A tip ‘o the hate to Countenance
Chicago Public Schools [sic] prom slogan: ‘This Is Are Story’
June 10, 2014Illinois Policy Institute
Illinois Policy Institute is an independent government watchdog fighting for hardworking taxpayers.
It’s hard to deny just how poorly Chicago’s public schools are performing when it hits you in the face. Such is the case with Paul Robeson High School’s 2014 prom theme: “This is Are Story.”
That image came from veteran investigative reporter Chuck Goudie, who posted this image on his Facebook page.
Some people might enjoy mocking the irony of the gross misuse of vocabulary.
But unless the organizers of the prom festivities planned the wording this way as a joke, there’s nothing funny about the situation.
Paul Robeson High School is located in the Englewood neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side, one of the poorest and most dangerous neighborhoods in the city. The high school also is part of the failing Chicago Public Schools, or CPS, system.
Four out of 10 CPS freshmen do not graduate.
If they do graduate, 91 percent have to take remediation courses in college because they do not know how to do basic math and school work. Just 26 percent of CPS high school students are college-ready, according to the ACT subject matter tests.
Students in these schools whose families can’t afford an alternative are trapped in classrooms that, for the most part, aren’t equipping them to succeed in the future.
But while CPS students get left behind, their teachers receive generous compensation.
The average CPS teacher salary is $76,000. The last contract negotiations in 2012 gave CPS teachers 17 percent raises over three years.
The median household income in Chicago is just $47,408. The disparity is worse in Englewood, a neighborhood where 23.6 percent of residents are unemployed and the average per capita income is $12,255.
Something’s not adding up.
Students can’t spell. They can’t do math. They aren’t graduating. And they’re not being set up to succeed in the real world.
So why should CPS teachers be rewarded with raises?
The Paul Robeson prom theme is a glaring example of just how bad things have gotten in Chicago Public Schools. The tragic irony is that Paul Robeson students picked a theme that evokes hope for the future; something every child deserves.
But until CPS changes its ways, the system will continue failing students at schools like Paul Robeson.
It’s time all Chicago students have a reason to believe in a brighter tomorrow.
Authored by Hilary Gowins
It is not the teachers. It is not the text books. It is not the lesson plans.
ReplyDeleteIt is a student body that is predominantly lazy, dumb and stupid.
They don't even try
Stop. End stop Period.
Someone will think it is a joke. NO it is not. Is real. 100 % so.
ReplyDeleteRobeson. Paul Robeson. Scholar, All-American athlete, great opera singer. A negro and one of the most accomplished persons that ever lived. He was a communist or quasi-communist but at least he could read and write and do pretty well at it.
ReplyDeleteRobeson is an almost if not totally 100 % colored high school. And Condesa del Mar has been chosen as the location for the prom. That site is in a predominantly all whitey area. How ironic?
ReplyDeleteI think what the statistics are truly telling us is that black parents are ill equipped to raise productive children. You can have the greatest teachers in the world, but if no one at home is making the kids do the necessary work, than nothing will come of it. I spent many years working in the middle east, and have seen how mothers will beat their kids if they are not doing well in school. Most of their children speak more than one language by high school and complete college despite having uneducated parents. In other words, blacks are lazy as hell.
ReplyDelete