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- <text id=92TT2807>
- <title>
- Dec. 21, 1992: What Makes This School Work?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Dec. 21, 1992 Restoring Hope
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 62
- What Makes This School Work?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Malcolm X Elementary has everything going against it--except
- the commitment that may be changing students' lives. Or even
- saving them.
- </p>
- <p>By Ted Gup/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Malcolm X Elementary School is in the heart of
- Washington's seventh police district. It is known to some
- officers as "the jungle," because, as one black patrolman
- observes, "it's all about survival here." Across the street from
- the school is a graveyard, its iron fence mangled where a
- sixth-grader crashed a car he had hot-wired. Near an outside
- corner of the school is "the penthouse," where at night, under
- a mural of the U.S. flag and the words WE WANT A DRUG-FREE
- AMERICA, the crackhead prostitutes of Alabama Avenue sell
- themselves for $2 or $3. Every morning the school custodians
- splash bleach against the doorways to wash away the stench of
- urine. Behind the building are the projects--public housing
- and empty lots. On the playground, thieves have carried off
- whatever of the jungle gym is not bolted to the ground.
- </p>
- <p> This is a school with little going for it: no special
- government programs, no foundation grants, no major benefactors.
- It is not a magnet school, not a school for gifted children, not
- special in any way--except for the extraordinary things that
- go on inside. America's abject inner-city schools may yet be
- rescued by a new commitment from Washington or by the bold
- reform movement gathering strength in the think tanks and
- universities. But in every city there are schools like this one
- that are not waiting to be saved, which offer a case study in
- how to make the most of nothing at all.
- </p>
- <p> Malcolm X thrives on ideas, stubbornness and high
- expectations. Its teachers and staff are realistic about the
- lives students live during the 16-plus hours a day they are not
- under the school's protection and are aware of the lessons that
- must be unlearned. "They're not kids, they're really not," says
- Chester Earl Jordan, father of a five-year-old Malcolm X
- student. Jordan, along with others, patrols the neighborhood at
- night, a flashlight in one hand, and--until recently--a gun
- in the other. "If you sat down a third-grader and asked him how
- to weigh crack, how to bag it, how to load a 9-mm, how a beeper
- works, you're going to get first-rate answers right off the
- bat."
- </p>
- <p> All but two of Malcolm X's 30 teachers are black. The
- classrooms feature pictures of famous African-American artists,
- scientists and writers, and there is a clear, though unspoken,
- sense of pride that it is blacks helping blacks reclaim this
- troubled community. But there are many teachers who knew little
- of the inner city before arriving here. "It was a culture shock
- even for me," says second-grade teacher Avis Watts, who was
- raised in the Virginia countryside, and whose parents taught
- college. Now she appreciates just how critical the school is to
- the children. "This is their lifeline really," she says. "They
- know they'll be fed, loved and everything else in this school."
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere, there are lessons in contrasts. In Room 212,
- Gloria Sheila McCartney's fourth-graders sing "the gospel train
- is acomin'" and drown out the incessant scream of sirens from
- Alabama Avenue. The rosebushes planted outside were hacked to
- bits by vandals; but inside, preschoolers nurse acorns in paper
- cups and watch for signs of growth. This is a neighborhood
- where a child could get stabbed over a pair of sneakers; but the
- students of Malcolm X Elementary dress in uniform, the boys in
- white shirts and red ties, the girls in plaid jumpers. "If we
- don't hold high expectations for these children," asks principal
- John Pannell, the son of a West Virginia school-bus driver,
- "then who will?"
- </p>
- <p> Pannell and his staff understand what they are up against
- and bristle when students' standardized-test scores are
- compared with those of more affluent or suburban schools. Only
- 1 in 10 children comes from a home with two parents.
- Three-quarters live below the poverty line. Some come from
- shelters. In the morning, before school opens, 250 children--half the student body--line up outside waiting for a free
- breakfast. As the month wears on and parents' incomes run out,
- the line grows longer. Some children have not had dinner the
- night before and complain of a headache. "This is the only real
- meal that some of them get," says cafeteria worker Doris Tabbs--"Grandma," as the children know her. She calls them her
- "babies" and often pays for treats from her own pocket.
- </p>
- <p> Many at Malcolm X express a sense of desperation in trying
- to rescue the children. Frank Edge is a formidable 215-lb.
- former professional wrestler who works as a school security
- guard. Children follow him around the playground and through the
- halls, where he doles out lollipops and hugs in equal measure.
- But for Edge, this is no casual job. Before coming to Malcolm
- X two years ago, he was assigned to a nearby junior high. When
- students from the school were killed, it was his duty to walk
- the grieving mother or father to their child's locker and help
- them clean out the books, papers and gym shoes. How many died?
- "Twenty, maybe 30," he says, his eyes welling up with tears.
- </p>
- <p> Edge's role goes well beyond providing security. "He's
- explained to my son how to be himself, how not to be a follower,
- to use his own judgment," says a grateful Sylvia Chavis, a
- single parent and mother of sixth-grader Terrence Cooper. Each
- of Edge's warnings is tinged with the memory of an empty locker
- or graveside service. His job too is not without risks. Last
- year three men opened the door of the school and leveled
- automatic weapons at him. "Hey, you," they hollered, paused for
- a moment, then left. Says Edge: "I never know if I'm going to
- come home at night or not."
- </p>
- <p> No one understands the stakes at Malcolm X better than
- Earl C. At night he works as a federal undercover narcotics
- agent. By day he volunteers his time providing security and a
- reassuring presence at the school. Earl, a former Golden Gloves
- boxing champion, is rough-edged and straight talking. A father
- of six, he can also be a gentle man, and is often seen crossing
- the playground or walking the halls, a knot of adoring children
- at his side.
- </p>
- <p> Two years ago, in another quarter of town, he cornered a
- drug dealer, only to discover it was a baby-face 11-year-old
- boy. The child had a gun. Earl slid his own service revolver
- back into the holster, hoping to defuse the tension and
- thinking of his own son that age. After a few words, the child
- pulled the trigger, and a .32-caliber slug ripped through Earl's
- groin, coming to rest between the muscle and spine. Earl
- returned a single shot. The boy fell dead. "After I shot the
- kid, I rocked him in my arms," says Earl, his voice cracking.
- "I took something I can never give back. I went home three days
- later, saw my kids and burst out crying." The bullet still rests
- against his spine. "I figure if somebody had taken some time to
- spend with that kid, showed they really, really cared, this
- wouldn't have happened. You can't save everybody, but if you
- save 1 out of 200, then you've accomplished something. That's
- my whole purpose here."
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes his methods are unconventional. Over the summer
- he took groups of Malcolm X students from the fifth and sixth
- grades to the District of Columbia morgue and pulled back the
- sheets on the bodies to show the children the ultimate product
- of violence and drugs. On one visit, the children viewed a
- corpse riddled with 11 bullet holes. The victim's mouth had been
- sealed with duct tape. One of the children in the group
- recognized the body as someone from the neighborhood.
- </p>
- <p> Earl's message to the children is direct. "I tell the kids
- here, `I'll be your best friend or your worst nightmare.'"
- Despite his supervisor's warnings, he often gets personally
- involved in his cases. Last year he arrested a woman for selling
- crack, then agreed to take the woman's three children into his
- own home for six months while she underwent a treatment
- program. He knows there are risks, both physical and emotional,
- that go with extending a hand to children. "I love all kids,"
- says Earl, "but I trust them as far as I can throw the
- Washington Monument. Some of these kids have known only
- violence. It's like entering a lion's cage with steak in all
- your pockets--you come out all chewed up." Moments later, he
- is comforting a fifth-grade boy who has fallen on the
- playground.
- </p>
- <p> Like so many inner-city principals, Pannell seems forever
- on the verge of being overwhelmed, having inherited a school in
- turmoil. Says Pannell: "The only thing you can do is pray
- daily: `Give me the wisdom to make the right decision.'" He is
- nothing if not pragmatic, accepting the largesse of corporate
- donors and government alike (he receives both Head Start and
- Chapter I funds), and espousing a mix of George Bush's "thousand
- points of light" and Lyndon Johnson's "Great Society." To
- encourage the children, he has set up an elaborate system of
- rewards for excellence in every category, amassing a treasure
- of parchment certificates and glittering trophies, medals and
- pins he hands out amid much fanfare. The outstanding student
- last year received a 4-ft.-tall trophy of walnut and brass
- replete with winged victories and a lamp of learning. "This is
- what the students need," says Pannell. "They need it tangible,
- and they need it immediate." Something appears to be working.
- Attendance rates, now running 93%, are finally expected to equal
- the district's system-wide average, and the number of school
- volunteers is steadily increasing.
- </p>
- <p> But perhaps the centerpiece of his administration is his
- effort not merely to establish order and civility but also to
- make the school a place where children feel wanted. Even before
- the children enter school in the morning, assistant principal
- Michael Owens has them line up in neat rows, fingers pressed to
- their lips, calling for silence. "Don't we look pretty today?"
- he calls to them. "What kind of school is this?" he asks. "A
- school of love," the children answer in unison.
- </p>
- <p> There is a constant question of discipline. Pannell has in
- essence deputized the entire school to assist in keeping order.
- Students discreetly report anything that seems threatening. When
- tensions rise or confrontation seems imminent, the diminutive
- messengers appear at his door and whisper into his cupped ear.
- That network has averted some fights and shortened many others.
- </p>
- <p> More often than not, even reprimands are laced with
- compassion. At recess a six-year-old in an oversize coat takes
- his younger brother by the hand. He walks him from the
- playground to the rear of the building. The older boy takes out
- a green felt-tipped marker and writes FOKE YOU BITH across the
- back wall. Poor as the spelling is, the intended message is
- clear, and students alert Pannell. Within minutes the two boys
- find themselves sitting across from the principal. "You got your
- baby brother in trouble. Now pick up the phone and call your
- mother," Pannell tells the tearful older boy. It was a simple
- matter, except that in it Pannell saw a chance to sever the
- older boy's habit of including his brother in mischief. Down the
- road, says Pannell, it could save the younger boy from being an
- accomplice to something more serious--a drug deal, even
- murder. Minutes later, the older boy was scrubbing his
- penmanship off the wall with a brush and a pail of detergent as
- tall as he was.
- </p>
- <p> To repeat offenders, Pannell gravely passes out "pink
- slips." They have no intrinsic meaning other than the gravity
- with which Pannell presents them. "They're hot pink--they mean
- they're in hot water," he laughs. Rarely does he or assistant
- Owens show anger. "We don't want to rule on fear," says Owens.
- "They get that out there," he says, glancing out the window.
- Besides, underneath, even the toughest of these children
- responds to a soft voice. Two boys who have been fighting are
- led into the principal's office. At first they appear
- steely-eyed and sullen. Then, under Pannell's tender
- inquisition, they begin to melt. One of the boys, a
- fourth-grader, sobs and rubs his tears with the end of his red
- tie. Pannell listens, adjudicates and gently chastises the two
- before sending them on their way.
- </p>
- <p> Moments later, two girls appear at his door, agitated and
- hoping he can help them avert a fight. One is a stocky
- third-grader, the other a fourth-grader with limpid brown eyes
- and cream-colored skin. "She called me a whore," said the older
- girl. With agonizing patience, Pannell unravels the dispute. The
- girls are friends. The day before, the older girl invited her
- friend home for the first time. There the younger child saw her
- friend's house was in disrepair, that the outside door was
- battered and punctured by what she thought were bullet holes.
- At school the next day she told friends about the house and the
- broken door. The older girl, insulted and hurt, fired back that
- at least her mother had a house and wasn't so poor she had to
- live with a man to gain a roof over her head. Pannell listens
- calmly, then convinces the two that they should make up. They
- disappear down the hall skipping and laughing.
- </p>
- <p> But a serious fight brings automatic suspension. "This is
- not punitive, it's protective," Pannell told parents at a
- back-to-school night. His concern about weapons was evident.
- "I'm pleading with you as parents to check your children before
- they leave home," he told them. Last year a young boy brought
- a 13-in. butcher knife to school. Students saw the blade in his
- jacket pocket and reported it. The knife was confiscated; the
- child was suspended.
- </p>
- <p> Pannell and his staff offer a constant refrain. "What is
- the rule?" he asks. "No hitting, kicking, fighting or other
- types of negative, violent behavior," answer the students. Even
- among Malcolm X kindergartners, tempers can flair into serious
- combat with little or no provocation. In the community around
- Malcolm X, fighting often escalates in an instant. "There are
- no more fisticuffs," says Pannell. "It's maiming, stabbing,
- shooting immediately. This is the kind of learned behavior, the
- environment in which these children are growing up." At Malcolm
- X, the short-term objective is to intercede and present a
- peaceful resolution. The ultimate goal is more ambitious. "Too
- many black males are being killed every day," says Pannell.
- "It's necessary that we put violence prevention into our
- everyday curriculum. We have to do something to stem this tide
- of violence."
- </p>
- <p> But for some the lesson in avoiding violence comes late.
- Psychic scars have already made them casualties of the street.
- "I'm afraid my day is going to come, that I'm going to get
- killed one day," says a fourth-grade boy. Two members of his
- family were shot to death, and police advised him not to discuss
- the shootings for fear the killers would return for him.
- Recently he witnessed a neighbor gunned down as well. "I saw the
- fire come out of the gun," says the boy. "It hit him in the
- head, and he fell out." He is struggling to rise above the fear
- that is around him. He is still very much a child, and school
- is the one bright spot in his life.
- </p>
- <p> Despite their exposure to violence, the students
- demonstrate a remarkable resilience. Crystal is a bright-eyed
- 13-year-old with fine, long braids and an irrepressible smile.
- She deeply appreciates what Pannell and others at the school are
- trying to do to stem the violence. Two years ago, her brother
- Leonard died from a gunshot wound in the chest while standing
- in front of his grandmother's house. She believes Pannell's
- words and those of her teachers can make a difference, though
- it will do nothing to ease the loss of her brother. "I wish we
- could do it all over again," she says, "so my family could hear
- this."
- </p>
- <p> Drugs have taken a toll among the parents. Problems of
- abuse and neglect are undeniable. But there are also many
- parents deeply involved in their children's education who defy
- simple stereotypes. Pannell speaks of a concerned father who
- routinely called him from the Washington jail to speak with his
- daughter and ask how she was doing in school. The child, a
- fourth-grader, was an honor-roll student. Since his release from
- jail, the father has been a frequent volunteer at the school.
- </p>
- <p> On a recent parents' night, scores of parents came to
- school to meet with teachers and discuss their children's
- classwork. Among them was Virgie Heath, a 33-year-old single
- mother who recently lost her job and who last year spent six
- months in a shelter for the homeless. She did not finish high
- school. "I want my baby to have the best," she says. "He loves
- school--reading, math, everything." Last year her son Ernest
- made the honor roll.
- </p>
- <p> Tyrone Woods and Debra Tracy were also at the school that
- evening. Woods, who wears a gold earring in each ear, admits he
- was no choirboy in his youth. "Coming up as a child, it was bad.
- I was terrible," he said. "I came from a one-parent home, and I
- didn't want that for my children." Now, as a father, he is
- strict--a stickler for homework and keeping a neat room. What
- does he teach his eight-year-old daughter Doree?
- "Responsibility and respect for her elders, as well as her
- peers," says Woods, a postal-service employee. He is unabashedly
- proud of Doree, who gets all A's in third grade. Says Woods: "I
- can honestly say my daughter will have a great future." Adds
- Tracy: "This is a school you can be proud to send your child
- to."
- </p>
- <p> No one at Malcolm X speaks of miracles or underestimates
- the challenges these children still face. But for Debra Tracy
- and so many other parents at Malcolm X, the most valuable
- instruction their children receive--in self-esteem,
- nonviolence and dignity--may not appear in any book. They are
- lessons offered by an entire school community--principals,
- teachers, security guards, cafeteria workers, volunteers--that
- has transformed a dowdy building in the inner city into a
- sanctuary of hope. Theirs is a lesson other schools should be
- eager to learn.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-