190 pages, 6 x 9
4 b-w images
Paperback
Release Date:17 May 2024
ISBN:9781978836563
Hardcover
Release Date:17 May 2024
ISBN:9781978836570
Wake
Why the Battle over Diverse Public Schools Still Matters
Rutgers University Press
The Wake County Public School System was once described as a beacon of hope for American school districts. It was both academically successful and successfully integrated. It accomplished these goals through the hard work of teachers and administrators, and through a student assignment policy that made sure no school in the countywide district became a high poverty school. Although most students attended their closest school, the “diversity policy” modified where some students were assigned to make sure no school had more than 40% of its students qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch or more than 25% performing below grade level. When the school board election of 2009 swept into office a majority who favored “neighborhood schools,” the diversity policy that had governed student assignment for years was eliminated. Wake: Why the Battle Over Diverse Public Schools Still Matters tells the story of the aftermath of that election, including the fierce public debate that ensued during school board meetings and in the pages of the local newspaper, and the groundswell of community support that voted in a pro-diversity school board in 2011. What was at stake in those years was the fundamental direction of the largest school district in North Carolina and the 14th largest in the U.S. Would it maintain a commitment to diverse schools, and if so, how would it balance that commitment with various competing interests and demands? Through hundreds of published opinion articles and several in depth interviews with community leaders, Wake examines the substance of that debate and explores the community’s vision for public education. Wake also explores the importance of knowing the history of a place, including the history of school segregation. Wake County’s example still resonates, and the battle over diverse public schools still matters, because owning responsibility for the problem of segregated schools (or not) will shape the direction of America’s future.
Harwood tackles a fascinating story and imparts new insights that could help guide readers to imagine a better future for schoolchildren. Wake provides a powerful narrative as a major school integration program that has been sustained to this day.’
Karey Harwood does a brilliant job of describing Wake County, North Carolina’s struggles to create a more equitable and integrated school system. Most importantly, Harwood shows how ‘school choice’ has seriously undermined those efforts, providing a cautionary tale of how charters and vouchers now facilitate the new white flight, forcing the reader to consider the consequences of viewing schooling as a marketplace commodity.’
KAREY HARWOOD teaches at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina. She is the author of The Infertility Treadmill: Feminist Ethics, Personal Choice, and the Use of Reproductive Technologies (University of North Carolina Press, 2007), and a parent of children who attended Wake County Public Schools.
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Wake County’s Example: What Happened Here was Remarkable
Chapter 2. Contested Values in the Public Debate: Published Opinions, 2009-2011
Chapter 3. Defenders of the Faith: Leaders Reflect on Diversity a Decade Later
Chapter 4. Arguing from the Past, Fighting for the Future
Chapter 5. Moral Logics and the Case for True Integration
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Chapter 1. Wake County’s Example: What Happened Here was Remarkable
Chapter 2. Contested Values in the Public Debate: Published Opinions, 2009-2011
Chapter 3. Defenders of the Faith: Leaders Reflect on Diversity a Decade Later
Chapter 4. Arguing from the Past, Fighting for the Future
Chapter 5. Moral Logics and the Case for True Integration
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C