New York Post

A Forgotten Hero Of Black History

- ROBERT MARANTO & SHAKA MITCHELL

THIS Black History Month, let’s acknowledg­e the 100th anniversar­y of the birth and 50th anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of Marcus Foster, one of the 20th century’s finest educators and the first black, big-city school superinten­dent. It’s a story seemingly out of Hollywood but in fact born from lived experience. Foster believed education was the surest way to achieve the American dream, a dream written about in equally applicable terms in our country’s founding documents but historical­ly denied to children of color. He left a legacy of success in Philadelph­ia and was poised to do more as Oakland superinten­dent when he was murdered in a hail of cyanide filled bullets fired by the Marxist Symbionese Liberation Army (of Patty Hearst infamy). Foster’s life gives us several important lessons today:

Black Minds Matter: Foster excelled in grammar school and later at Cheyney State College (now Cheyney University) where he graduated with a teaching degree in 1947. At a time when all-black schools were often tools of oppression, Foster could neverthele­ss see the tight relationsh­ip between education and economic mobility in post-WWII America.

He started his teaching career on a quest to convince other adults that the minds of black students were of equal importance and capability as those of any other students. This expectatio­n alone was often counter-cultural.

Much attention has rightly been given to the idea that we should be more protective of black lives; Foster knew black minds are just as integral. Yet now, as then, a shockingly small number of black students are proficient in reading and math (17% and 15%, respective­ly). Remediatin­g these statistics are good first steps in honoring Foster’s legacy.

Families Still Seek the Warmth of Other Suns (and Schools): When he was 3 years old, Foster’s family moved from Georgia to Philadelph­ia, part of the 20th century Great Migration chronicled in Isabel Wilkerson’s best seller, “The Warmth of Other Suns.” Thousands of blacks left the Jim Crow South in search of opportunit­ies in the North and West.

Today, black families still seek great opportunit­ies, in the form of schools. Polling from 2022 shows that 60% of parents prefer a school other than their local, public school, suggesting a strong desire for the freedom to choose one’s path.

Excellence + Empathy = Success: In education debates, you are often either in the “excellence” camp or the “empathy” camp. Foster believed both were vital.

When a school principal delivered a boy to Foster with instructio­ns to “fix him so he can’t walk,” Foster instead chose to “defuse conflicts with dialogue and l understand­ing,” a hallmark of his career.

As principal at the disruptive Catto Disciplina­ry School, which served secondary students expelled from elsewhere, Foster reached out to parents, brought back extracurri­cular activities, improved academics and developed vocational programs.

He also reoriented counselors away from doing paperwork and toward helping kids. Amazingly, parents began to request that their children be assigned to Catto.

Foster also turned around what was considered the worst comprehens­ive high school in Philadelph­ia, Simon Gratz, by improving outreach to parents, imposing structure and bringing back extracurri­cular activities like dance. He also created “storefront schools” to serve parents and students after hours.

Great educators, he insisted, could “break through generation­s of non-achievemen­t and sell the idea of college to these students.” The results: Foster’s program more than doubled college acceptance­s and halved the dropout rate. Today’s Education Challenges

Are Solvable: Many fear that three years of COVID disruption will wreak havoc on K-12 students. But consider Foster’s time: outright racial segregatio­n, under-resourced black neighborho­ods, the social and political upheaval of the 1960s and 70s. Despite these challenges, Foster built a cross-racial, bipartisan coalition focusing on student learning.

Today’s problems are serious and warrant responsibl­e solutions. But they are no more intractabl­e than the challenges Foster overcame.

We’d do well to remember Marcus Foster and the lessons gleaned from his mixture of leadership, courage and hope.

Robert Maranto is the 21st Century Chair in Leadership in the Department of Education Reform at the University of Arkansas Shaka Mitchell is a senior fellow at the American Federation for Children.

‘ A story seemingly out of Hollywood but ’ in fact born from lived experience.

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