America's Worst School System Will Soon Be Dead. Will What Replaces It Be Any Better?
The remaking of public education in Camden, New Jersey.
"I have girlfriends who have a lot of children who have been killed, and I look at their pain and hurt on their faces, and I don't want that," says Shantella Davis, who's an unemployed recovering drug addict and the single mother of a six-year-old named As-Sidq. "When I leave this earth I want him to be established…I want him to be able to go to college."
They live in the impoverished city of Camden, New Jersey, which is home to some of the nation's lowest performing public schools. "A lot of kids that came out of Camden High not knowing how to read and write," says Davis. "How did the kid get through the school not knowing how to read and write?"
But for her part, Shantella Davis hasn't shown herself to be the most proactive parent. Last year, As-Sidq was enrolled in public pre-K, but she says she wasn't feeling well enough to take him to school most days. So As-Sidq ended up staying home and
missing most of the year.
Today, in an effort to better meet the needs of kids like As-Sidq Davis, the state of New Jersey is remaking Camden's public school system in a way that's not quite like anything that's been tried before.
The 2012 Urban Hope Act authorized the state to open four new public schools in Camden, and three opened this year, which are run by the charter school operators KIPP, Uncommon Schools, and Mastery Charter Schools. Over the next several years, these three schools will gradually expand their enrollment until they serve the majority of kids in Camden.
These schools enjoy the same autonomy as charter schools in selecting their teachers and managing their budgets, but they also have one major thing in common with traditional public schools: They're attached to specific neighborhoods, so most of their students were assigned to attend them. Charter schools, on the other hand, generally accept kids from an entire city, and parents make a choice to send their kids to them.
Drew Martin, 34, who's the school leader at KIPP Cooper Norcross, says this provides an opportunity to rebut critics who claim that the only reason charter schools perform so well is that they attract the most involved parents willing to make the effort to look for better options for their kids, and that they push out the most difficult students.
"So that's no longer going to be able to apply to us because we'll be using the same tactics that we've always used," says Martin, "but we're going to be required to take kids from our sending zone so nobody can say that we're creaming."
As-Sidq Davis was part of the first class at KIPP Cooper Norcross Academy, but Shantella Davis' continued to have difficulty getting him to school—and she even withdrew him after a dispute with the administration. Davis is planning to reenroll As-Sidq, and since KIPP Cooper Norcross is his zoned school, Drew Martin says the door is open when he's ready to return. And that's what's different: If the school were a charter, Martin wouldn't be required to take him back.
Derrell Bradford, an education reform advocate who spent ten years working in Camden, says that the lack of parental choice is a major shortcoming of these new schools. "It removes the most powerful and fundamental element, which is that a parent wakes up one day and wants something better and has a right to go get it," he says.
Coincidentally, NYU Professor Diane Ravitch, who is the best-known policy analyst to make the charge that charter schools don't serve kids from the most trouble homes, suggested on her blog in 2012 pretty much exactly what's happening in Camden today, challenging KIPP "to put an end to suspicion that they [sic] were skimming students and excluding low-performing students by taking over an entire district." adding: "Camden looks like a perfect candidate for the challenge."
"I don't think KIPP has anything to prove to Diane Ravitch," says Bradford. "If there were no residential assignment someone would be out in the home of the neediest person in Camden trying to recruit their kids into a school because of the economics of it."
"I'm excited about what's going on there," Bradford adds. "Camden is monumentally better off today than it was event two years ago because who runs the schools matters. But I think in an ideal world their would be open enrollment everywhere."
This story is part three in a three-part video series on Camden's public schools. Click here to watch part one, which looks at how dramatically boosting per pupil spending didn't fix the public schools in Camden and New Jersey's other poorest cities. Click here watch part two, which is a profile of LEAP, Camden's first and most successful charter school.
Reason Foundation is a partner in National School Week, an annual event that draws attention to increasing educational options for K-12 students and their parents. For more information on resources and activities, including more than 10,000 events taking place nationwide between January 25-31, go here now.
About 5 minutes.
Shot, edited, produced and narrated by Jim Epstein. Production assistance from Brett Crudgington.
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Wow - I didn't know Detroit had such tough competition.
She named her kid Ass-Skid? Seriously?
And she can't get him to school because of her busy unemployed lifestyle?
"When I leave this earth I want him to be established...I want him to be able to go to college."
Well then naming him As-Sidq was a great first step, lady....
I have a sneaking suspicion Shantella knows exactly how to go through high school without learning to read or write.
Camden spent $26,000/kid/year and graduates function illiterates.
The wife and I homeschooled our two sons. In addition to their education, we provided food, clothing, shelter, transportation, music lessons, sports, vacations, and everything else for the kids for far less than that. Elder son graduated University of Texas in three years. Younger son took just two years.
Obviously, money is not the solution to this problem. The old educational model is obviously not suited for Camden, though it seems to work tolerably well elsewhere.
The problem isn't "the old model". The problem is the work-shy parasites who have learned how to milk the system. Not, BTW, the unemployed parents, but the bottom feeders who have managed to slouch their way through one College of Education or another. There are, of course, womderful and dedicated public school teachers. But they are outnumbered by the hacks, the power-trippers, and the swine, and it is those who primarily benefit from the Teachers' Unions.
Much could be solved by publicly naming the Teachers' Unions the criminal conspiracies that they are.
As-Sidq....As-Sidq.....As-Sidq
How the uck do you pronounce that!?!?
In a few years, that will explain his reluctance to attend school.
Nothing like a first name that you need to say twice and/or spell out to everyone you talk to, for the rest of your fucking life. Maybe he'll go by "Sid."
I'm going with "Acid Q"
My guess:
As see deek
It took me 5 minutes and 4 second guesses.
Why do I think only an absent father would assent to that name for his son, as if he was even around to be asked.
The societal dysfunction is strong with this one.
At least Boy Name Sue's father have a point in naming him Sue. The father knows that he's NOT going to stick around to raise this boy, and he wants the boy to toughen up without his 'guidance'. Boy did that worked.
What the f is wrong with the taxpayers who are freighting the cost of graduating kids that can't read or write? Even if the area is a one party monopoly, isn't there one concerned black reform Democrat to take on the assholes in charge?
Will they be better off being flunked out?
If you want to know why the elite go to bat for the status quo, look no further than the way Diane Ravtich is worshiped by unions. They will fly her anywhere. Rubber room grade teachers treat her like Justin Bieber. They are simply giddy.
Yes. Her idea is to try and insure this new approach doesn't work by forcingschools to take kids who's parent/s won't even bother to see that they attend.
The scholls should not be forced to take a kid who is going to hold all other kids back and/or costs more than other kids.
Let the parents of those kids have to shop around for a school willing to take them.
Yes. Her idea is to try and insure this new approach doesn't work by forcingschools to take kids who's parent/s won't even bother to see that they attend.
The scholls should not be forced to take a kid who is going to hold all other kids back and/or costs more than other kids.
Let the parents of those kids have to shop around for a school willing to take them.
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Camden, that place holds a special part of my heart. It's where I learned to take a punch and be a fighter ... Mainly by getting the shit kicked out of me on the apartment playground by older kids.
Part of the tragedy is that the area AROUND Camden is made up of some of the wealthiest townships in Southern NJ with some of the best school districts in the state. Since the riots in 1971 onwards, anyone able to leave has and the governance has been a wreck (the most recent mayor was the first in six to leave NOT in handcuffs). Due to North vs. South Jersey infighting, so much of state resources are always invested into the similar problems in Newark (pissed away in recent years by Cory Booker) while Camden is given triage at best.
I grew up a few miles outside Camden in a really good school district and still live in the area, attending grad school part-time at the Rutgers campus in the city, which is connected to one of Camden's charter schools: an odd juxtaposition to drive through the wastelands of the city and then see the bright eyes of little kids in uniforms running around the playground ? it's not what one would expect in that environment. I've also worked on & off as a guide at a local museum, including doing tours for Camden's school children. You still have a clear desire to understand their world; hence these charter schools starting to take off. Compared to kids there from well-off districts, these poorer urban students were usually more interested in discovering, most likely *because* of how little their schools had tended to teach them, so I think that you get a sense how this sort of school choice issue DOES offer some hope for giving that city a future.
This is kind of sad. And it's really disturbing when parent forget that they are responsible for their kids education. It's no use to blame everything on school and teachers as soon as your precious kiddo reaches school age. Here I helped my son compete his custom paper writing for college as they haven't practiced it in school. Same can work out for any parent, just take some time to help your kid and arouse interest for knowledge. It's not that hard to find any kind of information on the Internet today.
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