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I think it is more like the core subjects, like math and science, English, the
straight edge classes. They are not really fun, but you have to kind of do it.
And
then there are the fun classes, like psychology, law, auto, art, and thea-
ter. In those classes you have a lot more fun, and you do a lot more things
that you like to do.
•
Tracking
. The division of students into separate courses was a source of consid-
erable discussion. Some expressed concern over students who are labeled and
channeled into low-level courses. One student, an African-American senior at
Springdale, said that she thought that some students were perceived as stupid
and put in certain classes accordingly, passed from year to year, and given
diplomas that meant nothing. Others,
she noted, were really quite bright, but
were labeled as behavior problems, stereotyped as stupid, and placed accord-
ingly. ‘‘Someone needs to pay more attention to those kids.’’
An African-American 15-year-old male at Hamilton, the child of professional par-
ents, said:
I think that this is an excellent school academically, but they track here. Like
kids who didn’t do well in middle school, they just throw them in a low
track and maybe expect them to drop out or something. You see more
minorities here in the lower track. But sometimes I think that may be their
fault. I think that it’s time for,
especially black people, to start taking charge
of things. We are sitting around complaining that there are no opportunities,
but there are some opportunities here and we’re not taking advantage of
them. If a parent would come in and say that I don’t want my child in this
lower track, then I’m sure they would change the child, but I don’t see that
happening often.
The most common concern raised about tracking, as noted in the comments
above, was the conflation with race and socioecomonic class, and the effect this
has on the schools as a whole. At East City High School a senior commented
that she didn’t see the system as equal. ‘‘Advanced is mostly upper class, mostly
white.
Academic is mostly lower class, with a lot of black people. There are
even two class presidents, a black one and a white one.’’
At Springdale High School a student talked about ‘‘honors, regular, and basic’’
students and said:
The racial issues are very intertwined. The fact is that in most of my classes
there are not a lot of minority kids. Why, I cannot say. But it is certainly an
issue. It is not meant to be segregated, but it sort of is.
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As a white student, he was bothered by the fact that his primary contact with
African-American students was in gym and health class, and that in a community
that prided itself on racial integration, the school had become so segregated.
Similarly, at Hamilton High, a white student in a group interview noted:
The kids in the honors and AP courses are mostly white,
and by the time
of your senior year, you know most of the kids when you walk into the first
day of class. The regular and general classes are mostly black.
An African-American honors student in the same group responded to this com-
ment:
What is really weird, if you take a low or regular kid and put them in an
honors or regular class for a month, you will see work like every other hon-
ors student. And I wonder like why they are in lower classes if they can do
honors work.
The mechanisms for selection into various courses and tracks varied from school
to school and seemed relative to the population. At the high-achieving schools,
honors and accelerated courses were reserved for those working well above grade
level, but honors courses at Uptown enrolled students ‘‘who are working at grade
level or above.’’ Most schools used scores from state-mandated
tests or teacher
recommendations for placement. In nearly all schools, however, it was noted that
parental preference could override more objective criteria, a system noted by
teachers as more likely to benefit those with parents knowledgeable about how
the system functions, typically white, middle, and upper-middle-class families.
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