15 Aug The Education Imperative for the Black Community

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Rosa Smith, former superintendent of the Columbus, Ohio, schools, had an epiphany one morning when she read some statistics about U.S. prison population. Some 75% of the prison population, she found, is Latino or African-American, and 80% are functionally illiterate. She felt a new sense of purpose: Her work was no longer about teaching math or science, but about saving lives!

This is the attitude we must adopt if we are to save our children in urban schools, and schools in predominantly Black communities all over this country. There is a call to arms that we must all embrace. Failure is not an option!

When we look around us, we see widespread evidence of an education crisis in urban communities. In a study released in 2006 by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the study estimates that . . . just 52% of blacks graduate, and 57% of Hispanics. Fourteen urban school districts have on-time graduation rates lower than 50%; they include Detroit, Baltimore, New York, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas, Denver and Houston.

If we are to save our children, we must embrace an education imperative that refuses to allow our children to face a new world that they are unprepared for. There are many programs that are being initiated to stem this tide. In Columbus, Ohio, Gene Harris, the current superintendent, is committed to raising the graduation rate from 72% today to 90% for the class of 2012. Her plan, Project Mentor, calls for 10,000 volunteers to mentor children starting in the 8th grade, and covering all classes to graduation. This ambitious plan calls all concerned adults to arms to combat this crippling situation in our public schools.

The Black Star Project challenges all Black men to take their children to school on the first day of school. Participants in more than 200 cities all over the country are answering this call to arms and supporting the Fourth Annual Million Father March. Further, Phillip Jackson, Director of the Black Star Project encourages fathers to visit schools often.

This is not a time for apathy, finger-pointing, or blame casting. Every one reading this article should seek out an opportunity in your local community to volunteer just a small amount of time to help reverse this devastating trend. This is a crisis of will. The question is, "Do we have the will to save our children?"

In times of drastic change, it is the learners who inherit the future. The learned usually find themselves beautifully equipped to live in a world that no longer exists.
-- Eric Hoffer, Reflections on the Human Condition
(New York: HarperCollins, 1972, p.32)

Roger Madison
CEO, iZania.com

 

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Last modified on Sunday, 02 October 2016 23:55