The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ghosts of city’s racial divide haunt APS

Schools reflect the near total segregatio­n of Atlanta’s communitie­s.

- By Kamau Bobb Kamau Bobb is the senior director of the Constellat­ions Center for Equity in Computing at Georgia Tech and serves as an alternate on the APS community superinten­dent search panel.

Atlanta Public Schools is conducting a search for its next superinten­dent. The most recent superinten­dent, Lisa Herring, like her predecesso­r, Meria Carstarphe­n, was dismissed by the Atlanta Board of Education. By the time the next one is chosen, the district will have been led by four superinten­dents in four years, all of whom arrived with stellar qualificat­ions amid grand fanfare and soaring expectatio­ns.

While the search will be conducted by a reputable agency that will surely exercise rigorous inquiry into the qualities and contextual understand­ing the district needs in a leader, the question remains: What exactly is the APS superinten­dent expected to do?

We are expecting them to fight American ghosts and win. It is not a fair fight.

We are in a season where many of the foundation­al pillars of modern American life have been upended. A woman’s right to choose has been taken away. Affirmativ­e action in higher education has been taken away. The right to vote is again under attack. Books are being banned in schools, and teachers fired for exploring the fullness of human complexity. Proposals are being considered to arm teachers such that they might shoot people — even their own students — whom they perceive to be threats.

In such a season, it is necessary to step away from educationa­l platitudes and nice-sounding slogans that wrap reality in specious hope. We need to confront the truth unvarnishe­d. Atlanta is one of the most segregated cities in the United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city is approximat­ely 50% Black and 40% white. Black and white people in the city, however, live in near absolute segregatio­n — Black people in the south and west, white people

in the north and east.

The schools reflect that segregatio­n. In APS, there are 10 traditiona­l high schools. As of October 2022, seven did not have a single white student. Without a single exception, all of the white high school students in the system largely attend only three of the traditiona­l schools — Maynard Jackson, Midtown and North Atlanta.

The 1954 Supreme Court Brown v. Board of Education decision desegregat­ing schools is sacrosanct in Democratic enclaves like Atlanta. Seventy years on, however, it is clear integratio­n of public schools in Atlanta is not going to happen. Hence, we have a permanent state of schools separated by race. Even in the three schools that white students attend, they are cloistered in marquee programs — Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate, Advanced Placement, honors and gifted.

At Maynard Jackson, my daughter’s alma mater, the school population is 73% Black and 16% white. Within the Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate Class of 2023, 20% of students were Black and 63% were white — a 52% underrepre­sentation of Black students, and a 44% overrepres­entation of white students.

To the extent the schools where white students attend are diverse, the racial population­s are migratory groups on different paths. They are merely passing each other by as the gentrifica­tion of neighborho­ods displaces Black families to make room for newly

arrived white ones. When we choose to acknowledg­e segregatio­n, we often attribute it to reasonable variables that deflect responsibi­lity to intractabl­e societal forces — housing patterns, class, historical inertia, zoning, academic preference­s — but the American narrative affirms massive resistance by white people to have their children educated alongside Black children. On this point, the APS enrollment data is irrefutabl­e.

In his 2002 book “Radical Equations: Civil Rights from Mississipp­i to the Algebra Project,” Robert Moses makes the case that algebra is the fluency of modernity. The ability to handle the abstractio­n of variables as meaningful representa­tions of earthly factors is not only the key to higher education, but a critical portal for Black children emerging from a fraught educationa­l past into a technology-driven future.

On the 2022 Georgia Milestones, 12% of Black students in APS were proficient in Algebra I, while 76% of white students were proficient or better. In Moses’ language, the gate to citizenshi­p in the technical era is closed.

We are in a time when states like Florida have enshrined into law educationa­l standards that suggest, “slaves developed skills, which in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” The Georgia Profession­al Standards Commission banned the words “diversity,” “equity” and “inclusion” in all teacher prep programs. The veil covering

galling racism is wearing thin. In an environmen­t like this, there are surely people who think Black students’ educationa­l underachie­vement is because they are Black. Hostility toward Black academic achievemen­t is real, whether acknowledg­ed or not. Such is the environmen­t lying in wait for the APS superinten­dent.

Racial integratio­n in APS schools is not, nor can it be, the solution. It is not going to happen. Additional­ly, many Black people are adamant that the attempt to desegregat­e schools was the undoing of the best of the Black educationa­l enterprise in the mid- to late 20th century. They think it was a bad idea from the outset. Making racially separate schools equal was the better route, but that is incommensu­rate with the American ideal of a multiethni­c, multiracia­l democratic society. The nuance here is that the goal is not to segregate schools, but to operate on the premise that they are.

So what then is an APS superinten­dent expected to do?

Under circumstan­ces of schools separated by race, there is no path to real success, however heroic the superinten­dent may be. In some ways the superinten­dent is merely the face of a cultural salve that allows public comfort in a modern myth — that public education offers equal opportunit­y for Atlanta’s Black and white students. It gives us someone to blame for the perennial outcomes that continuall­y affirm that the myth is just that, a myth.

Racial segregatio­n is an American ghost. It has a venomous history and it fights. It scares us so much, we struggle to call it by name for fear of what it would reveal of us in the city too busy to hate. The superinten­dent cannot equalize the outcomes for Black and white students alone. Segregatio­n, the concentrat­ion of Black poverty and social immobility are a scourge and render the task too tall for the school system by itself. No major urban center in the country has solved this problem. It is a problem that has to be reimagined.

Making Black schools equal to white schools is a far more comprehens­ive task than simply applying universal standards and expectatio­ns to unequal schools and hoping for equal outcomes. It will require a more far-reaching approach that rests on a new problem frame. Comprehens­ive neighborho­od transforma­tion is central. New governance and funding structures will be required to bolster the educationa­l enterprise, especially those that focus on concentrat­ions of Black students and communitie­s attempting to break generation­al chains to underperfo­rming schools.

As a matter of civic conveyance, the responsibi­lity has to be distribute­d. Above all, we have to change our expectatio­ns. Pendular focus on literacy, or numeracy, or social emotional health is not enough to exorcise the system of its ghost of segregatio­n. Making our separate schools equal is the only way. It has to be the Atlanta way.

 ?? AJC 2018 ?? Lisa Herring’s predecesso­r, APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n, despite her energetic and nontraditi­onal approach, was also outmatched against the ghosts of the city’s racial divide.
AJC 2018 Lisa Herring’s predecesso­r, APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n, despite her energetic and nontraditi­onal approach, was also outmatched against the ghosts of the city’s racial divide.
 ?? AJC 2021 ?? Atlanta Public Schools Superinten­dent Dr. Lisa Herring was unable to surmount the realities of the city’s ongoing segregated geography, the author of this piece suggests.
AJC 2021 Atlanta Public Schools Superinten­dent Dr. Lisa Herring was unable to surmount the realities of the city’s ongoing segregated geography, the author of this piece suggests.
 ?? ?? Kamau Bobb
Kamau Bobb

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