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- <text id=90TT1091>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Blackboard Jungle
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 106
- Blackboard Jungle
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A TIME correspondent revisits his troubled alma mater
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Chavira
- </p>
- <p> In its 94-year history, Los Angeles' San Fernando High
- School has turned out enough distinguished graduates to fill
- a classroom. They include Heisman Trophy winner Charles White,
- former National League Rookie of the Year Gary Matthews,
- University of Louisville basketball coach Denny Crum and
- rock-'n'-roll legend Ritchie Valens. San Fernando also produced
- Xavier Velazquez, an honor student and school vice president
- who was one of a group of students who met with President
- George Bush last year to discuss education. But Velazquez, a
- senior who hopes to attend M.I.T. in the fall, is one of the
- fortunate few: roughly half of those who began tenth grade with
- him have dropped out, lured by the drugs and gangs that infest
- the surrounding neighborhoods.
- </p>
- <p> San Fernando, my alma mater, is fairly typical of the
- sprawling L.A. Unified School District, the nation's second
- largest. And typically, it is in deep trouble. Despite vigorous
- efforts by a strongly committed core of teachers and
- administrators, the school's vital indicators are startlingly
- bleak. The yearly 20% dropout rate is more than double the
- California average, and a quarter of the student body is absent
- on any given day. In reading and math, San Fernando seniors
- rank in the bottom 5% statewide.
- </p>
- <p> When I graduated in 1968, dope and gangs were already
- invading our campus, which is tucked into the far northeastern
- corner of the San Fernando Valley. Black and Latino students
- were in ferment over civil rights, and there were ugly clashes
- with white students and teachers. Black pupils rioted for
- several days to protest the murder of Martin Luther King Jr.
- Only a full-scale police occupation of the campus restored
- order. Today nine security guards, two of whom carry pistols,
- keep violent confrontations and drug use on the premises to
- a minimum.
- </p>
- <p> The racial balance has changed dramatically. During my time,
- Latinos represented about 40% of the school population and 15%
- district-wide. Now Hispanics, many of them newly arrived and
- poor, account for 92% of San Fernando's student body; in the
- district they form 59% of the total, up from just a fifth in
- 1978. Of the school's 3,000 pupils, nearly half are enrolled
- in bilingual or English-as-a-second-language classes. "This is
- very much a port-of-entry school," says Bilingual-ESL Program
- coordinator Pat Reynosa. That means, says Reynosa, that in
- addition to having limited or nonexistent English, many of the
- students must cope with the pressures of grinding poverty (a
- median family income of $17,000; 18% on welfare) and the anomie
- common to refugees. And since Hispanics are America's
- fastest-growing ethnic group, San Fernando's problems will be
- increasingly echoed throughout U.S. public education.
- </p>
- <p> "I've never had so many kids with so many needs," says
- school nurse Susan Mitchell. In a typical week she and other
- officials assigned to the school's crisis-intervention team may
- counsel students who abuse drugs and alcohol (or whose parents
- do so), aid rape victims, deal with youths contemplating
- suicide or Central American refugees suffering war-related
- stress. Student pregnancy is so common that there is a
- minicampus for expectant mothers and a nursery for students'
- children. "If these kids came from nurturing families, we could
- all go home," says Mitchell. "But these are families who have
- to work in sweatshops twelve hours a day. The children have
- nowhere else to turn." In contrast to two decades ago, today
- San Fernando's teachers and administrators are addressing home
- and community problems that affect students. "I had a student
- who wasn't getting her work done," recalls Bud Schindler, who
- runs a campus counseling program and teaches English
- composition. "Well, it turned out she had seen a person shot
- dead in front of her home. She had to see a psychologist before
- she could focus on her classwork." Says principal Bart
- Kricorian: "We are an island in this community. We can't keep
- problems from coming in."
- </p>
- <p> Critics of the mess blame everyone: parents for not
- stressing the importance of education and responsible behavior,
- teachers for succumbing to burnout, the system for failing to
- adapt to the changing needs of L.A.'s inner-city schools. All
- are valid observations. Yet even if those challenges did not
- exist, San Fernando and L.A.'s other troubled schools would be
- facing a daunting financial crisis. The school district this
- year must trim an estimated $200 million from a $4 billion
- budget, and some 3,000 jobs will be eliminated. Assistant
- school superintendent Amelia McKenna calculates that even
- without the cuts, the system is short 1,500 critically needed
- bilingual teachers. Thirty years ago, California was nearly
- unsurpassed in its expenditure per student; today it ranks 40th
- nationwide. "We are the richest country on earth, but look how
- little we are doing for these students," says community
- activist Lupe Ramirez.
- </p>
- <p> L.A. school-board member Leticia Quezada, a Carnation
- executive, says that unless government invests sufficiently in
- the rehabilitation of schools like San Fernando, the U.S. will
- continue to slip as an economic power. "We have success
- stories, but overall there's a sink-or-swim attitude, and
- increasing numbers of kids are sinking," she says. "Are we
- willing to pay the price for not investing in education?"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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