Wednesday, Feb 8, 2012
workaround

Donate Now tile

User login

To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.




workaround



Triangle Park Creative

YOUR TURN | Should Minneapolis stop busing students all over the city?

By © robert paul van beets - Fotolia.com
May 07, 2009
Minneapolis Public Schools has proposed major shifts in the way that elementary schools are organized, beginning in the 2010-2011 school year. Under the new proposal the city would be divided into three major areas: North/Northeast, South/Southeast and Southwest, less busing would be provided, and most students would go to their designated community school.

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!
Is moving to community schools a good or bad option? Why?

The Story
What’s at stake
The case for community schools and less busing
The case for citywide choice and citywide busing


WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!

Is moving to community schools a good or bad option? Why?

Do you think that closing Folwell Middle School and three specific buildings -- Pratt, Longfellow, and Northrop -- are wise or imprudent choices?

Changing School Options

Minneapolis Public Schools is facing both budgetary and educational challenges. The budget challenges include a shortfall for 2009-2010 and subsequent years. This plan, however, is only partly about cutting costs. MPS says that the major objectives for the Changing School Options initiative are:

• Get students closer to home to reduce transportation costs.
• Reduce but maintain choice for families.
• Ensure adequate program size for efficient use of limited resources (24-25 classrooms and 3 kindergarten sections in an elementary school).
• Maintain flexibility for growth.
• Uphold commitments to the North Side Initiative.

The story

This story focuses on the proposed shift to community schools and away from citywide choice and busing. It is the first in a series of three TCDP forums on the Changing School Options proposal.

Under the new proposal, the city would be divided into three major areas: North/Northeast, South/Southeast and Southwest. One key element of the proposed changes is to give every home a community school choice, and a choice of three or four magnet schools in their area. High school students could still go anywhere in the city as long as there is room in a school and provided they find their own transportation. That's a major change from the current system, and would greatly reduce busing.

The plan originally called for closing three small elementary school buildings -- Pratt, Longfellow and Northrop -- and also Folwell Middle School. (The details of possible school moves and closings are at the Changing School Options website.)

On May 5, the Board of Education asked Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) to revise the plan. MPS is currently revising details of the plan, including:
• defining the exact borders of the three zones,
• creating clear elementary/middle school/high school pathways for students, and
• determining exactly which elementary schools will be closed.

MPS says there is no clear time line in place for the revisions to Changing School Options and that they will reschedule community meetings, originally set to begin next week. MPS and the Board of Education will implement Changing School Options alongside pre-existing academic plans like the March 2008 Strategic Plan and high school redesign efforts.

What’s at stake

Choice:
The shift to community schools and away from citywide busing will limit families’ choice of schools. With some exceptions students and parents will have more limited access to academic options.

Are we closing or not?
The fate of roughly 630 students, as well as the future of teachers and staff, at the schools proposed to be closed is yet to be determined

An integrated school district:
The goal of integrating public schools goes back to the Civil Rights Era and has been met with varying success. Busing has not always meant more integrated schools in Minneapolis, but it has helped some schools become more racially and economically diverse.

The case for community schools and less busing

Busing was originally meant to help integrate schools and give students access to academically successful schools. However, some say that busing has not actually helped integration as much as was intended and that focusing on integration has brought attention away from improving the quality of education in neighborhood schools.

District-wide declining enrollment necessitates a restructuring of the system in some way. Proponents argue that busing kids across town is simply not pragmatic. Moreover, busing is costly and decreasing busing under the Changing School Options plan could save the district up to $8.5 million annually. In the short term, this money would most likely help close a budget shortfall expected to last into the next couple of years, but in the long term the money could be spent on teachers and staff.

Community school advocates also argue that parents and communities have the potential to invest more in schools if they are located nearby. Access to local health and human services, parent and neighborhood resources may improve the quality of education.

Here are some opinions on moving to community schools:

In the best situations, schools are connected to communities. Schools were distributed to be a part of a community. They are supposed to be a community asset. They are supposed to act not only to educate kids, but to act as a meeting place for community members, to provide services, to be a town hall. They’re supposed to be a place that people feel more connected and engaged to their community. Coming from a social work and city planning background, it makes me think that that’s the ultimate ideal.
–Steve Kotvis, Minneapolis District Parent Advisory Council


Well, what we are trying to balance here is cost savings and maintaining a system of choice. But the system of choice has been built to a point where we almost have too much choice and have to spend an exorbitant amount for that choice. We spend approximately $33 million annually to bus students across the city. This is not a good use of our limited resources. The system itself is not rational. So the aim of this plan that created a system of schools that was rational, fair and equitable and that was really logical to parents, so that you didn’t have to read a book to understand it.
–Pam Costain, Director, Minneapolis Board of Education


Transportation is a large expense and it doesn’t contribute to the high quality programming we want to be able to have. We want our students to be spending less hours on a bus, and we want to be spending less money on buses and more money on things that impact the classroom.
–Emily Lowther, Communications & Public Affairs Associate, Minneapolis Public Schools

I definitely believe we should move to community schools. When my kids were going to school, they didn't even know half of the kids in their own neighborhood because they were bused all over the city. Community schools create a better sense of community. It is also ridiculous to spend all that money on busing. If you want to go to a particular school, move to that area.

Anne Johnson, Cooper neighborhood, Minneapolis


The case for citywide choice and citywide busing

Citywide busing allows parents and students to make the best possible academic choice. It also guarantees access to high quality education and equalizes access to good schools, particularly helping low-income families who may not be able to afford transportation costs to good schools on their own.

Depending on where MPS draws the borders of the three zones, the plan has the potential to further segregate Minneapolis. This is particularly true of Southwest Minneapolis, which has a mostly white population, and North and Northeast Minneapolis, both of which have large minority populations. Even if integration policies vary in success throughout the city, citywide busing intentionally facilitates integration options for students, parents, and administrators.

Here are some perspective on the problem with moving towards community schools

[Community based schools] works only if those community schools are of quality. If we don’t have schools that are being effective in some of those communities, then we are basically denying kids in those communities access to a decent education denying access.
–Steve Kotvis, Minneapolis District Parent Advisory Council


Community schools are great for people who live in high-income areas like parts of Southwest Minneapolis. For the rest of us, a return to community schools means sending our children to very high-poverty, very low performing schools—with the nebulous promise that the school district is going to wave a magic wand and turn chronically low-performing schools into “schools of excellence.” Parents in poor areas of Minneapolis have been promised time and again that there is some sort of pedagogical cure for concentrated poverty—at this point it is pretty clear that schools with concentrated poverty have problems that depress test scores and life chances for students who attend them. Waving the IB or Montessori flag over these high-poverty, low opportunity schools is unlikely to change this.


Students in Southwest Minneapolis have advantages that students from the rest of the city don’t often have- parents who have the time and connections to fundraise for the PTA, volunteer in classrooms, coach teams, and raise a ruckus when the school isn’t living up to expectations. When students from different socio-economic background attend school together, these parental and community resources are shared – increasing the quality of education for everyone.


A return to community schools means a complete return to segregated high-poverty schools in one part of the district and low-poverty, high performing schools in another part of the district. I am pretty sure that I don’t want to live in a city that separates its children like this – segregation along neighborhood, class, and race lines bodes poorly for the future of our children and out society.
–Geneva Finn, Research Fellow, Institute on Race and Poverty, University of Minnesota


WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!
Is moving to community schools a good or bad option? Why?

Do you think that closing Folwell Middle School and three specific buildings -- Pratt, Longfellow, and Northrop -- are wise or imprudent choices?

Click on the comment option below or send an email to editor@tcdailyplanet.net.


peterson.delacueva's picture
Lisa Peterson-de la Cueva

Lisa Peterson-de la Cueva (lisa@tcdailyplanet.net) is the project manager for the New Normal project at the Twin Cities Daily Planet.

Comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

This is Easy

Go to your neighborhood school. If you are determined to go to another school, either move to that district or pay for the transportation of the student to the out-of-district school.

community schools

My son and I wait at the bus stop and their are kids are on four different corners going in four different directions to different schools. When I was a kid walking to the local school was a huge part of our day. We knew all the kids in our neighborhood and we walked meeting up along the way to and from school. We used the school playground afterschool and on weekends as it was a place we knew and that we could walk to. My son rarely gets to play with friends from his school as they live all over the city and I would be a taxi for play dates. If all the kids in our neighborhood went to the same school I believe our neighborhood would be much stronger. As it is, I am meeting my neighbors at the bus stops, where I introduce myself. We have little other interaction. Let's go to neighborhood schools and make sure they are all of good quality. Not to mention that walking in this day and age of fat kids would be a good thing.

support busing

Keep busing! The level of residential segregation has not changed in Minneapolis since the civil rights movement when busing was implemented to alleviate the enormous material inequalities that result from a property tax-based school system. Busing does not solve the problem of continued inequality, but is a temporary solution that allows all students the opportunity for a better education. Just because it is temporary, does not mean it should be gotten away with. That is, until a just reform--not voucher-based policy of evasion-- transforms the public school system, we need to keep busing to alleviate persisting class and racial inequality in our school system.

local schools

Perhaps society has had unrealistic expectations of the educational system in terms of integration and social justice. School busing and even the education system at large addresses the outcome, but not the root, of segregation and inequity. Can we really expect school busing and integrated schools to fundamentally change our lives if neighborhoods are still segregated? If all of the other systems of inequity remain in place? If our economic system is predicated on global capitalism? School busing has not been able to address those issues. Why should do we still expect it to? The last commentator says that busing is a temporary solution that does help alleviate racial injustice. Has it really? Where's the evidence for that - in terms of poverty and racial inequity in society at large? Perhaps turning back to decentralized neighborhood schools that have the ability to respond more directly to the needs of their community, to create a stronger local community, to involve parents, and to place more decision making power in the hands of the community they serve will result in better schools and more social justice. Neighborhoods schools have a built in, stable constituency - the neighborhood - that should be better able to hold the school and school district accountable. If the school is of poor quality, the neighborhood is able to organize for change more effectively than a dispersed parent population with less ownership. Geneva Finn thinks that wealthier neighborhoods are better positioned to be in that role of holding the school district accountable. Maybe so, but maybe that is short-changing the power of low-income communities to take power and ownership of their schools. What if all the busing money saved was directed towards schools in low-income neighborhoods? Would that be a more efficient and productive use of resources?

Fewer magnet schools - unequal access persists

The orientation to community schools since 1995 resulted in black / nonwhite students being more heavily concentrated in the district's worst schools, and white students being more heavily concentrated in the better schools. Though the district promised to minimize the segregative effects of the community school plan, it seemed that the district went out of its way to do just the opposite - to make the schools less diverse racially -when it came to setting attendance boundaries, picking school sites, changing grade level configerations, etc. And during this time the district has failed to take steps to bring it into compliance with Minnesota's so-called Desegregation Rule, which allows school districts to have "racially identifiable schools" so long as they have educational inputs comparable to other district schools, which includes factors like teacher expertise and turnover rates. The district has kept teacher turnover rates high in most racially identifiable schools by firing teachers on probationary status (first three years of employment) every year and replacing most with new teachers before they finish their three year probationary period. Perpetuating this situation may be saving the district a lot of money, and it is certainly playing a big role in denying a majority of nonwhite students access to a quality education in district-run schools. On average the district has a lot more money to spend per pupil than charter schools, to which non-white students have been fleeing. Currently, a majority of K-12 students on the North Side are no longer attending Minneapolis Public Schools, compared to something approaching 90% in SW Minneapolis.

Back to to community schools or not

The problem with the MPS is that every few years they revamp where to send kids, how to teach kids, how much decisions should be school-driven or district driven. At the end, this leads to more curriculum chaos for students. The MPS has a lot of challenges to face and I do believe they are trying to do what is in the best interest of students. But changing their idea of what that is every few years is not good for students. Community schools follow the city's demographics, meaning there would be even more income/racial segregation than there already is. This is not always a bad thing as long as the schools with high levels of poverty and mobility have the resources to address student needs -- which just doesn't happen. I have two kids who are products of the MPS and can attest to the district having many great teachers doing amazing work in the classroom. Unfortunately, that in and of itself is not enough.

Stoooopppppppppp!

Busing doesn't work, and I have the therapy bills to prove it. I can't believe this still exists.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br> <img> <span> <div>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may use [google_ad:ad_slot] to display Google Admanager ads within your content.

More information about formatting options

By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.
workaround

Free Speech Zone

The Free Speech Zone offers a space for contributions from readers, without editing by the TC Daily Planet. This is an open forum for articles that otherwise might not find a place for publication, including news articles, opinion columns, and announcements. The opinions expressed in the Free Speech Zone and Neighborhood Notes, as well as the opinions of bloggers, are their own and not necessarily the opinion of the TC Daily Planet.

Click here to see a display of Twin Cities problem reports, from potholes to neighborhood eyesores. Click here to report a problem. Have you used SeeClickFix? Have you gotten any response from city officials? Let us know - email info@tcdailyplanet.net