Thursday, May 28, 2009

Grappling with San Diego's Latino high school dropouts By Vince Vasque

http://www.sddt.com/Commentary/article.cfm?Commentary_ID=191&SourceCode=20090527tzc

Grappling with San Diego's Latino high school dropouts
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
 
Over the past month educators at the San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD) have been trumpeting new state statistics that indicate a dramatic cut in the number of high school dropouts. Though this is good news, we shouldn't ignore the growing "Latino achievement gap" in the region.

Changing the status quo on student retention is critical, as teenagers that fall through the cracks will dramatically diminish our region's economic growth and prosperity. Adults who drop out of high school are more likely to be poor, unemployed, be in poorer health and spend time in the corrections system. A high school dropout is the loss of not only thousands of taxpayer dollars, but the loss of a young resident who will find it harder to compete in our globalized economy, where higher skills and academic degrees are required to attain high-paying employment.

On the surface the numbers from the California Department of Education tell an encouraging story. San Diego Unified School District reduced the number of high school dropouts by 490 students in the 2007-2008 academic year, slashing the 4-year dropout rate by 37 percent.
The tallies in the rest of the region are not nearly as promising. Of the 25 high school districts in San Diego County that reported to the state, nearly half (12) saw a year-to-year rise in overall student dropouts. On the whole, 6,126 students dropped out of San Diego County high schools, a figure which is essentially unchanged from last year.

Where trends appear especially bleak is the drop out rate among Latino teens. Though they make up less than half of all students in San Diego County public schools (44 percent), Latinos composed more than half (56 percent) of all county dropouts in 2007-08, a rate which increased from the previous school year. Sweetwater Union High School District (SUHSD), which educates more than one out of every three Hispanic high school students in the county, stood out as being especially troubled, with a 44 percent year-to-year increase in the number of Latino dropouts.

There are some proven policy options that can help address this problem. One is taking aggressive steps to increase the number of charter schools. The flexibility and diversity in teaching methods that charters encourage have been shown to help keep students in school and get them to graduation ceremonies. UC San Diego's Preuss Charter School, for example, which enrolls 758 low-income students and is 60 percent Latino, reported zero dropouts in 2007-2008. Indeed, the overwhelming majority of San Diego Unified charter high schools have lower Latino dropout rates and overall dropout rates than the district average.

Unfortunately, in this respect Sweetwater has lagged the rest of the region. There is currently only one chartered high school, MAAC Community Charter School, which focuses on at-risk students who have already dropped out of school. Another school, High Tech High Chula Vista, which opened its doors in fall 2007 and is modeled from a highly-popular educational philosophy, is not part of the district and has yet to graduate its first full class of students. The SUHSD School Board should consider setting new goals to approving charter schools, including transitioning existing high schools into charters, giving school administrators the tools they need to raise academic expectations and deliver results in the classroom.

A second problem is that too many of our high schools in this region are simply too large to meet the needs of students. Eighty-two percent of all Latino public high school students in San Diego County are currently enrolled at a high school with population of at least 1,823. At the Sweetwater District, 11 of its 12 high schools reach this size, including three with enrollments of almost 3,000. In contrast, at San Diego Unified only 27 percent of all mainstream public high schools have enrolments greater than 1,800.

Breaking down school sizes has been accomplished regionally with the aid of private dollars. With support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, three historically large schools within SDUSD (San Diego High, Kearny High and Crawford High) were divided into 14 smaller schools in 2004. Eight of these 14 institutions have now posted Latino dropout rates that are lower than the district average. Cultivating higher achievement is not exclusive to San Diego; earlier this decade, New York City officials broke 12 large high schools in 47 small schools and witnessed a 38 percent graduation rate increase in 2007.

Dramatic success with either small schools or charter reforms is not guaranteed. Nor is it the only thing that needs to change. As Bill Gates stated in his Foundation's 2009 Annual Letter, the schools that failed to make a dent in graduation rates or student achievement "tended to be the schools that did not take radical steps to change the culture, such as allowing the principal to pick the team of teachers or change the curriculum." It will take true classroom pioneers and undaunted professionals to change the state of South Bay public schools, and when they do emerge, they are deserving of the full support of parents and teachers.

No parent, no matter what ethnic background, should be forced to send their child to a failing school and sentence them to an unproductive adulthood. By working together and setting higher goals for all, our community can achieve more scholastic success for the benefit of every student.

Vasquez is the senior policy analyst at the National University System Institute for Policy Research. Send comments to editor@sddt.com. Letters may be published as Letters to the Editor.
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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
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Welcoming the First Latino Supreme Court Justice: Gabriela Lemus

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gabriela-lemus/welcoming-the-first-latin_b_208116.html
Gabriela Lemus

Gabriela Lemus

Posted: May 27, 2009 11:07 AM

Welcoming the First Latino Supreme Court Justice

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Yesterday, President Barack Obama announced his decision to nominate Judge Sonia Sotomayor to sit as the next Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. This unprecedented and historical announcement is a reflection of our nation: the first African-American president nominates the first Latina to the Supreme Court, and only the third woman in its history to hold that position.


But historical moments aside, the qualifications of this judicial nominee are outstanding and merit careful examination. Judge Sotomayor has more than three decades of experience bringing more federal judicial experience to the Supreme Court than any justice in 100 years and more overall judicial experience than anyone confirmed for the Court in the past 70 years.


This judge is no intellectual lightweight. In her role on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit -- one of the most demanding circuits in the nation -- Judge Sotomayor participated in over 3000 panel discussions and authored some 400 opinions. She has handled everything from constitutional law to complex procedural matters and complicated business organizations. There is plenty of concrete information to draw from regarding her intellectual rigor and legal acuity.


A qualified Latina on our highest court will diversify judicial deliberations and bring firsthand experience to issues faced by not only ordinary Americans, but also under-served individuals and communities. This nomination will undoubtedly increase public confidence in our legal system by reinforcing our Constitution's axiom of "equal justice under the law."

Sotomayor has been widely admired by her colleagues as a judge with a sophisticated understanding of legal doctrine, but also as a judge who has keen knowledge of how laws and courts impact every-day lives. This is an important point to keep in mind as rule of law extends beyond legal theory to ensure common-sense application to real-world facts. This factor does not mean that she would base her decisions on some type of emotional reaction -- to the contrary -- it would serve to enhance the richness of the discussions taking place between the justices as they make their deliberations. Sotomayor is a moderate who forges consensus.


Her nomination comes at a time when the Latino community is at the heart of a number of highly politicized issues and attacks on its civil liberties. Someone like Sotomayor could help bridge the gap that exists in our communities today -- the gap between fear (and hatred) and understanding (and compassion).


As the Senate moves forward with her confirmation, Latinos everywhere will be watching and evaluating. Both parties should treat Judge Sotomayor with the respect that she deserves. Her record is there -- examine it, but render judgment with the same impartiality that will be expected of her should she be confirmed as Justice to the highest court in the land.


The president demonstrated the courage and political will to do what is right by opening the doors of the least diverse Supreme Court in history. A new day has dawned and hope has been reinstated for all whose belief in the American Dream had become tarnished.

 
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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Re: Prayer Vigil and peaceful demonstration In solidarity and support with 65 tribes, indigenous peoples in Peru,

http://www.aidesep.org.pe/

http://www.redambientalloretana.org/en/

http://www.amazonwatch..org/
 
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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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From: "tlacayaotzin@aol.com" <tlacayaotzin@aol.com>
To: networkaztlan_news@yahoogroups.com; networkaztlan_action@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 11:02:10 AM
Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] Prayer Vigil and peaceful demonstration In solidarity and support with 65 tribes, indigenous peoples in Peru,



Prayer Vigil and peaceful demonstration In solidarity and support with 65 tribes,1000 communities and more than 30,000 indigenous peoples in Peru, Hollywood celebrities, Activists and Indigenous youth are pulling together in a Prayer Vigil and peaceful demonstration In solidarity and support with 65 tribes,1000 communities and more than 30,000 indigenous
peoples in Peru, who are being Criminalized by their government for holding peaceful protests throughout the country's Amazon region. Since April 9th, for fundamental human rights.

Celebrities attending to help raise awareness and on the docket to
speak are: Q'orianka Kilcher (The New World, The People Speak), Clifton Collins jr (Star Trek, The Horsemen), Alex Meraz (The Twilight Saga-New Moon), Jesse Garcia (Quinceañera)

Other celebrity activists lending their support to this event are Colin Farrell, Woody Harrelson, and Esai Morales

PRAYER VIGIL AND PACEFUL DEMOTSTRATION IS SOLARITY AND SUPPORT 65 TRIBES IN PERU.

When: Tuesday, May 26th, 6:30 pm

Where: In front of the Consulate General of Peru , 3450 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90010, cross street Mariposa
What: We call on the Peruvian Government to respect the rights of its indigenous peoples and refrain from using military force,violence, repression and bloodshed in their response to the Indigenous mobilizations. Furthermore we strongly urge the Peruvian press and media to commit to accurate press coverage of=20 the protests and stop radicalizing and distorting the position of the indigenous protestors in the eyes of the public.

Why: : For the past 43 days, Thousands of indigenous people have been blockading roads and river traffic throughout the
Amazon in peaceful protests, demanding the repeal of a series of new laws imposed by the Garcia Administration under the pretext of implementing the Free Trade agreements (FTA) with the United States .

Protesters demand the revocation of 10 new legal decrees, which grant international corporate access to Amazonian lands and allow oil, logging and mining companies to buy large parcels of communally-owned indigenous land without the consent of the local inhabitants.

These new laws directly undermine indigenous peoples rights and violate rights recognized in the national constitution as well as in international treaties, including the United Nations declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples and the International Labor Organization (ILO) Convention 169..

Implementing these new legal decrees, result in a government backed land-grab by large international corporations and the extractive industries and set the stage for water privatization. , In spite of the fact that the consequences of such laws directly affecting indigenous peoples life's, wellbeing and in some cases even their survival, the new laws allow for Indigenous peoples to be excluded from the decision making process .

On Ma
y 9, 2009, the Peruvian government declared a state of emergency in the regions of Loreto, Amazonas, Cusco, and Ucayali in an attempt to criminalize and intimidate whatever protests occur on indigenous territory. This action is a license for the government to violently repress Indigenous People and the Peruvian Government is subjecting indigenous areas to military occupation in order to silence indigenous community opponents of extractive industries.

Under the emergency decree, all constitutional rights have been
suspended — including the right to hold meetings and freedom of
movement. The measure also permits the use of armed forces against the civil population, criminalizing the legitimate rights and demands of the Peruvian indigenous nations, as well as endangering normal democratic rights.

Accurate news reports out of Peru have been extremely scarce, despite the sad news that one protester is dead, 9 more critically wounded, 6 indigenous leaders detained and several people gone missing in a recent confrontation with military police.

Video and photo evidence show police beating peaceful protesters and firing rubber bullets in order to break up demonstrations blocking roads and bridges.
Also, In an aggressive harassment campaign, the Garcia government has filed criminal charges of treason and sedition against 6 indigenous leaders including Alberto Pizango, president of AIDESEP, Peru's national indigenous organization Furthermore, the government appears to be carrying out a strategy to control press coverage of both the mobilization and the response

Contact: On-Q initiative / Q'orianka Kilcher peru.initiative@ yahoo.com
Tel: 310-696-9424
Interview and photo requests : QPR publicity qpr.publicity@ gmail.com

http://www.aidesep. org.pe/ --- http://www.redambie ntalloretana. org/ ---
http://amazonwatch.org/

# # #

Martha Ugarte
Community Guidance Media Network
(818)398-2578
Fax (818) 920-0790

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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Whites become minority in Kansas county: CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/wayoflife/05/22/garden.city.kansas.minorities/index.html

Whites become minority in Kansas county

updated 12:44 p.m. EDT, Fri May 22, 2009
By Sean Callebs
CNN

FINNEY COUNTY, Kansas (CNN) -- U.S. communities are changing complexion as ethnic diversity grows in the American heartland.

Beet farming brought immigrants like Sue Rodriguez and her family from Mexico in the early 1900s.

Beet farming brought immigrants like Sue Rodriguez and her family from Mexico in the early 1900s.


Though not new in California, Arizona, Texas or Florida, the change of demographics is a bit more surprising in southwest Kansas.

Finney County, Kansas, is one of six counties across the nation that became majority-minority between 2007 and 2008, the U.S. Census Bureau recently announced. The agency defines majority-minority as a county where more than half the population is made up of a group that is not single-race, non-Hispanic white.


Nearly 10 percent (309) of the nation's 3,142 counties were majority-minority as of July 1, 2008.


"Why there?" people ask Tim Cruz, former mayor of Garden City, Kansas, the largest town in Finney County. And then, "How do you all get along?"


"It's just another melting pot you know," Cruz says. "It makes it nice to have those different cultures. And sure they're different -- we have to understand what they celebrate and why they do it."


In the last couple of decades, massive meatpacking plants in Garden City have drawn workers from Southeast Asia and Somalia. Video Watch diversity in the heartland »

You can smell the major industry of Garden City before you actually reach it and the stockyards that feed the meatpacking plants have their own unmistakable odor.

After high school, Cruz worked one year in the meatpacking plant and that one year was enough for him. But he says Somalis, and many southeast Asians come to the area for the steady work, and a steady paycheck -- even if the work is tough.


"Very dangerous, long hours," he says. "I am grateful that they do that work. Now, I know why my dad said stay in school, you know."


At the Alta Brown Elementary School, the native language of about half of the 409 students is something other than English.

New Majority-Minority Counties
Finney, Kansas
Orange County, Florida
Stanislaus, California
Warren, Mississippi
Edwards, Texas
Schleicher, Texas
Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Cruz's wife of 26 years, Penny Cruz, teaches English as a second language there. In one class, she leads four kids in a card game of "Go Fish" to help them grasp their new language. Five-year-old Robert is from Burma and has only been in the country a few months. His grasp of English at this stage is mostly mimicry.. If the teacher says, "Robert," he'll smile broadly and repeat his name.


Penny Cruz says the town is getting more and more diverse, adding, "I think we all blend together and get along. There are ups and downs but for the most part I think we're all pretty accepting of whoever comes into our community and into our classrooms."

Majority-Minority States

Minority percentages
Hawaii --75 percent
New Mexico -- 58 percent
California -- 58 percent
Texas -- 53 percent

Source: U.S. Census Bureau


But not all of Finney County's some 41,000 residents are thrilled by the increasing cultural diversity.


The day before public schools let out for the summer, teenagers of all colors were skateboarding, tossing a football, and kicking around a ball in Finney Park. Teacher Linda Turner admits while she's cooking hamburgers for the kids that she's heard some complaints about the area's newest residents.


"There were always whispers," she says. "Out at Wal-Mart you hear, 'Oh, look at how they're dressed ... wonder where they're from, what they're doing here?' Especially if they weren't speaking English."


But much of the United States is looking more like Garden City. New census figures show more than one-third of the people in the United States are non-white and a staggering 47 percent of the population under the age of 5 are a minority.


The latest census figures show four states as majority-minority in 2008: Hawaii (75 percent), New Mexico (58 percent), California (58 percent) and Texas (53 percent). The District of Columbia was 67 percent minority. No other state had more than a 43 percent minority population.


For more than 100 years, Hispanics have lived in Finney County. Tim Cruz's grandmother moved to Garden City in 1910. He doesn't remember the name of the Mexican town she left, but does remember that she instilled a good work ethic in him as a young child.


"She was always a hard worker, " Cruz says, "very dedicated to her work and their church. That's what I remember about my Grandma."


He also remembers as a boy being told, "Don't speak Spanish, you're in America, speak English." And now, despite trying to learn on many different occasions, Tim Cruz can't speak Spanish.


This Midwest enclave, home to hamburgers and hot dogs, is giving way to Vietnamese pho, or Mexican tacos.


Police Chief James Hawkins admits communication with some residents can be a problem for his officers. Hawkins, a 25-year veteran of the force, has nine Hispanic officers on a staff of 58. Not enough he says, but he's trying to add more diversity..


"I have an officer who achieved citizenship about five years ago," the chief says. "He came from deep down in Mexico, and said that's all he ever wanted to do is be a police officer. When he came to the United States, he learned English and has been going to school. That's what he wanted to do, become a police officer, but you have to be a citizen to do that."

For many immigrant residents, life in Kansas, even working at the meatpacking plants, is much better than where they came from. But Cruz wants the immigrants to know, in his words, that "the American dream is much greater."


"We catch them trying to tell their kids they don't need to go to college because this is a good life," Cruz says. "We have to help educate them saying, 'No, there is even a better life than doing this and your kids can get to do that.' "


Cruz seems most pleased that his sleepy small town, is just that, and not rife with racial and ethnic tension and violence.


"I have no magic words. I would just say open arms to people that come in your community because they might be the person that's going to help you when you have times of struggle," Cruz says.


"We're all here for one reason, and someday we'll be gone, and you know, what kind of mark are you going to leave -- good mark, or a bad mark. There are a lot of good people, just try to be a good person."

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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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