Lessons in Integration: Realizing the Promise of Racial
Diversity in American Schools |
| |
| Erica Frankenberg and Gary Orfield, eds. |
| 384 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 11 tables and 11 figures |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2631-5 $22.50 |
| Race,Ethnicity
and Politics |
 |
Segregation is deepening in American schools as courts terminate
desegregation plans, residential segregation spreads, the proportion
of whites in the population falls, and successful efforts to use
choice for desegregation, such as magnet schools, are replaced
by choice plans with no civil rights requirements. Based on the
fruits of a collaboration between the Civil Rights Project at
Harvard University and the Southern Poverty Law Center, the essays
presented in Lessons in Integration: Realizing the Promise
of Racial Diversity in American Schools analyze five decades
of experience with desegregation efforts in order to discover
the factors accounting for successful educational experiences
in an integrated setting. Starting where much political activity
and litigation, as well as most previous scholarship, leaves off,
this collection addresses the question of what to do--and to avoid
doing--once classrooms are integrated, in order to maximize the
educational benefits of diversity for students from a wide array
of backgrounds.
Rooted in substantive evidence that desegregation is a positive educational and social force, that there were many successes as well as some failures in the desegregation movement, and that students in segregated schools, whether overwhelmingly minority or almost completely white, are disadvantaged on some important educational and social dimensions when compared to their peers in well-designed racially diverse schools, this collection builds on but also goes beyond previous research in taking account of increasing racial and ethnic diversity that distinguishes present-day American society from the one addressed by the Brown decision a half-century ago. In a society with more than 40 percent nonwhite students and thousands of suburban communities facing racial change, it is critical to learn the lessons of experience and research regarding the effective operation of racially diverse and inclusive schools. Lessons in Integration will make a significant contribution to knowledge about how to make integration work, and as such, it will have a positive effect on educational practice while providing much-needed assistance to increasingly beleaguered proponents of integrated public education.
Erica Frankenberg served as the Study Director
at the Civil Rights Project and is a doctoral candidate at the Harvard
University Graduate School of Education. Gary Orfield
is Professor of Education and Social Policy at the Harvard University
Graduate School of Education.