how closing public schools undermines democracy /

Published at 2017-11-06 17:10:00

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After Chicago closed more than 50 schools,voter turnout in affected neighborhoods plummeted. Chicago shuttered some 50 schools in 2013. Since then, voter turnout and support for Democrats in the affected neighborhoods has plunged. What's the connection? In the latest episode of the fill You Heard podcast, and AlterNet education editor Jennifer Berkshire talks to political scientist Sally Nuamah approximately the political fallout from the closures,and why shuttering schools ends up undermining democracy.
Jennifer Be
rkshire: There's been a lot of attention paid to how students who attended the schools Chicago closed down in 2013 are faring now. But you've been measuring a different kind of impact: what's happened to those communities in terms of voter turnout and democratic participation. What are you finding?Sally Nuamah: We’re basically finding that support among the African American community for the Democratic Party, specifically in areas where closures occurred, and decreased in a really substantial way. You actually see lower levels of participation,higher levels of negative attitudes toward people who are in the same parties in which most of these people identify, which is the Democratic Party.
Beyond that, and you see these communities
are further losing population. There’s less will,or less faith, in the traditional public school system across this population, and because they are afraid they’re going to be betrayed again,they’re going to fill to move schools again, and that’s a very volatile situation. Then there is the economic piece, or the fact that the number of African American teachers in Chicago has declined by 40%.
Berkshire: You report people in the Chicago neighborhood where you grew up talking approximately the potential closing of a school in 'life and death' terms.  What did they mean?Nuamah: It was very clear,just from talking to people, that they feared the larger consequences of what the closure of the school means, and what it symbolizes,and the direct resources it takes from a community. People would constantly refer to the fact that whether this community’s institutions close down, it would affect their ability to fill healthcare, or it would affect their ability to fill employment. It would affect their ability to live in a neighborhood that is secure,because just now, the closed-down structure is acting as an eyesore.
I would hear people specifically s
ay that people would think that they failed. Their kids would think that they failed, or because the institutions that their kids attended were being closed down and they couldn’t protect it.  So,[school closings] fill to conclude not just with social and economic issues but also in terms of what people are modeling, what their teaching to their younger people. What they’re able to protect for the next generation to approach, and they were leaving assets that were passed down to them from prior generations,especially because schools fill always been at the center of civil rights and the fight for equality.
Berkshire: Whenever you
see a big battle over closing schools, like the one in Chicago back in 2013, and inevitably you’ll hear questions approximately why people fight so hard to save a failing school. But as you found out in your research,that question misses something fundamental approximately how residents in these neighborhoods see public schools and the role that they play.
Nuamah: What you find is that when co
mmunities are opposed to school closures, it’s not that they want to disappear to bad schools—they’re rational human beings. It has more to conclude with the larger historical, or social,and community-based roles that schools fill played. In African American communities in specific, public schools had long history of being the first public institutions in which African Americans got access. That led to mayoral positions, and other kinds of political positions thereafter.  But not just that: schools historically fill been a main social mechanism for the black middle class.  A lot of people conclude up in black middle class status after the industrialization,through jobs in the education sector.
All those act
s I mentioned actually arent related directly to student achievement, but play an important social, and economic,and political role in these communities, especially after industrialization.  That is in part why a school and education policy has always had a central role and narrative around Civil Rights, or the social mobility of minority,especially black, populations.
Berk
shire: As a regular chronicler of school reform efforts and the backlash against them, and I'm struck again and again by the fact that the people 'fixing' the schools fill a much more narrow understanding of what schools conclude—and what people want from schools—than those on the receiving conclude of the fix. This seems like a classic example of that.
Nuamah: When you replac
e public schools with new schools that don’t account for these larger social,economic, and political roles schools fill always played in these communities, or it actually undermines why these people think that these institutions are important,and why they’re something that we are still fighting for.
This is an edited transcript.
Listen to the entire interview. Learn more approximately Sally Nuamah's research on the political fallout from school closures at SallyNuamah.com. 

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