But
it's so much easier said than done.
With
more black men behind bars than in college, it's difficult for young black
males, especially those from one-parent households, to find adequate role models
to inspire them and steer them on the path of college education and away from
the streets.
More
than half the nation's 5.6 million black boys live in fatherless households,
more than 40 percent of which are impoverished.
They
are educated in school districts where 21 percent of teachers have less than
three years of experience – more than twice the percentage of inexperienced
teachers in majority-white districts. They live in a world where 18 percent less
is spent for their education than for whites.
“Too
many absent fathers leave too many poor and minority children in families headed
by single mothers struggling financially and straining to hold their households
together,” noted Marian Wright Edelman in her essay in the National Urban
League’s The State of
Black America
2007.
“With
frayed or sundered extended family networks, few single working mothers have the
time, supports or energy to nurture and guide their children, read to them at
night, help with their homework, take them to a health clinic, or advocate for
them at their schools. They are too busy merely trying to survive.”
Since
the mid-1960s, much progress has been made by blacks on the college education
front.
In
the past decade or so – 1993 to 2003, black enrollment climbed nearly 43
percent to more than 1.9 million students, according to the American Education
Council. Black men, however, made up 38 percent of this population in 2005,
according to Census Bureau data.
White
men, on the other hand, made up slightly less than 50 percent of white college
students.
The
decline in numbers of black men on campus – even at Historically Black
Colleges and Universities, where at least 60 percent or more of students are
women -- has set off alarm bells among educators and politicians alike.
Earlier
this year, the Presidents' Round Table, a group of black community college
presidents, joined forces with the Congressional Black Caucus to study the issue
and make recommendations to reverse the trend.
Where
we need to focus our efforts is on these boys at an early age when they perform
fairly well compared to white boys, according to most recent National Assessment
of Educational Progress, otherwise known as the Nation’s Report Card.
Since
1992, the performance gap between black and white boys has narrowed. In reading,
black boys at the age of nine lagged their white counterparts by 28 points in
2004, up from 32 points in 1992.
In
math, they trailed by 22 points in 2004, compared to 25 points in 1992,
according to the NAEP.
Progress
has been made in the early years in closing the achievement gap.
However,
a major disconnect occurs by high school: by age 17, black males are further
behind their white counterparts than they are at age 9.
In
2004, black teenagers actually lost ground on white teenagers in math where the
gap in scores widened to 30 points, up from 26 in 1992.
In
Maryland
, an education task force characterized school as “an at-risk environment for
African-American male youth” and recommended that the state take steps to fix
the situation “whatever the costs,” according to a recent New York Times story.
That
solution, as I recommended last month in my remarks during the release of The
State of
Black America
2007, could come in the form of more all-male schools such as
New York City
’s
Eagle
Academy
that features mentoring as well as longer school days to remove some of the
distractions and obstacles.
Eagle
Academy
for Young Men has a school
day that ends at 5:30 p.m. and requires students to attend on Saturdays for half
a day.
In
Ossining
,
N.Y.
, education officials discovered through a district-wide analysis of high
grade-point averages that black males performed far worse than any other group,
including black females whose performance compared favorably with their peers.
So,
in 2005, the area’s school district began a college-preparatory program for
black male high-school students and recently began offering voluntary mentoring
services for black boys in second and third grades, in which they are paired up
with teachers for one-on-one guidance outside of class and extra homework help.
While
it’s too early to assess the effect of these programs on test scores, Ossining
officials point out that the percentage of black students in the 11th
and 12th grade enrolled in college-level courses doubled in 2005 over
2004.
And
discipline referrals of black male second and third-graders have fallen 80
percent, the New York Times reported.
Even
in college, black males at times require special “intrusive counseling” by
very committed mentors to stay on the course because they tend to “come to the
academic environment with incredible degrees of distraction and more often than
not, not with the tools” that they need to succeed, Malcolm B.
Williams, a manager for student support services at all-male Morehouse College,
told the magazine Diverse Issues in Higher Education.
Somewhere
down the line a growing population of black males began to deem a college
education as unattainable or just not worth the investment. This is exactly the
attitude we must reverse in light of an increasingly high-tech economy.
In
the past, unskilled Americans could find themselves secure relatively high-wage
jobs in the manufacturing sector but those jobs are few and far between these
days.
Without
a strong education, black men face bleak prospects.
MarcMorial@MaximsNews.com
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