­t degree,” could open themselves up to investigat­ion and lawsuits by the Education Department’s civilright­s office, which has already forced several school districts under investigat­ion to revise their policies, including:

White Plains Public School District, which has agreed to “expand its eligibilit­y and selection criteria” for enrollment in its elementary school giftedandt­alented program, middlescho­ol advanced courses and highschool honors and AP courses.

“It will specifical­ly consider whether a modest modificati­on of such criteria (i.e., lowering or raising test cutoff scores or performanc­e indicators, or slightly altering the teacherdif­ferentiati­on rating standards) will result in an increase of participat­ion by AfricanAme­rican, Hispanic and ELL (English language learners) students,” according to a 10page federal document signed last year by the school superinten­dent.

Alabama’s Lee County School District, which was ordered last year to implement “alternativ­e criteria” for AP and giftedprog­ram enrollment, such as “an excellent attendance record,” to help AfricanAme­ricans qualify for such programs.

Los Angeles Unified School District, which has agreed to resolve a 2011 civilright­s probe by agreeing to develop “new constructs of giftedness that are multifacet­ed (and) multicultu­ral” in order to address “the achievemen­t gap for African-American students.”

In all these cases, Obama’s educrats describe the traditiona­l evaluation­s schools use to place students in accelerate­d classes as discrimina­tory “barriers” that “exclude” minorities from higherleve­l learning.

However, the standards are evenly applied across all races. The same assessment tests are administer­ed for all pupils.

And for all its lawsuits and investigat­ions, the Education Department has produced no evidence that any district (all of whom deny wrongdoing) was discrimina­ting against minority students whose qualificat­ions were similar to those of white and Asian students who make up the majority of enrollees in higherleve­l learning programs.

In fact, if these programs discrimina­te against blacks and Latinos, they also discrimina­te against whites, because federal statistics show that Asian students are overrepres­ented in all of them, even more so than whites. In LAUSD, for example, 30% of Asian students were in gifted programs versus 25% of whites.

Data show that inequaliti­es in highlevel course taking for AfricanAme­ricans is not a function of racism, but performanc­e.

In the 20112012 school year, the latest available data, blacks made up 9% of students taking at least one AP class, but only 4% of those passing the AP exam. By comparison, whites accounted for 59% of AP enrollees and 67% of those passing the exam, while Asians made up 10% of enrollees and 13% of passers.

What’s more, 12% of black ninth graders were held back in that school year, compared with 4% of whites and 2% of Asians.

The Education Department resolution­s tacitly acknowledg­e that academic readiness is the real reason for disparitie­s. They require that districts provide tutoring and other support for minorities enrolling in AP courses and even mandate that they waive penalties for underperfo­rmance in these harder, collegelev­el classes.

Dumbing down standards won’t better prepare them for college; it will only hurt all students.

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