Thursday, December 30, 2010
Slavery paintings coming down from Atlanta office
The murals are part of a collection of eight works painted by George Beattie in 1956 depicting an idealized version of Georgia farming, from the corn grown by prehistoric American Indians to a 20th-century veterinary lab. In the Deep South, the history in between includes the forced use of slave labor.
'I don't like those pictures,' said Republican Gary Black, the newly elected agriculture commissioner. 'There are a lot of other people who don't like them.'
Slavery was indisputably part of 19th-century farming in Georgia. By 1840, more than 280,000 slaves were living in the state, many as field hands. Just before the Civil War, slaves made up about 40 percent of the state's population.
Va. judges revisit noncitizens' convictions, sentences to prevent deportation
But in Virginia, a similar battle has emerged over whether judges can revisit and reopen old cases or even summarily revise the sentences to avoid a convict's removal from the country.
A Loudoun County General District Court judge recently reopened four cases involving defendants who say they would not have pleaded guilty if they had known that they would be deported. In one instance this month, Loudoun prosecutors sought a court order to stop the judge from reopening such cases, but a Circuit Court judge refused.
Miss. Gov. Haley Barbour to free sisters sentenced to life in prison for robbery
Gladys and Jamie Scott have each served 16 years of a life sentence. Their case had become a cause celebre among civil rights groups, including the NAACP, which mounted a national campaign to free the women.
The Scotts were convicted in 1994 for an armed robbery in which they led two men into an ambush. The men were robbed of $11, and their supporters contend that the Scotts, who are black, received extraordinary punishment for the crime.
Monday, December 27, 2010
Puerto Rico baffled by high asthma rate
The island, with a population of 4 million, already has 2.5 times the death rate stemming from asthma as the mainland, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Puerto Ricans in the U.S. also have been hit hard by asthma, with an asthma attack rate 2.5 times higher than for whites.
Adding to the problem is that Puerto Rican children do not respond as well as those from other ethnic groups to the number one medication prescribed to asthmatics: Albuterol, which comes in an inhaler used to relieve sudden attacks. As a result, several major pharmaceutical companies are working to create another medication, but they are still years away from doing so.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Hispanics Leaving Connecticut Town, Citing Racial Abuse By Police
Malave, a probation officer who works in New Haven, says the racial abuse is so bad that he only crosses the town line into East Haven to go home. He and his wife are now preparing to sell their house and move, joining an exodus of Hispanics who say police have hassled them with traffic stops, false arrests and even jailhouse beatings.
The Justice Department has started a civil rights investigation, and the FBI recently opened a criminal probe. But that has not changed things on Main Street, where restaurants and stores that cater to Hispanics are going out of business.
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Cherokee, Apple partner to put language on iPhones
The goal, Cherokee Chief Chad Smith said, is to spread the use of the language among tech-savvy children in the digital age. Smith has been known to text students at the school using Cherokee, and teachers do the same, allowing students to continue using the language after school hours.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Study: Stroke deaths higher where fried fish aplenty - USATODAY.com
A study published in today's Neurology shows people living in the stroke belt — which comprises North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas and Louisiana — eat more fried fish and less non-fried fish than people living in the rest of the country, and African-Americans eat more fried fish than Caucasians.
'Differences in dietary fish consumption, specifically in cooking methods, may be contributing to higher rates of stroke in the stroke belt and also among African Americans,' says study author Fadi Nahab, medical director for the Stroke Program at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
‘Freedom Riders’: The Fight To End Segregation
The film, “Freedom Riders,” recounts the 1961 crusade by daring young activists intent on ending segregated travel on interstate buses in the Deep South. The American Experience film, set to air May 16 on PBS, has been generating buzz on the film festival circuit ever since its showing at Sundance in January.
Most of the riders were college students coached in the art of nonviolent protest by veteran activists, including the Rev. James M. Lawson Jr. The students, both Black and White, knew they were risking their lives by traveling on Greyhound and Trailways buses into the rigidly and violently segregated South.
Kaplan Higher Education Sued Over Alleged Job Discrimination
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) says the practice of rejecting job seekers based on their credit history has a discriminatory impact on some racial and ethnic groups. The lawsuit alleges that Kaplan's practice is not job-related or justified by business necessity.
As a result of this practice dating back to 2008, the company has violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, according to the lawsuit filed by the EEOC’s Cleveland field office in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. It is a violation of Title VII to use hiring practices that have a discriminatory impact because of race and that are not job-related and justified by business necessity.
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Texas Curriculum Changes Prompt Civil Rights Groups To Seek Review Of Public Schools In Lone Star State
The request to the U.S. Department of Education made by the Texas NAACP and Texas League of United Latin American Citizens on Monday contended that the curriculum changes passed in May 'were made with the intention to discriminate' and would have a 'stigmatizing impact' on African-American and Latino students.
'The State of Texas is failing to provide many of its minority students with equal educational opportunities,' documents sent to the federal department said.
Reinvented New Jersey College Embraces Minority Identity
“I helped the college understand what it had become and that was kind of a sea change,” says Dr. John Noonan, a veteran educator recruited by Bloomfield as president in 1987. “I knew which way the country was moving. Colleges that didn’t aggressively recruit non-White students were going to become anachronistic. It was not that I came and brought something new. All I did was to help people understand why that was occurring.”
It was important to embrace diversity, says Noonan, who retired from his post in 2003, “because that’s who we were by the time I got there. African-American students saved the school,” he says, pointing to the steady enrollment of Black and other minorities that helped offset the loss of White students who began leaving Bloomfield en masse in the early 1970s.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Curriculum Reform at UT-Galveston Medical School Yields Improved Minority Student Board Results
Lieberman said that the overall rate of failure on the Step 1 exam has dropped from 7.5 percent to 2.3 percent, compared to a national rate in the 5 to 7 percent range. The change for minority students, which he described as “huge and surprising,” dropped from 16.9 to 3.9 percent, which is lower than the national failure rate for all students.
DREAM Act Blocked in Senate
Sponsors of the Dream Act fell five votes short of the 60 they needed to break through largely GOP opposition and win its enactment before Republicans take over the House and narrow Democrats' majority in the Senate next month.
President Barack Obama called the vote “incredibly disappointing.”
“A minority of senators prevented the Senate from doing what most Americans understand is best for the country,” Obama said. “There was simply no reason not to pass this important legislation.”
Reaching Out to Diverse Students with Mental Health Services
Sadly, this student’s story is not unusual. According to a supplemental report from the U.S. Surgeon General, “striking disparities in mental health care are found for racial and ethnic minorities.”
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Young supporters vow to keep fighting for DREAM Act | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Breaking News for Dallas-Fort Worth | Dallas Morning News
'It's a heartbreaking loss, but we're going to keep fighting for it,' said Him Ranjit, a University of Texas at Austin student who was in Washington, D.C., on Saturday to support the legislation.
'I've never seen the Senate chambers that full,' he said of students who were present to witness the vote. 'We were holding hands and praying and hoping for the best.'
Ranjit, who came to Texas from Nepal, said he would struggle to continue his biomedical engineering studies without the financial support that students who are citizens typically receive.
Whatever Happened To ... the Baltimore high school debater?
Iggy was a kid who had a lot of strikes against him. He never knew his biological dad. His mom struggled with drug addiction, and he landed in foster care. He attended Baltimore's Frederick Douglass High School, one of four failing Baltimore schools slated for takeover under the No Child Left Behind Act. His odds of success were poor: Only 56 percent of Frederick Douglass students had graduated in 2006.
But Iggy, an argumentative kid, found a way to channel his contrariness through the wildly popular Baltimore Urban Debate League, a program that teaches the fundamentals of democracy -- as well as critical thinking, basic literacy and research skills -- to underprivileged students. Weekly debate tournaments in the city continue to draw more than 1,000 students on any given weekend.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Dream Act Scheduled for Senate Vote - NYTimes.com
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, scheduled the vote on the student measure, which is known as the Dream Act, late on Thursday. The Senate will vote on a version of the bill that passed the House of Representatives on Dec. 8.
The bill gained some momentum after passing the House by 20 votes, including 8 Republicans, a wider margin than its supporters had expected. But on Friday the Senate count appeared to be short of the 60 votes Democrats need to bring the bill to the floor for debate. Its sponsors, including Senator Reid and Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the second highest Democratic leader, acknowledged they faced an uphill climb.
The Root: When Biracial Means Black : NPR
Yeah, me, too. This is just one of the reasons I'm scratching my head at the findings of a new study that people with one white and one black parent 'downplay their white ancestry,' in part to gain the acceptance of other black people. The authors dub this phenomenon 'reverse passing' and call it 'a striking phenomenon.' I'm beyond stumped. In a summary of the results, the sociologists behind 'Passing as Black: Racial Identity Work Among Biracial Americans' report that this occurs especially in 'certain social situations' — ostensibly, around other black people — where having a white parent 'can carry its own negative biases.
Friday, December 17, 2010
College President Tackles Student Persistence, Campus Expansion
And that doesn’t bother him one bit.
Hernandez joined the faculty at NJCU—then Jersey City State College—as a professor of psychology in 1972. Over the last 17 years as president, he has shepherded the largely commuter school of about 10,000 students through some monumental changes, including the achievement of university status and an increase in the number of minority students—specifically Latinos by 52.2 percent—on the urban campus.
Reports Highlight Health Care Reform’s Potential Impact in Reducing Health Disparities
Also on Thursday, the Washington-based Center for American Progress released two reports that explore the Affordable Care Act’s impact on racial and ethnic minorities who suffer from chronic illnesses and how the legislation can improve efforts to address gaps in the data that measure health care disparities.
“There has been considerable debate this week around efforts to dismantle health care reform,” said the reports’ author, Dr. Lesley Russell, a senior fellow at the think tank, during a conference call with reporters.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
With Dream Act Shelved, Immigrants Look to 2012
The measure that passed in the House on Wednesday is unlikely go anywhere in the Senate, and the House is unlikely to revisit the issue once the new Republican leadership takes over.
Groups like The National Council of La Raza and other Hispanic and immigrant advocacy groups know the prospects for comprehensive immigration reform are dim for the time being. So they've turned their attention to a measure that they believe will spark more sympathy from most Americans, bringing with them a coalition of labor groups, the Conference of Catholic Bishops and even Defense Secretary Robert Gates. And come 2012, advocates say, Spanish-language media will be filled with ads slamming lawmakers who voted against the Dream Act.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Census Data Show Immigrants Making Path to Suburbs - NYTimes.com
Following jobs to rural and suburban areas, in industries like construction and the food business, immigrant populations rose more than 60 percent in places where immigrants made up fewer than 5 percent of the population in 2000. In areas that had been home to the most immigrants, the foreign-born population was flat over that period.
In Los Angeles County, long a major destination for new immigrants, the foreign-born population remained largely unchanged for the first time in several decades. In contrast, it quadrupled in Newton County, in central Georgia outside Atlanta.
Minnesota’s Private Colleges Recruit Diverse Students
They’d do well to pay a little attention to some Minnesota success stories. For almost the tenth consecutive year the number of minorities enrolled in the 17 four-year, liberal arts schools that belong to the Minnesota Private College Council has increased. This year, 17 percent of incoming freshmen statewide are minorities, as are nearly 23 percent of transfers.
Garden State Abandons Minority Doctoral Program
“The defunding was the result of the continuing state fiscal situation,” says Dr. Glenn Lang, acting executive director of the New Jersey Commission on Higher Education. “The program was not singled out but was part of larger statewide budget cuts. The current budget only supports the seven remaining doctoral fellows.”
Lopez and other former fellows say they were surprised and dismayed at the cutback, which was announced in September. The chairman of the state’s Legislative Black Caucus, state Sen. Ronald Rice of Newark, says he too was unaware that the Legislature has only provided appropriations to wind down the program.
Immigrant students try to rally support for national Dream Act
Midence arrived in Maryland four years ago, when her mother moved to the state with her and her younger sister from El Salvador as an undocumented worker. She declined to say where she currently lives or the name of her high school.
If the Development Relief and Education for Minors Act, dubbed the Dream Act, does not pass, she will continue to face a difficult path to college and citizenship.
'If I'm deported I have a lot I've done for my community to be proud of,' Midence said.
The Dream Act would allow the children of undocumented immigrants who have graduated from high school, are considered of 'good moral character' and have been in the country at least five years the opportunity to earn conditional permanent residency if they complete two years of college or two years in the military. Those who complete military service or obtain a bachelor's degree would be eligible to become U.S. citizens.
Achievement gap on AP scores grows in Montgomery County schools, as overall performance dips
Still, Board of Education members stress the importance of opening up Advanced Placement tests and classes to more Montgomery County Public School students — and more black and Hispanic students in particular.
As one of the school system's Seven Keys to College Readiness, the school system includes earning a 3 on an AP exam or a 4 on an International Baccalaureate exam.
Education Week: Study Finds Bad Schools Rarely Get Better—or Shut Down
Of 2,025 chronically low-performing elementary and middle schools identified in 10 states in 2003-04, it found, only about 1 percent had improved enough to exceed their states’ average academic performance five years later, and fewer than 10 percent had even broken out of the lowest 25 percent of schools in their states. The findings are in a report released Tuesday by the Washington-based Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Basis Policy Research, of Raleigh, N.C.
Despite such a dismal record, only 19 percent of the lowest-performing charter schools and 11 percent of their more-traditional public school peers had been closed after five years, according to lead author David A. Stuit, a founding partner of Basis Policy Research.
Education Week: Study: States Must Move Faster to Close Achievement Gaps
The report, released Tuesday by the Center on Education Policy, a Washington-based research and policy group, breaks new ground by estimating the length of time it will likely take to close gaps in a sample of states, said Jack Jennings, the organization’s president and chief executive officer.
It shows that, overall, achievement gaps remain large and persistent across the nation, but the gaps between whites and Hispanics and whites and African-Americans are narrowing at a faster pace than those between whites and Native Americans.
“There’s some progress made in narrowing the gaps, but we have to do much more and kick it up much faster,” Mr. Jennings said.
Report: Latino students in area improve in math tests
In Virginia, the report found, the pass rate for Latino students on state eighth-grade math tests rose almost 5 percentage points a year from 2006 to 2009. In Maryland, the rate has been rising at about the same clip. And in the District, it has been rising even faster - 8 percentage points a year.
Those increases were among the largest in a comparison of gains by racial subgroups in those jurisdictions, according to the report from the Center on Education Policy to be made public Tuesday. They reflected a national pattern.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
American Indian Museum Still Facing Criticism for Historical Inaccuracies
It is not surprising that a group of Native American scholars and activists is gearing up for an effort to rewrite their history to clarify the true scale of their historical oppression. The struggle to correct the record is happening at the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI). Since its 2004 opening, the NMAI has been a source of pride as a prominent national exhibit dedicated to the preservation and study of Native American culture but one that critics say inadequately represents the persecution of Native Americans.
The NMAI is the newest of 19 museums and nine research centers that make up the Smithsonian Institution, the world’s largest museum complex and research organization.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Only One In Four Young Black Men In New York Have A Job: Study
The headline of the report, filed by the Community Service Society of New York reads, 'Only One in Four Young Black Men in New York City Have a Job.'
The study finds that the unemployment rate for African-American men in New York, between the ages of 16 and 24, was 33.5 percent from January 2009 through June 2010.
By comparison, the jobless rate amongst all New Yorkers in that age range was 24.6 percent.
In higher education, lessons in equality
The suburban Baltimore school joins Virginia's George Mason University on a list of 11 higher education institutions nationwide where graduation rates for minority students meet or exceed those of whites, according to an analysis by the Education Trust, a Washington-based think tank that focuses on racial and ethnic achievement gaps.
It put Towson's graduation rate at 67 percent for white and black students and 70 percent for Hispanics. The report says the school has an overall graduation rate of 65 percent, higher than George Mason's 58 percent and the national rate of about 55 percent. (The overall rates include students who decline to identify themselves in a racial or ethnic group.)
'The goal has been, if you take them in, you should graduate them,' said Robert Caret, Towson president since 2003.
Student Activist Encourages Peers to Act on DREAM Act - Kensington, MD Patch
'I was one of those kids. I was undocumented,' said Benitez, who is working to educate his fellow students about the DREAM Act and drum up support for the bill, which was approved by the House of Representatives on Dec. 8 and is expected to be voted on in the Senate before the end of the year.
If passed into law, the DREAM Act, formally known as the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act of 2010, would protect those who entered the United States when they were younger than 16 from deportation and help them to become citizens. If passed, the act won't affect anyone older than 30.
The bill states that candidates must show they are 'of good moral character' since their first entry into the United States and that those with state or federal convictions or prison sentences of one year or more are not eligible for DREAM Act protection. It also requires a mandatory background check for each candidate.
NAACP to protest secession ball - Local / Metro - TheState.com
State NAACP leaders held two press conferences Friday, spreading the word they will protest the ball and any other sesquicentennial events that they deem disrespectful.
“We are not opposed to observances,” said Lonnie Randolph, state president of the NAACP. “We are opposed to disrespect.”
Book Review: Lending Credibility to the Oral Tradition
On June 27, 1868, Chief Hole in the Day (Bagone-giizhig pronounced Bug-oh-nay-gee-zhig) left his home in Crow Wing, Minn., for Washington, D.C., to fight the planned U.S. removal of his people, the Mississippi Ojibwe, to a reservation in White Earth, Minn. Several miles from his home, he was accosted by at least 12 men from his own tribe and shot dead. The death of this self-styled chief of all the Ojibwe people was front-page national news at the time.
Civil Rights Commission Report Finds That HBCUs Do a Better Job of Graduating Black STEM Majors
According to the findings, although HBCUs have an average graduation rate of 55 percent — compared to the 63 percent average graduation rate at non-HBCUs — they succeed in educating and graduating disproportionately large numbers of African-American students. The reason, the report says, is that HBCUs provide a better match for the students’ academic abilities.
“Many African-American students granted preferential admission at elite non-HBCUs, even when they score well compared to national norms, are competitively disadvantaged in developed ability relative to their school’s student body who are admitted without consideration of racial or ethnic preferences,” the report states.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Doll project aims to boost black girls' self-confidence - USATODAY.com
'It means a lot to them,' said Smith, a junior at Mary Baldwin College. 'Having an African-American doll, it's like having a part of them.'
The project, which is in its 13th year, has collected more than 300 dolls, including Barbies, Kenya dolls and professional dolls. The Rev. Andrea Cornett-Scott has some caveats, though, about the types of dolls they accept.
Tattoos, piercings, a ton of makeup drawn on and skimpy clothes are some of the automatic disqualifiers for the dolls. They are supposed to model average black girls and women, Cornett-Scott said. Another big requirement, and a harder one to meet, is finding dolls that have authentic black features.
She held up three examples. The first, a doll with dark brown skin and a short bob, the next with braided hair and glasses, and the last with curls and full lips."
Racist cupcakes? Duncan Hines 'hip-hop' video ad under fire
The commercial, which features chocolate-frosted cupcakes singing a harmony, was released on YouTube with the title 'Hip Hop'. Along with that title, the cupcakes featured exaggerated lips and eyes and more hummed a melody – that was decidedly un-hip hop.
'If you're going to call them hip-hop cupcakes, then shouldn't at least one of them at least do a verse?' a blogger wrote on the Racialicious blog wrote.
In a press release, the company said it wanted to inspire creativity in its new commercial."
Saturday, December 11, 2010
On Nixon Tapes, Disparaging Remarks About Ethnic Groups - NYTimes.com
The remarks were contained in 265 hours of recordings, captured by the secret taping system Nixon had installed in the White House and released this week by the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.
While previous recordings have detailed Nixon’s animosity toward Jews, including those who served in his administration like Henry A. Kissinger, his national security adviser, these tapes suggest an added layer of complexity to Nixon’s feeling. He and his aides seem to make a distinction between Israeli Jews, whom Nixon admired, and American Jews.
In a conversation Feb. 13, 1973, with Charles W. Colson, a senior adviser who had just told Nixon that he had always had “a little prejudice,” Nixon said he was not prejudiced but continued: “I’ve just recognized that, you know, all people have certain traits.”
Friday, December 10, 2010
Early College Planning Essential for Latino Student Success, Experts Say
That was one of the take-home points that University of Maryland higher education professor Alberto Cabrera offered up Thursday while presenting at a research conference titled Building Better Students: Preparation for Life After High School. The Educational Testing Service, the College Board, and the American Educational Research Association sponsored the conference.
“The main message that we want to convey to you is that success in college and beyond is seeded in the eighth grade, if not earlier,” Cabrera, a professor at the University of Maryland at College Park, told the conferees.
Native Americans Combat the Suicide Spirit
The complex reasons behind these statistics dictate that suicide prevention strategies must recognize American Indians’ unique history and need to be effective, say American Indian mental health providers and researchers.
Thursday, December 09, 2010
Education Week: Civil Rights Complaint Filed Over Chicago Flunking Policy
Parents United for Responsible Education, or PURE, said in a news conference this morning that it filed a similar discrimination complaint against CPS in 1999 and reached a resolution to some of its concerns.
But the group said it decided to file another complaint after 10 years of seeing CPS flunk 'thousands of children every year'—despite research that PURE says shows flunking students doesn't help children's later achievement, and in fact increases their chances for dropping out of school.
'They drop out at an early age because they're so discouraged,' said Julie Woestehoff, executive director of PURE. 'It's like you have a bureaucratic door shut in your face and then you're left with a child who is unhappy and doesn't want to go to school.'
Obama Signs Settlement for Black Farmers
Standing in the White House's South Court auditorium, the president signed into law H.R. 4783, otherwise known as the Claims Resolution Act. The act provides billions to fund two separate class-action-lawsuit settlements against the U.S. government: Cobell v. Salazar and Pigford v. Glickman.
In the first lawsuit, filed in 1996, Native American claimants alleged that the Interior Department had been conning them out of oil, gas and timber royalties since the late 1800s. In the second, brought by Timothy Pigford in 1997, African-American farmers argued that the Department of Agriculture systematically cheated them out of loans and other public assistance throughout the '80s and '90s. In the end, the Native Americans won a settlement worth $3.4 billion, and the African Americans won nearly $1.2 billion.
House approves DREAM Act, but Senate approval uncertain - CNN.com
The 216-198 vote, mostly on partisan lines, sends the so-called DREAM Act to the Senate, where it was uncertain if supporters had the votes to overcome a certain Republican filibuster against it.
The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act -- or DREAM -- would create a path to citizenship for immigrants who entered the United States illegally as children under the age of 16 and have lived in America for at least five years, obtained a high school or General Education Development diploma and demonstrated 'good moral character,' according to a White House fact sheet.
Foreign Language Courses Growing on Campuses
But, despite the strong interest, experts warn that foreign language study on campuses is in peril because of budget cuts and a dwindling number of graduate students who form the foundation of future college language faculties.
The latest figures from the Modern Language Association, released Wednesday, show that enrollment in foreign language courses grew 6.6 percent between 2006 and 2009, achieving a high mark since the study began in 1960.
Scholar Documents Historic Ties Between African-Americans and Native Americans
“That changed my whole trajectory,” Miles says. “I switched, in the context of that class, from focusing on African-American 19th century literature to focusing on African-American-Native American relations, also in the 19th century.”
Now an associate professor of American culture, history, Afro-American and African studies, and Native American studies at the University of Michigan, Miles has emerged in this decade as a leading scholar of Cherokee-African American relations.
Aretha Franklin 'battling cancer' | Music | guardian.co.uk
'God is still in control,' Franklin said after last week's surgery. The 68-year-old singer's condition has been the subject of speculation since she announced she was clearing her calendar 'at the insistence' of doctors. Earlier this summer, Franklin suffered a serious fall in which she broke two ribs, and she also had a brief stay in hospital in early November.
NAACP contests suicide as cause of hanged man's death - USATODAY.com
Frederick Jermaine Carter, whose body was found Friday in North Greenwood, had a history of mental illness, was on medication and had a pattern of wandering away, says Leflore County Sheriff Ricky Banks.
Carter, who lived in neighboring Sunflower County, was helping his stepfather paint a building Wednesday. The stepfather went to get tools and when he returned, Carter had wandered off, Banks says.
'That really didn't bother the stepdaddy,' Banks says. 'It had happened so many times before. He's a mental patient and was taking medication. He had wandered to Florida, to Arkansas.'
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
Ten HBCUs Get Accreditation Reaffirmed, Two Placed on Warning Status
Two major colleges—Fisk University and Tennessee State University, both in Tennessee—were placed on “warning” status, a position that leaves their accreditation intact pending resolution of issues SACS raised during their review process. Warning is one step short of probation, a rating that could lead to a school losing accreditation.
Stillman College, a small private historically Black school in Alabama, was denied reaffirmation.
The SACS decisions were announced in Louisville late Tuesday as the Commission completed four days of meetings built around its annual convention.
Southern U.S. College Graduation Rates Lag Behind National Average
But while the study released Tuesday paints a disquieting portrait of college degree attainment for minorities in the South, education policy experts say it simply highlights a problem that has been occurring in the South for years.
Oxford, Cambridge Fail To Admit Black Students [UPDATED]
Last year, 21 Oxbridge colleges did not offer admission to a single black student. Oxford's storied Merton college has not accepted a black student for five years. Out of all of its colleges, Oxford accepted one black student last year out of 35 applicants. Cambridge accepted six, according to the Daily Mail.
These figures were produced after a Freedom of Information Act request on Oxbridge undergraduate admissions by Labour MP David Lammy. The statistics also show that Oxford and Cambridge's social profiles are 89 percent and 87.6 percent upper and middle-class, respectively.
Study: Graduation rates between blacks, whites widening - USATODAY.com
The annual report by the University of Central Florida's Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport found that the graduation success rate is increasing at a higher rate for white players than black players.
Richard Lapchick, the primary author of the study, said it's a 'disturbing' gap that has continued to widen.
Gay and lesbian teens are punished more at school, by police, study says
The research, described as the first national look at sexual orientation and teen punishment, comes as a spate of high-profile bullying and suicide cases across the country have focused attention on the sometimes hidden cruelties of teen life.
The study, from Yale University, adds another layer, finding substantial disparities between gay and straight teens in school expulsions, arrests, convictions and police stops. The harsher approach is not explained by differences in misconduct, the study says.
Friday, December 03, 2010
NAFEO, AT&T Launch Effort To Help Students With Disabilities Attend HBCUs, PBIs
The Inclusion Scholars Program (ISP) is a program designed to increase the recruitment, enrollment and graduation rates of students with disabilities at HBCUs and Predominantly Black Institutions (PBIs); support efforts by HBCUs and PBIs to increase graduation rates of traditionally underserved students; and assess HBCU campus readiness to receive students with disabilities.
Report: Asian American Academic Achievement in California Lags Heavily Within Certain
In a report that arguably underscores national findings that are too-rarely part of the public discourse, UC researchers ascertained that some southeast Asians and other subgroups struggle to even reach college in the first place. Indeed, the 2008 American Community Survey already showed that 40 percent of Cambodians and Hmong as well as 32 percent Laotians in this country lack high school diplomas. Nationally, 19 percent of Cambodians and 23 percent of Hmong lived below the poverty line.
Thursday, December 02, 2010
On Duncan's Mind for 2011: Technology, Contracts, ESEA - Politics K-12 - Education Week
Duncan highlighted adoption of the common core standards by most states as a 'game changer' in education. 'For the first time, students in Massachusetts and Mississippi will be measured by the same yardstick,' he said.
He also spoke of the need for better assessments and of the work being done to provide real-time feedback to students. He emphasized the importance of rewarding excellence in teaching and linking student performance with teacher pay, as well as providing access to 'great' schools for all students. Success in turning around 700 of the nation's lowest-performing schools is evidence that progress is possible in poor communities, he said.
Education Week: Race to Top Winners Press Ahead, Despite Pushback
While some of the winning states in the $4 billion competition were able to keep all their local participants on board, others, such as Ohio and Massachusetts, have seen schools and districts peel off and give up their right to a slice of federal cash.
All of the winners in the second round of the federal competition—nine states and the District of Columbia—were required to turn in detailed blueprints explaining how they will carry out their plans to the U.S. Department of Education by Nov. 22. ('Ambitious Race to Top Plans Put School Districts on Spot,' Oct. 13, 2010.) Those plans include “scope of work” documents from local participants.
Education Week: Students Want DREAM Act to Become a Reality
Scores of student leaders across California are illegal immigrants who came to this state as children.
With Congress expected to vote soon on immigration reform that would give these students a pathway to legal status, a new generation of scholars who were raised in California but not born here are shedding their secrecy and speaking about their lives.
They have a sense of urgency. If the bill, known as the DREAM Act, does not pass before a more conservative Congress takes power in January, it is unlikely to pass for years to come.
'At first my parents said, 'What are you doing? You're risking so much,' ' said David Cho, the UCLA drum major. 'But I told them, 'It's not only me. There are thousands of students like me trapped in a broken system. Unless our generation speaks out, the politicians won't tackle it. They have to see our faces.' '
Kindergarten Program Boosts Students' Vocabulary in 1st Grade - Inside School Research - Education Week
Early childhood programs like Mississippi's have focused heavily on early vocabulary for decades, with growing urgency since a seminal 1995 University of Kansas study showed children of parents on welfare enter school knowing about 525 words, less than half of the 1,100-word vocabulary of children of parents in professional jobs.
The Regional Educational Laboratory Southeast, housed at the SERVE Center of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, evaluated the Kindergarten PAVEd for Success program, which trains teachers to supplement their normal literacy instruction.
Baltimore Schools, a Mission for Andres Alonso - NYTimes.com
n 2007, the school board hired Andres Alonso, a Cuban immigrant with a Harvard degree and strong views on how to change things. In three years, he pushed through a sweeping reorganization of the school system, closing failing schools, slashing the central office staff by a third and replacing three-quarters of all school principals.
Not everyone likes Dr. Alonso’s methods, and many find that his brassy self-confidence can grate. But few are arguing with his results. Since he was hired, the dropout rate has fallen by half, more students are graduating and for the first time in many years, the system has gained students instead of losing them.
Mississippi Still Lacks Civil Rights Museum
Emmitt Till, a 14-year-old Black boy, was bludgeoned to death for “sassing'' a White woman and his body dumped in the Tallahatchie River in 1955. The Mississippi field secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Medgar Evers, was gunned down outside his home by White sniper in 1963. And three young voter registration activists were murdered by the Ku Klux Klan during the Freedom Summer of 1964.
Such events forced America's eyes on the upheaval in the segregated South and were pivotal in passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
UVa Preserves Civil Rights-era News Films
The WSLS-TV News Film Collection 1951-1971 is rare, original 16-millimeter film from Virginia's Civil Rights era. It contains nearly 12,500 news clips and about 20,000 pages of scripts read by the Roanoke station's anchors during broadcasts.
U.Va. said that the National Endowment for the Humanities has contributed $254,600 toward the preservation project.
The project is part of the endowment's “We the People” initiative, which aims to enhance the study and understanding of American history, culture and democratic principles.
Colin Powell, Educators Focus on High School Dropout Epidemic
That’s one of the messages conveyed by a new report released Tuesday by America’s Promise Alliance, the Washington-based national youth advocacy group founded by retired U.S. Army Gen. Colin Powell.
The report — titled Building a Grad Nation: Progress and Challenge in Ending the High School Dropout Epidemic — found that the number of dropout factories — the phrase used to describe high schools where 40 percent or more of the students fail to graduate — has dropped from 2,007 in 2002 to 1,746 in 2008.
Powell said the report shows that “there’s still a long way to go.”
Groups Make Late Push to Salvage Bill Aiding Illegal Immigrant Students - NYTimes.com
The groups held marches, hunger strikes, prayer vigils and protests at lawmakers’ offices on Monday and Tuesday in support of the bill, which they call the Dream Act. Opponents are also in high gear, swamping some senators who have not disclosed their positions with faxes and phone calls.