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Walter Williams
Walter E. Williams
15 May 2013
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Black Education

Comment

In my "Black Education Disaster" column (12/22/10), I presented National Assessment of Educational Progress test data that demonstrated that an average black high school graduate had a level of reading, writing and math proficiency of a white seventh- or eighth-grader. The public education establishment bears part of the responsibility for this disaster, but a greater portion is borne by black students and their parents, many of whom who are alien and hostile to the education process.

Let's look at the education environment in many schools and ask how conducive it is to the education process. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, nationally during 2007-2008, more than 145,000 teachers were physically attacked. Six percent of big-city schools report verbal abuse of teachers and 18 percent report non-verbal disrespect for teachers.

An earlier NCES study found that 18 percent of the nation's schools accounted for 75 percent of the reported incidents of violence, and 6.6 percent accounted for 50 percent. So far as serious violence, murder and rapes, 1.9 percent of schools reported 50 percent of the incidents. The preponderance of school violence occurs in big-city schools attended by black students.

What's the solution? Violence, weapons-carrying, gang activity and student or teacher intimidation should not be tolerated. Students engaging in such activity should be summarily expelled.

Some might worry about the plight of expelled students. I think we should have greater concern for those students whose education is made impossible by thugs and the impossible learning environment they create.

Another part of the black education disaster has to do with the home environment. More than 70 percent of black children are born to unwedded mothers, who are often themselves born to unwedded mothers. Today's level of female-headed households is new in black history. Until the 1950s, almost 80 percent of black children lived in two-parent households, as opposed to today's 35 percent.

Often, these unwedded mothers have poor parenting skills and are indifferent, and sometimes hostile, to their children's education. The resulting poorly behaving students should not be permitted to sabotage the education of students whose parents are supportive of the education process.

At the minimum, a mechanism such as tuition tax credit or educational voucher ought to be available to allow parents and children who care to opt out of failing schools. Some people take the position that we should repair not abandon failing schools. That's a vision that differs little from one that says that no black child's education should be improved unless we can improve the education of all black children.

What needs to be done is not rocket science. Our black ancestors, just two, three, four generations out of slavery, would not have tolerated school behavior that's all but routine today. The fact that the behavior of many black students has become acceptable and made excuses for is no less than a gross betrayal of sacrifices our ancestors made to create today's opportunities.

Some of today's black political leadership is around my age, 75, such as Reps. Maxine Waters, Charles Rangel, John Conyers, former Virginia governor Douglas Wilder, Jesse Jackson and many others. Forget that they are liberal Democrats but ask them whether their parents, kin or neighbors would have tolerated children cursing to, or in the presence of, teachers and other adults. Ask them what their parents would have done had they assaulted an adult or teacher. Ask whether their parents would have accepted the grossly disrespectful behavior seen among many black youngsters on the streets and other public places using foul language and racial epithets. Then ask why should today's blacks tolerate something our ancestors would not.

The sorry and tragic state of black education is not going to be turned around until there's a change in what's acceptable and unacceptable behavior by young people. The bulk of that change has to come from within the black community.

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM



Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
Yet another racist Tea-bagger.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Mike in PP
Tue Feb 1, 2011 12:46 AM
My, my, my, Mikey....hit a little too close to home, huh?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Eric
Tue Feb 1, 2011 4:12 AM
Hey Mikey:

I thought you Bolsheviks reject the very idea that a black man could even be "racist."

Don't worry: We aren't holding our collective breaths waiting for consistency from you commies, since we found out long ago that facts, evidence, logic and reason play no roles in your lives...
Comment: #3
Posted by: Earl P. Holt III
Tue Feb 1, 2011 9:28 AM
Mr. Williams, You are so correct.

By the time I was only seventeen years old, I had to endure the following intensely traumatic episodes and experiences: the holocaust of a city going up in flames during World War II. Several infectious killer illnesses, one of which caused me having to learn to walk all over again. It also caused me to behave so strangely that people thought that I had become an idiot. I flunked completely out of one school during my fifth grade. I suffered years of intense bare buttocks beatings with a rubberized wire cord. Years of near starvation and homelessness. Years of unbelievable judicial injustice. Abandonment. And much, much more

Thereafter. I became hard-labor slave.

Then i realized that my mind was my heaviest ball and chain.

Thereafter, I worked my way to a five-years engineering degree without any scholarships.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Former Slave
Tue Feb 1, 2011 11:29 AM
Dear Mr. Williams:

Thank you for your honest article, what you say applies to students of all races of course. Schools, no matter how good or bad, are for learning. But they spend more time on discipline and poor behavior than education. You are correct, disruptive kids should be expelled.

Many school districts have been doing the exact opposite of what you recommend. They are trying to re-integrate BD and LD students into mainstream classes. I understand the motive, administrators feel these kids can't learn to cope in the world if they are kept sheltered and separated from everyone else. However, putting kids with distruptive behavior problems, and even slow learners, into regular classrooms is a mistake. It disrupts the education of 95% of kids who want to learn and are capable of learning.

My mother taught BD Special Ed for 30 years. She had some very poorly behaved students, it was a classroom for kids with behavior disorders after all. The last 10 years it got worse. She required a teacher's aide who could physically restrain students when neccessary. Putting these kids into regular classrooms is a big mistake.

-Mark Wells
Comment: #5
Posted by: mark wells
Wed Feb 2, 2011 7:32 AM
Mr. Williams

The word "unwedded" is illiterate and that is sadly ironic when used in an article on Black education.
Comment: #6
Posted by: RobT
Wed Feb 2, 2011 11:10 AM
Dear Prof. Williams:
White attitudes towards schools are similar, I think.
Our country has fewer opportunities for young persons to become employed, like the rest of the world has had for a longer time.
I would like to see you write on the probable economic future of our country.

Regards!
Comment: #7
Posted by: Ross Melton, Jr.
Thu Feb 3, 2011 7:05 AM
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