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ShortJohnSilver
24th January 2011, 07:25 PM
http://articles.lancasteronline.com/local/4/341937

Apparently segregating the blacks by both race and gender (all-male black homeroom, all-female black homeroom) for just 20 minutes a day makes a difference in attitude at school. Be very interesting to see what difference on standardized tests this will make (we probably won't hear about it should it fail).

Amazingly, no funding is required and another bureacrat to "manage the process of systematically delivering appropriate services to at-risk individuals" was not hired.



During a recent class period at McCaskey East High School, T'onna Johnson's class discussed a film, learned about a college-visit trip, talked about designing a class T-shirt and was encouraged to sign up for a seminar on the importance of a good education.

This all happened during homeroom — that fleeting period when teachers take attendance, principals make announcements and students, usually, don't do much of anything.

Not at McCaskey East.

Every junior at the school has been paired with an adult homeroom mentor who tries to squeeze as much information and activities as possible into six minutes each day and 20 minutes twice a month.

The intent of the program, implemented in mid-December, is simple, principal Bill Jimanez said: "Let's make these guys think for six minutes about their future."

Every junior — the class that will take PSSA tests this year — was matched with a teacher who already had a relationship with that pupil.

But in the case of T'onna's class, there are other ties that bind the homeroom.

Every pupil is a black female. And their mentors are both female African-Americans. Across the hall, two homerooms of black male students are led by black men.

The all-black homerooms are part of an experiment to determine if grouping students homogeneously for a brief period each day will help them socially and academically.

"At first I was kind of like iffy because why would we be in homeroom together?" T'onna recalled. "But we work together and we do problems together, so I like it.

"Here we learn about how we can basically make a difference and how we don't have to settle for less."

The idea originated with Angela Tilghman, a McCaskey East instructional coach who was alarmed at the poor academic performance of the school's black students.

Only about a third of McCaskey's African-Americans scored proficient or advanced in reading on last year's PSSAs, compared with 60 percent of white students and 42 percent of all students.

Math scores were even worse, with just 27 percent of black pupils scoring proficient or advanced.

Research has shown, Tilghman said, that grouping black students by gender with a strong role model can help boost their academic achievement and self-esteem.

She and fellow instructional coach Rhauni Gregory volunteered to mentor the African-American girls, and Michael Mitchell and Willie Thedford each took a homeroom of black males.

No other students were divided by race, Jimanez said, although pupils enrolled in the school's English language learners program were paired with ELL teachers.

Initially, some McCaskey East students and staff objected to separating out black students. Some juniors asked to go back to their old homerooms. Others complained that the experiment ran counter to the culture of McCaskey, long a melting pot of students and staff from many diverse backgrounds.

But Jimanez said the academic data dictated the school take a different approach with its black students.

"One of the things we said when we did this was, 'Let's look at the data, let's not run from it,' " he said. "Let's confront it and see what we can do about it."

In all homerooms, teachers are tracking their students' grades, test scores and attendance and encouraging them to engage in discussions around "goal setting and self-actualization," Jimanez said.

In Thedford's class, for instance, students weren't assigned seats but were asked to sit at desks at which he had placed such name tags as "doctor," "friend," "lawyer" and "father."

When his pupils arrived, Thedford asked them to sit at the name tag that applied to them, and the class spent several days talking about what it takes to be those people.

"Once they said it, they were put to the task to aspire to be that person on the card," Thedford said. "Believe it or not, those kids got a sense of ownership.

"If you can get a bunch of kids, no matter what nationality or ethnicity, to buy into something that nobody ever said they could do, that's a good thing."

Tilghman and Gregory's homeroom, dubbed the Black Diamonds, has discussed books and movies that emphasize strong relationships between black women. Last week, the students hosted a group of female black professionals who talked about the importance of getting a good education.

"This isn't something we're just trying to preach to you about," Tilghman told the class. "This is the reality. Black women today need education."

The mentors also have talked about common stereotypes about black girls — that they're aggressive, combative, "cackling and confrontational" and more interested in pursuing relationships than academics, Tilghman said.

According to research, black students tend to feel disengaged and alienated in school and "act out behaviorally because they don't perform," she said.

"Our first theme was sisterhood so we can get them to see that we're here for each other and they have people they can rely on," Tilghman said.

The mentors also shared with students a detailed analysis of their test scores and grades.

The feedback "has had a very good impact on me because it shows where we have our weaknesses and strengths," junior Hilarie Gbote said. "It makes me want to go to college and be one of those people who become successful in life."

Mitchell, a math teacher, incorporates algebra problems into many of his homerooms, focusing on the skills students have struggled with on the 4Sight, a test that predicts a pupil's performance on the PSSA.

He often cites to his students a quote by the Rev. Martin Luther King: "Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity."

Mitchell recently used the quote when he reviewed his students' progress reports and noticed a couple of them were failing gym class.

"They're all young. They're all strong. They're all athletic. But they're failing because they chose not to participate," he said.

"That's an example of conscientious stupidity. You can do but you choose not to do. These are the things we need to get away from."

Mitchell, who graduated from McCaskey in 1983 and "bounced around" the city's 7th Ward while growing up, said he has a lot in common with many of his students.

"There are things I can say to these young men specifically to get them to do things that maybe some of our other fine educators can't reach or touch," he said.

Mitchell doesn't agree with those who criticize grouping black students together.

"I would have a problem if every class period was like that, but it's six minutes most days and 20 minutes other days," he said.

"In that amount of time, I don't think there's anti-anything going on in that classroom that's negative and takes away from any other group or that makes students feel like they're not part of the school."

But, at the same time, he said, it's important for adults to address the issues that are unique to blacks.

He has discussed with his students how the city's unemployment rate is higher for African-Americans than for other ethnic groups, and Tilghman has talked about how statistics indicate that black males are three times as likely to spend time in jail as to earn a college degree.

All of the discussions point to the need for a good education.

"Part of my job is to hammer home the importance of taking seriously anything that's put in front of you," Mitchell said.

"I see all too often when students give up far too easily these days, and parents will allow this to perpetuate itself, and then students think they don't have to complete anything."

In the few weeks the homerooms have been meeting together, the mentors said, they've seen a change in their students.

"You notice the level of interaction is different, the way they talk is different," Thedford said.

"One of the simplest things you notice right away is, before, the pants were hanging down; now, they are up. The shirt is tucked in, where before, it was hanging out. That's tangible."

It remains to be seen whether the homogeneous groupings boost students' test scores. Pupils will take PSSA tests in March.

But junior Mikeos Ango said his new homeroom has already made a difference.

"It definitely makes you think about stuff more," he said. "We have great role models as our teachers right now. They've been in our shoes before, and so we learn something from them every day."

His classmate, Dominique Miller, said the homeroom has helped combat the common stereotypes about black males — "the same old kids who don't do any work, think school is a waste of time and just come here to see their friends."

"Now I'm happy that other people can see my brothers, the people I'm associated with in this homeroom, are hoping to better themselves, and the teachers are hoping to better themselves," he said.

"It's about empowering who you really are.

"It kind of makes me think that, instead of just being successful, I'm being a successful black male."

7th trump
24th January 2011, 07:58 PM
Just goes to show you the true mind set of that generation and race.
They watch too much tv.
I always sort of looked at the big black guy with the macho "nigga" attitude as a little gossup girl with nothing better to do but project himself playing out the "I'm a victim and you cracka ass O's me" card.
No different than seeing huge rims with little tires they sport around on their cars.
Just freaken retarded!

You wait until God seperates the sheep from the goats.......................talk about segregation!
Just gotta think if they are thinking Jesus Christ as a "cracker ass honky". That mofo..........!

vacuum
24th January 2011, 08:02 PM
Just goes to show you the true mind set of that generation and race.
They watch too much tv.
I always sort of looked at the big black guy with the macho "nigga" attitude as a little gossup girl with nothing better to do but project himself playing out the "I'm a victim and you cracka ass O's me" card.
No different than seeing huge rims with little tires they sport around on their cars.
Just freaken retarded!

You wait until God seperates the sheep from the goats.......................talk about segregation!

I think I see what you're saying, but how does it relate to the OP?

7th trump
24th January 2011, 08:05 PM
Just goes to show you the true mind set of that generation and race.
They watch too much tv.
I always sort of looked at the big black guy with the macho "nigga" attitude as a little gossup girl with nothing better to do but project himself playing out the "I'm a victim and you cracka ass O's me" card.
No different than seeing huge rims with little tires they sport around on their cars.
Just freaken retarded!

You wait until God seperates the sheep from the goats.......................talk about segregation!

I think I see what you're saying, but how does it relate to the OP?

Segregation humbles them..........................they are nothing but little children with bad attitudes that shouldnt be given candy.
In all reality segregation isnt a race thing either.

Book
24th January 2011, 08:13 PM
Please segregate Whitey!

ShortJohnSilver
24th January 2011, 08:50 PM
Please segregate Whitey!


Exactly, but no one wants to talk about that!

Awoke
25th January 2011, 05:25 AM
School experiments with all-black homerooms





... ::)



http://www.oaklandnet.com/parks/0/news_041003c_3.jpg
Oakland 2nd Graders Reportedly Engage In Sex Acts, Teacher Suspended (http://gold-silver.us/forum/general-discussion/chimpout-oakland-2nd-graders-reportedly-engage-in-sex-acts-teacher-suspended/)

mick silver
25th January 2011, 06:38 AM
they need to try this with whitey . but then that would be

mick silver
25th January 2011, 06:40 AM
Racial

Awoke
25th January 2011, 07:37 AM
Haha, Mick, your posting style is always an adventure.

k-os
25th January 2011, 08:01 AM
We segregate ourselves naturally in where we choose to live, the establishments we visit, etc. Very few black people venture into the clubs white people frequent, or the predominantly white neighborhoods, and vice-versa. Forced integration in schools never made sense.

hoarder
25th January 2011, 08:55 AM
Racial assimilation has always been the catalyst behind "integration". It never really had anything to do with "equality", "education standards" or "persecution". Those were merely the excuses they used to justify it.

Jews have had this ambition to make Whites dissapear through race-mixing.

Most larger and fancier bars are owned by Jews. They first get the White clientele built up and the they feed them Black music and hire Black men.
Virtually all the bars I went to back in my drinking days were owned by Jews. I didn't understand it back then.

Quad
25th January 2011, 09:34 AM
Back in the days before I had given up on the black race, and I still thought of myself as African American, I would have vehemently opposed this.

Now that I’ve passed (as Latino, via marriage) I’m all for it. Re-segregation is both desirable and inevitable.

Viva la raza!

sirgonzo420
25th January 2011, 09:44 AM
Back in the days before I had given up on the black race, and I still thought of myself as African American, I would have vehemently opposed this.

Now that I’ve passed (as Latino, via marriage) I’m all for it. Re-segregation is both desirable and inevitable.

Viva la raza!



Quadroon!

You should post more often for sure!

DMac
25th January 2011, 09:46 AM
Nice to see you posting again Quad.

SLV^GLD
25th January 2011, 09:47 AM
Back in the days before I had given up on the black race, and I still thought of myself as African American, I would have vehemently opposed this.

Now that I’ve passed (as Latino, via marriage) I’m all for it. Re-segregation is both desirable and inevitable.

Viva la raza!



Quadroon!

You should post more often for sure!





Definitely!
I think Quad may hold the lowest post count of active veteran posters.

Neuro
25th January 2011, 09:56 AM
Back in the days before I had given up on the black race, and I still thought of myself as African American, I would have vehemently opposed this.

Now that I’ve passed (as Latino, via marriage) I’m all for it. Re-segregation is both desirable and inevitable.

Viva la raza!


Quadroon!

You should post more often for sure!



Definitely!
I think Quad may hold the lowest post count of active veteran posters.
He is a few behind, but I still have Zinc status too...

Cobalt
25th January 2011, 10:59 AM
I think most of this behavior can be traced back to Tribal pack mentality.

You take a tribe or village living out in the middle of no where and they go about their lives in a peaceful seldom chaotic fashion, each member knows their place and where they stand in the pecking order, if one member makes a move to climb higher up the social ladder it is usually a one on one challenge.

Now you take the same tribe and introduce outsiders into the mix and chaos explodes as many start strutting their stuff trying to display where they stand within the tribal social chain.

Add female outsiders into the mix and the strutting takes on a whole new level as many of the males try to impress upon the females that they are the most important too the tribe in an attempt to attract them.

ShortJohnSilver
3rd February 2011, 08:39 PM
UPDATE: They canceled the idea after being criticized over it...

http://articles.lancasteronline.com/local/4/346915

Personally it sounded healthy to me, provided the black teachers were strict enough, it might have shown that respect for (proper) authority was not a "white" thing...


Students will no longer be divided into homerooms at McCaskey East High School based on their race and gender.

In the wake of sometimes blistering criticism, School District of Lancaster has changed the format of a mentoring program that placed African-American pupils into homogeneous homerooms led by black teachers.

The three all-black homerooms and the 16 others participating in the mentoring program will now be open to all students, Bill Jimanez, McCaskey East principal, said Wednesday.

The district decided to make the change in light of the "distraction" of the intense media scrutiny the program has generated, superintendent Pedro Rivera said.

"The negative media that has swirled around this has been time-consuming and has taken us away from our mission of teaching and learning," he said.

Implemented in mid-December, the mentoring program matched all 11th-graders with teachers with whom they were familiar. The mentors meet with the pupils each morning during homeroom and encourage them to think about their futures, plan for college and take academics seriously.

Only the three homerooms of black students were divided by race and gender.

After a Jan. 24 story about the program was picked up by numerous media outlets, both nationally and worldwide, commentators — mainly on websites and cable TV programs — weighed in.

Many argued the program only reinforced negative racial stereotypes and was a throwback to the era of "separate but equal" schools for blacks and whites.

Others praised the mentoring as an attempt to address the unique needs of black students, who have been struggling academically at McCaskey East.

Rivera said teachers and administrators did nothing wrong by implementing the program, which was widely — and wrongly, district officials said — characterized in the media as a form of segregation.

"The intent … by educators was to serve students. They identified a need and were innovative and forward-thinking around how they were going to provide a quality education to kids here at the high school," Rivera said.

"If we took a misstep or made a mistake, it would have been around implementation."

He said the district could have been more cognizant of the fact the program might be perceived in a negative light.

"It was never the intent of the educators to have it perceived as discriminatory," Rivera said.

SDL board president Richard Caplan said the program came to be "viewed as exclusionary, and there's no place for that in public education."

Caplan and most other board members were not aware the high school had implemented the program before the original story appeared in the Intelligencer Journal/Lancaster New Era.

The administration had no obligation to notify the board that it had started the program, Caplan said.

"We don't get involved in micromanaging the school district," he said. In hindsight, however, Caplan admitted "it would have been prudent" for the board to have been consulted, given "the possibility of misperception" by the public about the program.

While reaction has been largely negative on the national level, local reaction has been split and much more muted.

Jimanez said he received about 50 e-mails containing "words of inspiration and support" from people and only three negative e-mails about the mentoring program.

While the controversy has "galvanized" several of the homerooms, Jimanez admitted that some McCaskey East students and staff members were not comfortable with it.

The changes announced Wednesday should allay the concerns, district officials said.

Students will be permitted to switch to any homeroom they choose to be in, provided they discuss the move with their mentors and guidance counselors.

The district is not specifically dismantling any homerooms, but students will be permitted to move in and out, regardless of race or gender.

Angela Tilghman, an instructional coach who suggested grouping the black students homogeneously and served as a mentor to black girls, said she "wished the program could continue in its initial state."

Tilghman added, however, that she supports the changes.

Rivera said there are enough open spaces in each homeroom to make them "vastly different" and more heterogeneous than they originally were.

The other aspects of the program will not change.

The Lancaster branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People supported the changes. In a statement, the organization said it was "pleased that the school district has addressed the mentoring program design and the community's concerns to meet all students' needs."

Jimanez said the ordeal, while trying, has "reinvigorated and recommitted" him to focusing on programs to improve student achievement.

"I think it's going to spur us to higher things," he said.

bwallace@lnpnews.com

cheka.
3rd April 2016, 08:30 AM
nyc...renewal skoolz....lmao

https://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20160310/arverne/principal-punched-face-breaking-up-fight-outside-school-sources-say

The principal of one of the mayor's "renewal schools"....

The fight broke out at 3:20 p.m. Tuesday, just after dismissal near P.S 42 on Beach 66th Street, police said.

Principal Patricia Finn went out to try to break it up but was punched in the face and stomach during the melee, according to her union and sources. She was also kicked after falling on the ground, according to sources.

She was taken to St. John's Hospital, according to the NYPD.