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DIVERSITY IN THE CLASSROOM (A Liberal sees the light!)
Santa Barbara News - Press ^ | 2/24/05 | Camilla Cohee

Posted on 02/25/2005 8:16:55 PM PST by WindOracle

Advocate for staying joins fleeing parents

Harding Elementary School PTA President Meredith Brace has led a battle for several years to stop her white neighbors from transferring out of the heavily Latino Westside campus.

Now she's joining them, saying she's not willing to make her son the guinea pig any longer.

The Braces are like hundreds of other local families who, over the years, have sought transfers out of neighborhood schools that are filled with mostly poor Latino children.

"I'm gone," said Mrs. Brace, who on Tuesday requested and was granted a transfer for her first-grade son out of Harding and into the more affluent Hope School, within the nearby Hope Elementary District. "I've just got to the point where, 'Sorry guys, I need what's best for my kids and there's a school that's two miles away that offers all those things I want.' "

About 40 percent of the 462 students at Hope School are there on transfers from the Goleta or Santa Barbara elementary districts.

Some school officials and neighborhood families view Mrs. Brace's departure as a red flag. If someone who has advocated so fiercely against white flight won't stick it out, who will?

A liberal whose father is Superior Court Judge George Eskin and stepmother is former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, Mrs. Brace had been considered over the years as the Great White Hope for Harding.

"This is a major blow," said Santa Barbara school trustee Bob Noel. "Meredith was kind of like Supermom in terms of doing things for her school. . . . You can read racism into this, but I read more of an issue of social class. People don't want to look and see their kid is in a classroom where most of the students are underachievers and where friendship circle possibilities are very, very small because they don't speak the same language."

Harding is 90 percent Latino, 6 percent white. Hope is 73 percent white, 20 percent Latino. Hope families have raised enough money every year to keep on staff an array of specialists in art, music, computers and science -- all the "extras" Mrs. Brace wants for her son, who is 7, and her 4-year-old daughter.

As PTA president, Mrs. Brace said she has tried to start after-school enrichment programs in art and theater at Harding.

"We made it so affordable, $20 for a six- to eight-week session. We told everybody, 'Come on, do something extra for your kids.' We had so few people sign up, we had to eliminate a lot of the classes," she said. "I've met some very lovely people, but we have nothing in common. Every time my husband and I would go over for an event, my husband would feel like it was his first time. We haven't made any friends."

Harding parent Cristina Hernandez said she's seen the school's racial mix change, but that Mrs. Brace shouldn't give up.

"I've been here 14 years now, and all of a sudden we turned around and all the white parents had gone," she said, speaking in Spanish. "They don't want their children side by side with our children. (Mrs. Brace) shouldn't leave. She should stay and keep fighting."

It was about three years ago, before her son entered kindergarten, that Mrs. Brace started going door to door touting Harding's achievements, trying to convince her neighbors to join her in giving the school a try. She even took on the PTA president post before her son had entered kindergarten.

Once her son started, she remained PTA president, volunteered in the classroom, boosted fund-raising efforts, and continued to hold regular neighborhood meetings to make other white families feel comfortable with the campus. While she said she's not bilingual, she used the Spanish she picked up while living in Costa Rica and Mexico to try to connect with Latino parents.

Some of the white families she had convinced to enroll their kids at Harding later bailed out. She said her son has struggled to make friends.

"He hasn't been invited to a birthday party. There is absolutely no after-school interaction," she said. "For his birthday, he invited four of his classmates. Only one came."

Then she was miffed that her skills -- she's a credentialed librarian -- weren't capitalized on in her son's classroom.

Another Harding mother and friend of the Braces, Brenda McDonald, said she had independently decided to transfer her kindergartner out of the campus. Mrs. McDonald is also considering Hope School, or Washington Elementary, which is still within the Santa Barbara district.

"At Harding, the teachers are wonderful. The principal is great. It's the socioeconomic chasm. It's not a gap, it's a huge difference in the population," said Mrs. McDonald, who described herself as a middle-class professional. "We don't have a lot in common with the other families. At the same time, do I want to drive five days a week now every day for the next six years? Then again, if half of the Westside is going in that direction, maybe we can carpool."

Superintendent of Santa Barbara schools Brian Sarvis granted Mrs. Brace's transfer request it "with regrets."

"It's a big loss to the school," Mr. Sarvis said. "But I see Meredith as a parent making the best choice for their child, and other parents making other choices for their children. I don't think any one parent is that critical, but that's not to take anything away from Meredith. She has been wonderful."

Mrs. Brace says she'll stick with her PTA president post until a replacement is found, even though her son starts at Hope School today. Over the years, she has criticized district officials for maintaining open enrollment as an easy way out. Now it's a policy she is taking advantage of.

"They keep telling me, 'No, Meredith, we've got to keep options open to parents or they'll leave.' It's so plain and simple. It's created such segregation. It's left us with a situation that is almost gotten beyond repair."

She said the policy allowing transfers within the district -- and outside of the district when a parent comes up with a valid reason -- has destroyed many neighborhood schools by exacerbating white flight.

With her 4-year-old daughter getting ready to enter kindergarten, Mrs. Brace had recently been courting a dozen other white families in her neighborhood who have children of the same age.

"Every single one of them is going somewhere else, and they had all looked at Harding," she said. "I said to myself, this is not getting any better, so if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. This is not the teacher's fault, or the principal's fault. They're wonderful."

At Harding on Wednesday, mom Amy Voss and her son, second-grader Eric Voss, said they're pleased with the school and planning on staying.

"I like Harding a lot," Eric said. "They got good friends, good teachers. Mrs. Schwyzer is the best."

Teacher Carol Schwyzer has been at Harding since 1991. She described Mrs. Brace as heroic for even taking on the challenge.

"It's sad to see Meredith go. She had such wonderful energy. But is it OK? Yes, we are OK," she said. "We are doing the best we can with who comes through the door. We love our students."

At the same time, Mrs. Schwyzer isn't pleased that Harding has gone from the diverse school it was when she first arrived to the racially isolated campus it is today.

"It's not OK, but it would take a major shake-up on a more systemic level to fix things now," she said. "That balance has tipped too far.

"You see what Meredith was fighting against. She had a vision of how things should be, and she didn't see why she couldn't bring other people along. We have to be sad that it didn't work out."

e-mail: ccohee@newspress.com


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: aliens; diversity; education; immigration; pspl; school; schools
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To: WindOracle
...where friendship circle possibilities are very, very small because they don't speak the same language."

This is America. Speak, read and write English or go to some Spanish speaking country.

81 posted on 02/26/2005 7:29:39 AM PST by JimRed ("Hey, hey, Teddy K., how many girls did you drown today?")
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To: Regulator
When did the people of California vote to have this happen to them?

When they voted for an almost all-Democratoc Legislature.

OTOH, they did vote for Prop 187, but now they won't fight to have it reinstated.

82 posted on 02/26/2005 7:32:58 AM PST by freedumb2003 (If you oppose jihad, you are not a Muslim. If you support jihad, you are my enemy.)
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To: Amelia; Admin Moderator
Sometimes the mods can fix errors in the title.

I may be talking out of school here, but when I see something that needs fixing, I "report abuse" on myself and then ask, ever so nicely, for the fix.

Thanks for the fix AM! That "see's" was driving me nuts.

83 posted on 02/26/2005 7:35:00 AM PST by freedumb2003 (If you oppose jihad, you are not a Muslim. If you support jihad, you are my enemy.)
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To: Regulator

"if you aren't from California, you can't put this in context"

Absolutely correct......when my oldest was going into kindergarten, I visited the local school and decided there was no way I could do this to her. I enrolled her in a private school I couldn't afford and took the first transfer I could find. That was 10 years ago. I can't imagine what it is like now, but I knew where it was headed.


84 posted on 02/26/2005 7:37:48 AM PST by RFEngineer
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To: freedumb2003; Admin Moderator
Thanks for the fix AM! That "see's" was driving me nuts.

DITTOS!!!

85 posted on 02/26/2005 7:39:48 AM PST by Amelia
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To: seastay
some of us and our families decided to build things like dams , power plants, roads, libraries hospitals, sewers, parks , malls and schools ect.. Others decided not to do these things . If those others who now claim this is land issue, why dont they squat in desert where the is oodels of land and they are free to build their own infrastructure? Somehow I don't think this is really a land issue.

Kind of sounds like an Israel/Palastinian thing....

86 posted on 02/26/2005 7:50:21 AM PST by Dasaji (Are the voices in my head bothering you?)
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To: WindOracle
Unfortunately the poorer kids are captive to the liberal brainwashing centers.

The problem with vouchers is that in places like LA the private schools will be flooded. Equilibrium will occur, and all the schools will be dumbed down, unless schools start using academic standards for admissions. Then, complaints will be made and since the schools take public money they will be forced to admit those that do not come up to standard and end up dumbing down everyone else.

NO on VOUCHERS!

87 posted on 02/26/2005 7:56:14 AM PST by D Rider
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To: albee
""I've seen blond-blues eyed Hispanics and dark skinned Europeons. Confusing, eh?""

Not confusing for us. Mexicans are actually native Americans, and the European Spanyiards came in. While there was some intermarriage there wasn't too much, but for those who are both we use the term "Hispanic". While Cameron Diaz and Christina Auguilera like to claim to be "Hispanic" or "Latino" they really are European.

If you watch a Spanish Speaking Channel on TV, you'll notice all the people are European looking. If you happen to catch a Spanish Speaking Talk show, you'll notice all the people in the audience are Mexican or Native American- and the host is always European.
88 posted on 02/26/2005 8:06:20 AM PST by LauraleeBraswell ( CONSERVATIVE FIRST-Republican second.)
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To: Regulator
When did the people of California vote to have this happen to them?

When they voted for Boxer, Feinstein, Gray Davis, and the Democrat State Legislature; when they vote against every referendum to protect the state from illegal immigrants and FOR every referendum that pumps more bucks into a Marxist school budget. The counties with the biggest socioeconomic problems are the BLUE counties.

Because of the Democrats in this state, California is rapidly becoming a province of Mexico - Hail Azetlan!

89 posted on 02/26/2005 8:12:47 AM PST by Thommas (The snout of the camel is in the tent...)
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To: Amelia

lol.. yeah, I was tired, but as I said, ya can take it as an example of Public School education. My parents could not afford a private school for their kid like I can mine.


90 posted on 02/26/2005 8:24:38 AM PST by WindOracle
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To: WindOracle
I was educated in the public schools as well.

I realize you are making a jab and a joke, but at some point as a conservative you need to take responsibility for yourself and not blame your faults on others.

91 posted on 02/26/2005 8:28:10 AM PST by Amelia
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To: D Rider

As more demand occurs, more schools will open to meet that demand, and competition will do the rest. I will take that over public schools with virtually no accountability and whose quality declines in direct proportion to the increase in funding.


92 posted on 02/26/2005 8:28:19 AM PST by WindOracle
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To: Amelia

Like I said, I was tired.. as for the other.. well it is just an amusing point.


93 posted on 02/26/2005 8:29:23 AM PST by WindOracle
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To: D Rider; rdb3; mhking

very interesting...this is why there will never be vouchers. drider you need a grip on reality. Parents who don't care won't be bothering with vouchers. You've reveled yourself in that post.


94 posted on 02/26/2005 8:33:39 AM PST by cyborg (http://mentalmumblings.blogspot.com/)
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To: WindOracle
As more demand occurs, more schools will open to meet that demand, and competition will do the rest. I will take that over public schools with virtually no accountability and whose quality declines in direct proportion to the increase in funding.

While all that is true. In places like LA, the results will also include the destruction of "elite" private schools, due to regional demographics.

95 posted on 02/26/2005 8:34:20 AM PST by D Rider
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To: D Rider

I doubt it. They will likely increase their rates as more schools begin popping up. The "Elites" who can pay more will always be willing to do so if they think it is in their kid's interest. This would be especially true during the early part of the migration from public schools, while not enough private schools exist yet. That too is a matter of supply and demand.


96 posted on 02/26/2005 8:47:09 AM PST by WindOracle
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To: D Rider
NO on VOUCHERS!


YES ON VOUCHERS!

This is one issue that I'll fight like hell over. You are not offering any solutions, of course.


97 posted on 02/26/2005 10:09:06 AM PST by rdb3 (The wife asked how I slept last night. I said, "How do I know? I was asleep!")
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To: WindOracle
Just about every point made in this article makes the bold statement that it is the Latinos who want nothing to do with the American/Caucasians. It's the Americans/Caucasians that are so loaded down with this suicidal 'diversity' notion that they are forced to flee in order to maintain a modicum of academic and social standards. If the Latinos en masse are not trying to reverse the tide of white-flight, what does that tell anyone with a grain of intellectual integrity?

I would do the same thing and move to a better area. But we need to stake our sashes to the ground and fight for our borders and culture with ferocity.
98 posted on 02/26/2005 10:26:48 AM PST by Ghost of Philip Marlowe (Liberals are blind. They are the dupes of Leftists who know exactly what they're doing.)
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To: WindOracle
Like I said, I was tired.. as for the other.. well it is just an amusing point.

I realize it's amusing to certain FReepers, but it's also the sort of knee-jerk and simplistic response that is typical of any thread related to public education.

As the article shows, there are some public schools which are abysmal, and others with much higher quality.

One point illustrated by the article is that a major factor in the quality of a particular school will be the type of students in the school. Another is parental involvement and the value the parents put on education.

99 posted on 02/26/2005 1:01:33 PM PST by Amelia
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To: Amelia
I realize it's amusing to certain FReepers, but it's also the sort of knee-jerk and simplistic response that is typical of any thread related to public education.

Actually, I feel any who would try to use a punctuation error I made in such a circumstance as a manner in which to undermine the validity of the article itself, would be committing an obvious logical error, as much fun as they may get from the attempt. I also feel some people who worry overmuch about such things are perhaps a bit too anal retentive types who need to loosen up a bit.

If you had read any posts I have made in several education threads, you would be very aware that I take education seriously... just not people who take pi**-ant little things and make a big issue of them. So my response was simplistic... that is because I feel people who make SUCH A BIG DEAL over such a petty thing are pretty simplistic themselves.

Happy ya got it corrected though.. perhaps ya will not lose so much sleep now. Thx! Have a VERY nice day!

100 posted on 02/26/2005 2:14:07 PM PST by WindOracle
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