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N.C. District鈥檚 Remedy for White 鈥業solation鈥 Draws Protest

By Blake Rodman 鈥 October 28, 1987 4 min read
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In a highly unusual move, school administrators in Greensboro, N.C., have grouped white students together in several predominantly black elementary schools to prevent them from being 鈥渋solated鈥 in nearly all-black classes.

In doing so, the district has created a number of all-black classes in the schools, raising protests in the city鈥檚 black community and from at least one white parent.

School officials say the move is a 鈥渟topgap鈥 attempt to stem the steady exodus of white students from predominantly black inner-city schools. But that explanation has not satisfied the local chapter of the naacp, which may file a lawsuit to strike down the practice.

鈥淭he position that the branch has taken is that you can鈥檛 have a policy that focuses on the segregation of classes,鈥 said Edwin D. Bell, chairman of the education committee of the Greeensboro naacp chapter.

Although deemed integrated in the mid-1970鈥檚 after several years of court-ordered desegregation efforts, the district has continued to bus children in an effort to preserve racial integration.

But as a result, many white families who live in attendance areas served by predominantly black inner-city schools have taken their children out of the city schools. This trend, city officials say, threatens desegregration efforts.

鈥淥ur number one goal is to main4tain an integrated education system,鈥 said Sarah J. Beale, president of the Greensboro City Board of Education. 鈥淚t is difficult because not all citizens share that goal, and there is a fear that isolation will drive more whites鈥 out.

In an effort to curb 鈥渨hite flight,鈥 principals at several elementary schools have sought and been given permission by Superintendent of Schools John A. Eberhart to create a number of all-black classes.

At Jones Elementary School, where the student population is 70 percent black, the principal established eight all-black classes. The remaining seven classes were to have had an equal number of white and black students.

But last-minute enrollments by a number of white students, Mr. Eberhart said last week, resulted in white majorities in those classes.

At Wiley Elementary School, where the student population is 83 percent black, there are seven all black classes; the rest are predominantly black.

The principals at both schools are black.

Washington Elementary School, which initiated the move to all-black classes last year, became a magnet school this year and was able to draw enough white students to integrate all classes.

Jones and Wiley also have become magnet schools, and district officials hope they, too, will eventually attract more white students.

鈥淥ur action was aimed at main8taining the enrollments of a few white students as we move to a magnet-school program which we hope will draw white students from all over the district,鈥 Mr. Eberhart said.

鈥楲et鈥檚 Try This鈥

鈥淲e are experiencing a rapid drop in white enrollment in the schools of central Greensboro and that has got to stop,鈥 Mr. Eberhart said. 鈥淎s a temporary stopgap measure I said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 try this and see what happens.鈥濃

William L. Taylor, a lawyer who is a national expert on desegregation, said classes in integrated schools around the country sometimes become racially segregated through the practice of grouping students according to ability.

But 鈥渢he notion of resegregating children within a desegregated school in order to maintain stability and avoid white flight is something that is unusual,鈥 he said.

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 heard of it before,鈥 Mr. Taylor said, adding that he believed the policy 鈥渨ould not survive a legal challenge.鈥

In Greensboro, the public learned of the practice after a parent of a white student at Jones asked the school鈥檚 principal why her son, who has a learning handicap, was not placed in the class of a black second-grade teacher who had helped him in the past.

鈥淚 was told that the teacher I had requested was going to teach an all- black class,鈥 said Kathleen Williams. 鈥淭he principal said that since my son was white he couldn鈥檛 be in this teacher鈥檚 classroom unless he was willing to be the only white.鈥

Disgruntled, Ms. Williams wrote an angry letter to Mr. Eberhart, saying: 鈥淢y child is on a bus for 45 minutes to go to his school to help desegregate it. What is the point of desegregation if the classrooms are going to be segregated anyway?鈥

Ms. Williams said last week that when she did not hear from Mr. Eberhart, she decided to go to the local newspaper, The Greensboro News & Record, which, on Oct. 5, ran a front-page story on the room-assignment practice.

Mr. Eberhart tells a different story: 鈥淭he newspaper had her complaints before I got her letter.鈥

Local naacp officials plan to meet with Mr. Eberhart and with representatives from their national parent organization before deciding whether to pursue legal action against the district, according to Mr. Bell. He said the organization was particularly troubled by the predominantly white classes at Jones.

Mr. Eberhart said last week that he would take immediate steps to eliminate any 鈥渕ajority-white classes鈥 in predominantly black schools. But he said he might continue to allow 鈥渙ne-race classes鈥 to prevent racial isolation for students attending schools where there is currently a racial imbalance.

鈥淎t this point,鈥 he said, 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been persuaded that this is not a positive and constructive action to promote and advance school and classroom integration.鈥

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A version of this article appeared in the October 28, 1987 edition of Education Week as N.C. District鈥檚 Remedy for White 鈥業solation鈥 Draws Protest

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