Monday, December 21, 2009

City Schools’ New Criteria for Diversity Raise Fears - NYTimes.com

City Schools’ New Criteria for Diversity Raise Fears - NYTimes.com:

"The Chicago public schools’ response to a recent court desegregation ruling — a plan to use students’ social and economic profiles instead of race to achieve classroom diversity — is raising fears that it will undermine the district’s slow and incremental progress on racial diversity."


Chicago schools, like the city itself, are hardly a model of racial integration. But a Chicago News Cooperativeanalysis of school data shows the district has made modest gains in the magnet, gifted, classical and selective-enrollment schools, where, for nearly 30 years, race has been used as an admission criterion. Those advances may be imperiled in the wake of court rulings that have prompted Chicago Public Schools to look for factors other than race when assigning students to such schools.

Nationwide, court rulings have prompted school districts to seek creative ways to diversify classrooms without using a student’s race as a factor. In Chicago, school officials last week moved ahead with their own experiment.
Instead of race as an admissions factor, they now will use socioeconomic data from the student’s neighborhood — income, education levels, single-parent households, owner-occupied homes and the use of language other than English as the primary tongue — in placing children in selective-enrollment schools.
A 1980 federal consent decree had, for nearly three decades, made the use of race a factor in admission to Chicago’s magnet and selective-enrollment schools. In September, a federal district court judge in Chicago vacated that decree. In the district’s neighborhood schools, race was not considered in assigning