GWEN IFILL: As the Supreme Court considers
yet another major affirmative action case,
tonight's Race Matters conversation focuses
on what happens before students get to college
when they grow up in mostly segregated inner-city
schools.
"PBS NewsHour" special correspondent Charlayne
Hunter-Gault is reporting a year-long series
on solutions to the questions raised by race.
Tonight, she talks with Pedro Noguera, a professor
at the University of California, Los Angeles,
who has found what can work.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Despite an historic
Supreme Court ruling some 61 years ago outlawing
segregated schools, today, huge numbers of
students remain in separate and unequal schools,
most in inner cities.
But it doesn't have to be that way, says Pedro
Noguera, director of the Center for Study
of School Transformation at UCLA.
I met him in New York, where he was about
to speak with a group of educators.
Professor Noguera, thank you so much for joining
us.
Sixty-one years after separate and unequal
was ruled illegal, you say it's still happening.
Why?
PEDRO NOGUERA, University of California, Los
Angeles: Well, it's happening because the
courts have basically made it very difficult
to continue to pursue integration.
And that's after we made quite a bit of progress
in this country, especially in the South,
but now we know that schools in the North
and the West are more segregated now than
they were 30 years ago.
So, we now find ourselves in a situation where
not only are schools increasingly racially
separate, but we're also concentrating the
poorest children in schools that have the
fewest resources.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Why?
PEDRO NOGUERA: I would say it's a combination
of lack of investment in schools that serve
poor children and the fact that we have no
longer the political will.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: But you have argued
that separate schools play a role in perpetuating
inequality, not just in the schools, but in
general.
PEDRO NOGUERA: They do.
They do, because separate has still been unequal
in education.
The racially separate schools, even when the
schools do a good job, the learning opportunities
you have a child will influence the kind of
college you go into, the kind of profession
you have access to, the kind of income you
earn.
And so if we really are interested in creating
a society that's more equal and less characterized
by racial divisions, then we need to put more
investment in education and leveling the playing
field and integrating our schools.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: There have been schools
that have started that are supposed to be
making up for these disparities, like the
charter schools and magnet schools.
What impact are those kinds of schools having,
though, on public education?
PEDRO NOGUERA: Well, in fact, many of the
charter schools are even more segregated than
the public schools.
Middle-class families, particularly middle-class
African-American families, want integrated
schools for their kids.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Not long ago, Professor
Raj Chetty told me about an experiment that
took young people out of segregated communities
into more integrated communities.
But even he said that, while those were successful,
you needed to fix those within the community.
Now, you have some solutions and some examples
where that works.
PEDRO NOGUERA: Yes, and -- because we do have
examples.
Tulsa, Oklahoma, for example, here, you have
a city, a very red state, the best high school
in the city, Booker T. Washington, is 50 percent
black, and it is a school that the entire
city looks up to.
That should be a model for the country.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: But why is it a school
that everybody looks up to?
PEDRO NOGUERA: Because of the quality of education
provided.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: You just said that
there wasn't the will in these communities.
So what happens in that case?
PEDRO NOGUERA: Well, Tulsa -- it's interesting,
because Tulsa has a very ugly history.
In 1924, there was the race riots there, where
the black community was burned to the ground,
Greenwood.
And there has been an effort, though, in Tulsa
to invest in early childhood education.
Every child gets quality early childhood education.
Every school is a community school.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: How did it get to
that point?
PEDRO NOGUERA: Good question.
John Hope Franklin, a great historian, was
a leader in the effort in promoting the idea
of reparations for black folks in Tulsa.
After he died, his students...
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: He was a pre-Ta-Nehisi
Coates?
(LAUGHTER)
PEDRO NOGUERA: That's right.
And his students, white students from Duke
University, took up the effort to rebuild
Greenwood after he died.
There is a big monument in Tulsa to John Hope
Franklin built by his former students, most
of whom are affluent whites in Tulsa.
So, this is an important part of the history
too.
It's, we make our greatest advances when it's
not just African-Americans that are pushing
the issue, when whites, when Latinos, when
Asians, when the mosaic of America recognizes
that we can be a better nation if we are working
together, if we are serving each other's interests.
And, you know, there are others like it in
other parts of the country that are showing
us that you don't have to wait until we solve
the problem of poverty or inequality.
You can do a lot in education now that would
help to move our society forward.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: But one of the things
you have talked about is how there are needs
beyond just the basic education, particularly
for urban students, and I guess you mean predominantly
African-American or children of color.
PEDRO NOGUERA: Well, absolutely.
There are many children in this country -- because
we have the highest child poverty rates of
all advanced nations; 22 percent of kids in
this country come from families at or below
the poverty level.
So, we have a lot of kids coming to school
who are hungry, who don't have adequate housing,
whose have basic needs not being met.
Schools serving those children need other
resources.
They need social workers.
They need psychologists.
They might need a food program.
They might need health workers on site in
order for those kids to be able to concentrate
on education and for their teachers to concentrate
on teaching them.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Brockton, Massachusetts,
you gave an example.
PEDRO NOGUERA: What Brockton shows us -- it's
the largest high school in the state, 4,200
students -- that by focusing on the student
needs, you can, even without moving them,
create a school that's the pride of the community.
Brockton is one of the only urban high schools
in the state of Massachusetts that gets a
level one rating.
And that's because over one-third of their
senior class gets the highest possible test
score in the state.
And the demographics of the kids who get that
score match the demographics of the school.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: And how did it get
that way?
PEDRO NOGUERA: They focus on literacy.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: They who?
PEDRO NOGUERA: The school.
They make sure that every teacher, regardless
of the subject they teach, is a teacher of
literacy, whether it be science, or math,
or art, or music.
Literacy is what's promoted, because they
understand that strong literacy skills, reading,
writing, speaking, is the key to a strong
education.
And they have stuck with that for the last
15 years or more.
And it shows in the results.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: How committed do you
think America is to maintaining public education?
PEDRO NOGUERA: I think we're at a crossroads.
But I try to remind people the public education
system is the only system that accepts all
children.
If we don't educate our children well, we're
all in trouble.
The retirees -- and we have a growing number
of retirees in America, most of whom are white
-- are going to be increasingly dependent
on a younger, more diverse work force to support
them in their retirement.
So, even if they really care about the kids,
if they just care about themselves, they should
be concerned about the future of public education.
People who are concerned about their property
values should be concerned about public education,
because the quality of the schools affects
the value of your property.
So we're all in this together.
And that's what it takes, is, we need leadership
that gets people to see it's in our interests
as a country to invest in our children, to
invest in our schools.
And we haven't had that for many years.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Except in the places
you mentioned.
PEDRO NOGUERA: Yes.
At the local level you, see it.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: So, it's doable?
PEDRO NOGUERA: It's doable.
It is absolutely doable.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: And you're optimistic?
PEDRO NOGUERA: Cautiously optimistic.
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Professor Noguera,
thank you for joining us.
PEDRO NOGUERA: Thank you, Charlayne.
