The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Diversity Middletown’s greatest weapon to close opportunit­y gap

- By Michael Conner Michael T. Conner is superinten­dent of Middletown Public Schools. He is a former administra­tor in New Haven, Hartford, Windham and Norwalk who began his career as an elementary school teacher. He lives in Middletown with his wife and 3-

MIDDLETOWN — I was born and raised in Connecticu­t by my mother, a woman who was a strong advocate for my education. Looking back, I have no idea how she was able to be such a fierce and tireless champion of my education, while working incredibly hard as a single parent to provide for her only child.

Some of her accomplish­ments are: meeting with my teachers on a daily basis and demanding more rigorous coursework to ensure I was prepared for college. Forcing school administra­tors to see past their own lowered expectatio­ns because of my race. As a kid, my mother’s advocacy was something I took for granted until many years later in my academic and profession­al career.

I grew up attending a parochial school before transition­ing to a public high school in my freshman year. In the entirety of my primary education, I was never taught by a person of color. My stark reality was being one of a mere handful of minorities in each of my schools. I grew up acutely aware of this racial disparity, and the resulting implicit biases I faced because of the color of my skin.

This experience is the foundation of my career in education. I didn’t want a kid like me — especially one without his or her own advocate — to be treated with the same low expectatio­ns. Driven by a desire to ensure that all children have access to a high-quality, equitable education, I persevered to work within a system I wanted to fundamenta­lly change. First, as a fourth-grade teacher and today as superinten­dent.

To seek positive change for students, I constantly seek solutions for fundamenta­l change. What is one approach to rectify this quandary from my personal educationa­l experience? Increasing a diverse teacher and leader pipeline in our schools.

A Brookings report points to the impact just one teacher of color can have on minority student performanc­e, attendance and even discipline. This focus matters. I’ve seen this narrative throughout my career — including in Middletown. The demographi­c opportunit­y gap within school districts often exceeds the poverty opportunit­y gap. Our students need to see themselves reflected back in teachers, counselors, mentors and leaders.

We can’t do it alone. Partnershi­ps are critical to ensure that a pipeline of diverse teachers are tackling this gap head on. That’s why I’m proud to deepen district collaborat­ions with national, innovative teacher preparatio­n organizati­ons like the Relay Graduate School of Education, which enables Middletown to tap into its rigorously trained diverse pool of teachers in residence. In last year’s Connecticu­t cohort, more than 60 percent of relay students self-identified as people of color.

When relay teachers enter classrooms, kids who look like me across Middletown will benefit from an experience I never had. That diversity is our greatest weapon and the greatest gift I can think of giving my students.

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