Republished on VDARE.COM on March 12, 2003
Twin Disasters
By
Thomas Sowell
February 27, 2003
When critics point out the abysmal performances of
schools in ghetto neighborhoods, teachers defend
themselves by pointing out the disinterested,
disruptive, and sometimes dangerous students they have
to deal with. But teacher failure and student failure
are not alternative explanations. They are twin
disasters. There is plenty of blame to go around.
The painful story of educational disasters is
analyzed in a recently published book on the teachers'
union ("The
Worm in the Apple" by Peter Brimelow) and one on
black students' counterproductive attitudes and behavior
("Black
American Students in an Affluent Suburb" by John
U. Ogbu). Neither book is pleasure reading but both
should be required reading for those who are serious
about wanting to improve the education of American
children in general and minority children in particular.
Peter Brimelow's book exposes the insidious, corrupt,
and dirty tactics of those who control the country's
largest teachers' union, the National Education
Association. It is a wholly different picture from that
of cheery smiling union officials who appear on TV ads.
While "educators" are quick to seize upon the defects
of students, parents and society, as if that
automatically vindicates the schools, the fact is that
if our public schools had perfect students, perfect
parents, and a perfect society, these schools would
still be failing because of the three R's that they do
not teach—and the politically correct propaganda that
they teach instead.
Professor Ogbu's book is devastating in a different
way. It is a study of the racial gap in students' school
performances in Shaker Heights, an affluent suburb of
Cleveland. Whether measured by grades, test scores, or
the quality of courses taken, black students lagged
consistently behind white students.
Why? Black teachers, white teachers, black students
and white students all give essentially the same answer:
Black students simply do not work as hard.
None of this should be a surprise to anyone who has
taught black students, especially if they have also
taught white students and Asian students. Nor should it
be a surprise to anyone who has read John McWhorter's
book "Losing
the Race." Although Ogbu failed to mention
either this book or its author, he is essentially
testing the McWhorter thesis that black students do not
put forth the efforts needed to succeed.
Why don't they? There are many reasons. McWhorter
thinks that the availability of affirmative action
reduces the incentives for black students to do their
best. Ogbu finds other reasons: different priorities,
such as more concern among black students for
non-academic activities, such as sports, entertainment,
and hanging out with friends in person or on the phone.
But behind the different priorities of black
students—and of their parents—is a pervasive suspicion
and hostility to the white school authorities and to the
whole culture which they perceive as a white culture
that they must resist as a threat to black "identity."
At least, that is how Professor Ogbu sees it.
Unfortunately, the very same apathy can be found
among black students and parents where the school
authorities are black. I saw it when I taught at a black
college—Howard
University—in the early 1960s, when there was no
affirmative action and no "white culture" or "white
power structure" as distractions.
The cold fact is that there was never any reason in
the first place to expect all groups to have the same
interest or the same performance, whether in education
or anywhere else. Whites do not do as well as Asian
Americans in either educational institutions or in the
economy. And they can't blame racism.
Malays do not do nearly as well as the Chinese in
Malaysia.
Sinhalese have not done nearly as well as Tamils in
Sri Lanka.
Northerners have not done nearly as well as
southerners in Nigeria.
None of this means that it is OK for black students
to keep doing less than their best and to keep falling
behind. It does mean that the time is long overdue for
realism and honesty—and for getting rid of racial hype
and the
claim that it is all whitey's fault. The issue is
not protecting the image of blacks but keeping a whole
generation from destroying their own future.
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