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Monday, October 23, 2006
Armstrong Williams :: Townhall.com Columnist
Our black brothers!
by Armstrong Williams
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Not long ago I attended a high school basketball game between local DC rivals. I was absolutely amazed at the level of intensity in which these young men played. Both teams, made up of all young black males, possessed a strong desire to win and the level at which they competed demonstrated that it was this desire to be victorious that pushed them all to respect and learn the game. Both teams ran complicated plays, perfectly executed the directions of the coach and never seemed to tire. When one of the young men made a bad decision, he was immediately admonished by the coach who exclaimed: "you are better than that!" Nodding his head, as if to show he agreed with the coach's statement, the young man refocused and played flawless basketball for the rest of the game.

I left this game not only impressed, but full of hope. Here were 24 young black men competing at an incredibly high level; a group that is often stigmatized as being lazy, unmanageable, slow learners and undisciplined. Many people wonder how a group that has so many problems succeeding in the classroom could excel at a sport that requires one to use the same qualities possessed by a great student. The answer is simply: expectations. Black men are expected to be exceptional athletes. Such expectations push them at a very early age to cultivate and perfect their skills on the field or court. In the eyes of many it's almost a sin for a young black man to be a poor athlete. He would face belittlement not only from his peers but society as whole.

Now, for sure, some racist claim that Blacks are simply born with the natural ability to become exceptional athletes, however, such an argument has no merit. While it may be true that on the average black men are physically larger than other races, size and strength play only a minimal role in determining one's success as an athlete. To compete at the highest level of any sport takes a tremendous amount of discipline since the athlete must devote energy and time to perfecting such skills as dribbling or passing. In addition, success hinges greatly on the athlete's intelligence. He must not only commit large amounts of information to memory but must also be able to adapt to the play of his opponent. If the athlete is unable to think analytically, his jumping abilities and speed will prove useless as he will simply be outsmarted by his opponent. The fact of the matter is young black men excel at sports because they work at it, and they work at it because they know that it will be held to higher standard than all others. The coach who reassured his young player that he could play better did not really have to say anything at all; he already knew he was better, not out of any sense of false pride, but from understanding that he had adequately prepared himself to excel in such an atmosphere.

If we juxtapose public school coaches' expectations of black male players with public school teachers' expectations of black male students the difference is night and day. Young black men are expected to fail in the realm of academia, consequently most of them do. Go into any inner city public school and you will witness excellence on the basketball court and failure in the classroom. Public schools reinforce society's low expectations of black males. The abysmal test scores among this group of students are largely a matter of social conditioning. If held to a higher standard, black men would work just as hard to perfect their writing as they do their jump shot. However, unlike coaches, teachers don't admonish black males; they accept their failure and even reward it by passing them on to the next grade. By the time they reach high school, most black men are so far behind, they simply give up. And those who do go on to graduate are hit with the stinging realization that their abilities as an athlete will not help them gain employment, unless, of course, they are one of the exceptional few who make the pros.

Young black men must be compelled to compete in the classroom if they are ever to achieve success in life. However, the only way public schools will be compelled to lift black men from the depths of academic despair is if they themselves are forced to compete with private schools. This can be achieved with school vouchers which would allow parents to put their children in schools that will hold them to higher standards in the classroom. Such policy has not taken off because teachers unions vehemently oppose vouchers. They recognize that vouchers would mean fewer teachers, fewer membership dues, the likely defections by public school personnel to privatized systems that have traditionally resisted centralized unionization, and the birth of competing collective bargaining entities. For the teachers' unions, the idea of competition can only mean giving up leverage. Nevertheless, if faced with such competition, public schools would be forced to push their young black men to succeed in the classroom, just as they push them on the basketball court.

With that said, perhaps what is even more important than the expectations of teachers and society as a whole are the expectations of parents. According to The Center for the Study of Sport and Society at Northeastern University, a poor African American family is seven times more likely to encourage a male child into sports than is a white family. Sadly, many black parents believe their children are unable to compete academically so they push their child to develop athletically and public schools simply reinforce this devastating mentality on daily basis.

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About The Author
Armstrong Williams is a widely-syndicated columnist, CEO of the Graham Williams Group, and hosts the Armstrong Williams Show. He is the author of Beyond Blame.
 
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Multiple Causation
The struggles of minority students in school have many causes, which is why the same problems are not apparent in certain minorities. The majority of Asian families have two parents and a cultural ideal of excellence. It is not an option to do poorly in school in Asian families and if their children perform in music or athletics, it is also not an option to do poorly there. Asian families provide discipline, opportunties for practice and a lot of parental involvement. Then the Asian kid gets to school and the teacher expects him to do well because the other Asian students are doing well. Part of this is the culture they brought with them from the home country, but part of it is the American experience of Asians. They came to this country to work hard or starve. There was no laziness permitted on the railroad crews of their ancestors.

Black kids (and I am making a broad statement that doesn't encompass all blacks) often come from single-parent households with a cultural history of mediocrity. They've been taught at home that the schools are slanted against them and in many cases, the school system has low expectations for them. Because black children typically are taller and stronger than their non-black counterparts, sports has a natural attraction. It requires no effort by teachers or parents. The kid can pick up a ball and learn to play from the guys on the playground. If he shows talent, he can try out for a team and that's when a coach can turn him into something good.

Obviously, there are black people who buck that trend and cultural message. I suspect they are raised by families where there is strong parental desire to do well in school. When they don't do as well as Mom thinks they should, she gets in the teachers' faces and demands excellence. Instead of heading off to the playground to play ball, Junior sits at Mom's kitchen table and does his homework.

I am not saying parents are the problem here. I believe teachers and school administrative policy is every bit as responsible for the failure of all colors of students these days. Parents play a part, but I've seen far too many committed parents who feel like they can make no headway against a culture of educational mediocrity to believe that teachers and schools do not contribute to the educational malaise in this country in a big way.

Educating a child is a team process. If anyone of the team is unwilling to cooperate, there is going to be problems. Sometimes it's the parent who is at blame. Sometimes it is the school and teacher who is at blame. And sometimes, it is the student himself at blame. More often than not, none of the units is working in a cohesive manner to bring about the education of the child.

If we want our educational system in this country to work, we need to start first by admitting that all sides need a fresh perspective. We need to look back to where educational standards started falling and admit that maybe the old people knew something we did. We need to take a clear hard look at the research being conducted by groups like the Gurion Institute. We need to adapt education to a model that says we try to meet the needs of every child to a point, but we always encourage first and foremost the students who show potential and are motivated to learn. We have to stop trying to be all things to all people so that by all means we teach very little.

Blame Public Schools
Public schools ARE the problem. The progressives who own the public schools, and who have more rights over our children than we parents do, are not interested in academics, only social engineering.
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