Posted 2012-September-12, 09:21
Race is a minefield, that's a fact. A little history of Maryland education. We have something called the HSA (High School Assessment I think it is). When these were first proposed as graduation requirements both my wife and I were drafted to help prepare the math tests. I was impressed, but skeptical. Can the kids, most of them, really do all this? Of course reality set in and in the final form the exams expected much less. Still, there was a ruckus, and it was very much phrased in terms of race. Kids would not be graduating, and it would be disproportionally African American kids who would not be graduating. Of course this could have been phrased as it being disproportionally kids from disadvantaged backgrounds who would not be graduating, but it was not primarily framed that way. The solution was to have kids who failed the exams twice have an alternative route to graduation.
I will be delighted if we ever reach the stage where we don't feel the need to check the color of a kid's face before we decide whether we favor these exams, but the fact is that we are not there yet. Progress maybe, but not there yet.
For me, with my priorities, I had different objections to the way this played out. The eventual form of the exams does not demand much, and the heavy concentration on getting kids through takes time and resources away from more advanced classes. My personal experience with minimal requirements came in my 1952 gym class, freshman year in high school. We were all (the boys only, this was 1952!) required to run a mile in six minutes. I did it, first try, Until around November or so I would sit on the grass with a slowly increasing number of other students while the rest of them slogged their way around the course. Maybe all of should have been expected to do our best instead of having this arbitrarily defined minimum?
Ken