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Posted: Thursday, April 22, 2010 10:34 am
For the second time in as many years, a largely Somali charter school is being pushed to diversify.
School leaders have tried to draw new students in with advertisements and brochures. Despite those efforts, San Diego Unified staffers say Iftin Charter School is still 96 percent African American -- a much higher share than the population in its City Heights neighborhood and San Diego Unified at large. It was formed by parents, many of them Somali refugees who were unhappy with local schools.
Charter schools, which are independently run and publicly funded, must get approval from school districts to start up and continue to operate. California law requires charters to meet a long list of conditions, including having a racial makeup that reflects their neighborhoods.
That's why San Diego Unified has warned Iftin that it needs to diversify. School district staff wrote that Iftin needs a plan to recruit students from other racial and ethnic groups -- and it needs to put money behind that plan. Failing to do that could put its existence in jeopardy.
This isn't the first time Iftin has faced questions about its diversity: When the school sought to expand into a high school, San Diego Unified staff said the school board should turn it downbecause in its four years of existence, it had failed to diversify, with a vast majority of Somali