by Joe Hawkins
When I worked at Teaching Tolerance
Magazine (1992, 1993), I wrote a piece about study circles.
I like study circles.
Study circles were created in 1989 by
the Study Circles Resource Center. Eventually, the Center evolved
into the organization known now today as Everyday Democracy (click here for a link to that organization).
Everyday Democracy uses study circles as a means for communities to
discuss a wide range of social and public issues, including criminal
justice, education, race, and neighborhood development.
On November 9, 2010, The Washington
Post ran an article on study circles (“Trying to close the
circle on race”—click here for a link to the article:
)
and their specific use by the Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
to explore issues centered around race. When reading the Post
article, I wish I could have stopped the science part of brain
from working. MCPS is crediting its study circles with all
kinds of miraculous deeds, including reviving PTA’s, mixing up kids
of different races in school lunchrooms, academic achievement gap
busting solutions, and increased enrollments by students of color in
Advanced Placement courses.
You see the science part of brain is
always asking for numbers, facts, and figures. So as I read the
Post piece, I was amazed at the absence of any facts and
figures. And let’s be clear here, the Post MCPS study
circles article implies that study circles are credited with
improving race relations, as well as a whole lot of other things.
Okay—I’m all for improving race
relations, but what’s the baseline for race relations in the county
schools? For example, how did white and blacks parents feel
about one another before the institution of study circles (in the
schools with the circles)? And further, before study circles, where
all the kids of color sitting separate from all the white kids in our
school lunchrooms? How can we Post readers rightly judge the
impact of these study circles for improving race relations if no one
knows what the starting point is?
Now there is an official MCPS study
circles evaluation report. That report is found here.
However, this report lacks a clear picture of where race relations
stand in our schools prior to the introduction of study circles. In
fact, based on my knowledge of the issue, the last time the county
adequately assessed race relations—how well students of different
backgrounds view each other—was in 1994 when the county’s
Committee on Hate/Violence conducted a random telephone poll of
county high school students. I was a member of that county
committee.
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