Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the line in the article that just isn't true. Yes, segregation is still an issue, but many black and Hispanic children attend very diverse schools in MoCo. Just because a school is majority non-white doesn't make it not diverse.
"Montgomery County, Md. is relatively diverse, with 34 percent of students white, 21 percent black and 26 percent Latino. But nearly 90 percent of both black and Hispanic children attend majority non-white schools. These children, in other words, live in a diverse county, but they don't attend diverse schools."
What are the options for diversity here? White, Asian, black, Hispanic, and multiple.
Now, I don't think that there are many schools in Montgomery County with a high proportion of Asian students and few white students -- although perhaps I'm wrong. And the proportion of multiple in MCPS is very small. So that leaves what?
In other words, lots of black and Hispanic children are going to schools where the majority of students is black and Hispanic. The 8 Northeast and Downcounty consortium high schools account for almost half of Montgomery County's black and Hispanic high school students. Meanwhile, 6 high schools (guess which ones?) account for more than half of Montgomery County's white high school students. That's de facto segregation.
http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post/19285/de-facto-segregation-threatens-montgomery-public-schools/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I raised the busing question on the thread about the new BCC middle school - we are in the Rosemary Hills catchment although not the neighborhood and while I love our schools (kids in both elementaries), I do question why these kids are bused while none of the other W schools are subject to any effort to promote desegregation. There was a very articulate and well-informed (nonpolemical) response in that thread explaining the difficulties of gerrymandering diverse elementaries in much of Bethesda and Potomac.
I don't have a good solution to any of this. But I do wonder whether the county is exposed to civil rights challenges.
We're a mixed-race family in a pretty diverse neighborhood in the Whitman cluster. One year one of our kids had a classroom that was close to 50% non-white. It's true that diversity overall is less than elsewhere in the county. The cluster is heavily single-family homes, and yes, they are expensive. There are plans to build a lot of new apartments in the Westbard area of Bethesda, which may create some lower-cost housing opportunities and could help with diversity as well. I support the idea, but want the county/city to think about how this will impact the schools, which are very overcrowded as it is. Wood Acres, which would serve most or all of the new units in Westbard, has something like 850 kids already and is about to close for 18 months to undergo a much needed expansion. Other than that, creating more diversity might require busing, which, given where Bethesda and Potomac are, could end up subjecting kids to heinously long bus rides. I agree with the previous poster that gerrymandering boundaries would be hard because of geographics and existing overcapacity for most of the schools. I don't see an easy solution either.
Besides most parents don't want their kids around Whitman kids, so there is an issue getting them to want to bus.
Huh? Was this a joke? What's the deal with Whitman kids?
Oh please. Whitman is a great school. Jealous much?
Drugs, elitist, lawyers getting them out of everything, never being accountable
Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/09/03/mapping-the-counties-where-public-school-children-still-remain-segregated/?tid=HP_national
It is disturbing to see just how segregated our school system is. IMO it is all about housing. We have segregated housing, and therefore segregated schools.
Anonymous wrote:Compared to a great majority of the country - Mcps is pretty diverse. Including the schools with a majority of one race. We moved from an area where the schools were 95% white. Mcps is diverse.
I will grant you that socio economically - there does appear to be a divide.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are white and are minorities in their school. It's diverse in number but the lunch room groups, recess groups and other socializing is not so diverse. And this is Elementary School. Maybe once middle school or high school activities start there is more mingling, or maybe not. Are sports programs self-segregating too?
Anonymous wrote:But a school can be "majority non-white" and still be very diverse. I think this describes a lot of MoCo schools.
Anonymous wrote:Redrawing boundaries and bussing are impractical and costly. Please don't assume that minorities would be eager for their kids to spend hours on a bus each day. Heck, I know parents who bailed on the HGCs and magnet programs because the bus commute was too taxing on the kids. Plus, it's tough to have friends when you don't live in the same area (after school play dates aren't practical, kids typically aren't on the same teams, etc.).
And new housing policies aren't going to fix the current situation. The mpdu program and zoning laws are helpful...but only for set asides for new developments. Expecting tons of new construction in the wealthier areas? Not so much. And let's pretend we could magically steer every family with a new housing voucher to Bethesda or Potomac...would that make an impact? Not so much. First of all, they aren't even putting names on the housing voucher list anymore (no new vouchers). And many voucher holders are elderly and/or disabled adults...not families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I raised the busing question on the thread about the new BCC middle school - we are in the Rosemary Hills catchment although not the neighborhood and while I love our schools (kids in both elementaries), I do question why these kids are bused while none of the other W schools are subject to any effort to promote desegregation. There was a very articulate and well-informed (nonpolemical) response in that thread explaining the difficulties of gerrymandering diverse elementaries in much of Bethesda and Potomac.
I don't have a good solution to any of this. But I do wonder whether the county is exposed to civil rights challenges.
We're a mixed-race family in a pretty diverse neighborhood in the Whitman cluster. One year one of our kids had a classroom that was close to 50% non-white. It's true that diversity overall is less than elsewhere in the county. The cluster is heavily single-family homes, and yes, they are expensive. There are plans to build a lot of new apartments in the Westbard area of Bethesda, which may create some lower-cost housing opportunities and could help with diversity as well. I support the idea, but want the county/city to think about how this will impact the schools, which are very overcrowded as it is. Wood Acres, which would serve most or all of the new units in Westbard, has something like 850 kids already and is about to close for 18 months to undergo a much needed expansion. Other than that, creating more diversity might require busing, which, given where Bethesda and Potomac are, could end up subjecting kids to heinously long bus rides. I agree with the previous poster that gerrymandering boundaries would be hard because of geographics and existing overcapacity for most of the schools. I don't see an easy solution either.
Besides most parents don't want their kids around Whitman kids, so there is an issue getting them to want to bus.
Huh? Was this a joke? What's the deal with Whitman kids?