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Ending
White Flight
How
did this district get its parents back? It gave them
more power. But it also engaged the black parents
and wooed the white parents back
by
JODIE MORSE
If
you want to glimpse true parental devotion, head to
the local mall in Vicksburg, Miss. Just past the JCPenney
and the KB Toys, right across from the Corn Dog 7,
you'll find a storefront occupied by Redwood Elementary
School. A mannequin in the school's red-and-blue uniform
presides over a spread of student-made dioramas and
papier-mâché, painstakingly displayed
by Redwood parents in an all-day decorating marathon.
On a recent Saturday, the school's choir serenaded
shoppers while a troop of parent volunteers was on
hand with brochures extolling the virtues of a Redwood
education‹and urging shoppers to sign up their kids.
"I can already see the day when parents of newborns
will call me up and say they want to register their
kids at Redwood," says principal Butch Newman.
Just a year ago, Vicksburg parents weren't such loyal
customers. Like most school districts along the lower
Mississippi, Vicksburg's had long hovered outside
the orbit of education reformers. It was still largely
segregated, and year after year its test scores stagnated.
The schools were so overcrowded that at one building
three teachers held class in the gymnasium at the
same time. So parents took to voting with their feet.
And their skin. Many white parents fled to private
and parochial schools, while others began home schooling.
Some black parents, convinced the schools in their
neighborhoods were worse off academically, gave the
district fake addresses in order to attend majority-white
schools. Those parents who stayed in the system often
did so with a sense of resignation that turned to
apathy. "You'd hold a meeting, and maybe one parent
would show up if you were lucky," says Diana Brokaw,
the mother of a second- and a third-grader. "It was
pitiful."
So how did Vicksburg win its parents back? By giving
them both a greater say in which elementary schools
their children would attend and a greater hand in
shaping the district's affairs. Perhaps more important,
the district confronted its long racial standoff,
engaging the black parents and wooing the white parents
back into the system.
"You
have to treat parents like shareholders in their children's
education," says now retired superintendent Robert
Pickett, who designed the plan. "We did whatever we
could to get them to buy in." That meant closing down
five schools that were in the worst disrepair, renovating
the rest and building two schools from scratch on
the outskirts of town. The district installed parents
on its strategic-planning committee. Then it increased
the rigor of its curriculum, asking parents to vote
on an academic focus for each of the schools. At one
writing, communication and technology school, for
example, students keep a daily journal starting in
kindergarten; at a math and science school, students
study botany in a state-of-the-art outdoor classroom.
To reach the most disengaged parents, the district
mounted a full-scale media blitz, postering walls
from the city health department to K Mart and taking
flyers door to door. The individual schools sent home
mass mailings and bought competing ads in the local
paper. The district even promised free rides to parents
who had trouble getting to their children's schools.
Then, starting last fall, the district instituted
a reform known as controlled school choice. It resembles
other popular forms of school choice, such as vouchers
and charter schools‹only there's a twist. While Vicksburg
parents took their pick of three schools closest to
their home, the district used race as a consideration
in making assignments, to achieve diversity in each
school. After the numbers were crunched, 85% of parents
got their first choice of school. Even more eye popping:
the schools now boast near equal head counts of black
and white students.
Still, many parents resisted. Balking at longer bus
rides, some signed up their kids for private schools.
One faction made a short-lived bid to build a charter
school closer to their homes. But by midyear, many
of those parents had transferred their children back‹and
they were joined by some parents who had been using
private schools for years. A man who once backed the
charter-school campaign won a school board seat. Those
who had been in the system all along are touting the
benefits of vigilant parenting. "The more you hang
around the school, the more your kid's going to get
preferential treatment," says Dennis Butler, father
of a fourth-grader. "I mean the teachers actually
dust off your kids when they see you coming."
So the students are more presentable, but will they
be higher achievers? The district says that student
attendance and behavior have both improved‹and that
drug use has dried up to such a degree that the district
lost half its federal grant to combat substance abuse.
More conclusive proof will come with test scores,
due in late summer. Until then, Diana Brokaw is keeping
a scorecard of her own. "The other day six parents
showed up to chaperone a field trip," she proudly
reports. "And two of them were dads."
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