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Better Choices for Buffalo's Students: Expanding & Reforming the Criteria Schools System

Authors: Gary Orfield, Jennifer Ayscue, Jongyeon Ee, Erica Frankenberg, Genevieve Siegel‐Hawley, Brian Woodward and Natasha Amlani
Date Published: May 27, 2015

This research was funded by a contract from the Buffalo Public Schools as part of an agreement with the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights. It represents our independent judgment on the issues addressed in the OCR investigation and agreement with the Buffalo Public Schools. This report examines educational opportunity in Buffalo’s system of criteria-based schools of choice, which offer their admitted students special opportunities not available in the regular schools.
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Excerpt from the Foreword 

by Gary Orfield

This report examines educational opportunity in Buffalo’s system of criteria-based schools of choice, which offer their admitted students special opportunities not available in the regular schools. This system is a direct descendant of the nationally famous system of magnet schools which Buffalo Public Schools created in the l970s and l980s under the court-ordered desegregation plan, following the ruling that the school district and the city government had discriminated for many years against students of color and had contributed directly to the housing conditions that made Buffalo one of the nation’s most segregated cities. School choice has been a central element of educational policy in Buffalo for 40 years. In contrast to cities like Boston, which experienced major conflicts in the civil rights era, Buffalo achieved a high level of diversity and created a number of very desirable public schools with little overt conflict. In l995, however, the federal court ended the plan and cut off the funding from the city that had been essential to the success. The idea of widespread school choice remained, although many of the tools for creating high quality diverse schools disappeared, and a reduced choice system came to rely on a number of standards or criteria for selecting their students. Among those schools was the famous City Honors school, one of the first two magnets created in the desegregation plan whose opportunities produced strong competition and struggle in a city still divided by race and poverty and with a great many intensely segregated and deeply impoverished schools branded as failures by the state government’s rating system. 

Over the years, the city schools developed methods of selecting students that ignored issues of race and poverty and tried to find neutral and fair ways to admit students. As the white population declined sharply and the most desirable schools admitted few students from some parts of the poor nonwhite areas, there was criticism and conflict which eventually produced a civil rights complaint to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR). After an OCR investigation produced evidence of racial inequality, OCR and the Buffalo Public Schools agreed to jointly sponsor this study with the hope of developing a stronger, fairer choice system. We were given a broad assignment to do that. To answer the questions, we obtained and analyzed a great deal of data from the school district and elsewhere, visited and talked with many people across the city, and conducted surveys of parents, teachers, administrators, staff, and students about the issues. We are now proposing a set of changes that we believe would offer better choices in a more equitable way to many more students and, we hope, could help the city school district, its teachers and its staff to compete more effectively and be a vital part of turning around a city that has suffered from a very long decline. 

As families and educators know, access to a strong school with motivated faculty and students and a challenging educational program can be a life-changing experience. Buffalo has a small number of excellent schools, but its families need more such opportunities and people in all parts of the city need to have confidence that their children have a fair chance to experience them. That confidence does not currently exist. 

We believe that there is a win-win solution that is not about dividing scarcity but increasing the offerings and fostering positive diversity, not taking the scarce seats in the schools that many want to attend from one group and giving to others but creating more winners, working together, in all parts of town. Fixing this system cannot address other educational reforms that the city clearly needs in non-criteria-based schools but it can be a solid step forward, creating momentum for future reforms and building confidence in the system’s ability to do some very important things very well. 

 

We recommend the kind of changes most Buffalo teachers and parents favor. This report was triggered by resolving civil rights problems, but we believe that the solutions we propose would be significant steps toward the creation of a more vibrant and competitive public school system. This is not a proposal to undermine existing successes, but to expand and create more. Nothing in it calls for lowering academic standards...

To read the complete Foreword and report, see the attached document on this page. 

 


In compliance with the UC Open Access Policy, this report has been made available on eScholarship:

http://escholarship.org/uc/item/2pn9k70f

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