Disaster Half of Black Students Can Barely Read - The racial wealth gap in the Bay Area starts with the stunning test scores coming out of our education system.

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SPUR crunched Census data on the financial situations of Bay Area ethnic groups and the image reveals Black residents are being left behind region-wide, with particular acuteness in San Francisco. In the epicenter of Silicon Valley, Black income growth lagged behind White and Asian households. In the East Bay and Solano County, Black households saw a raise of just $10,000 over 10 years. But San Francisco was the worst of all: the Black community’s income barely budged since 2010. Black San Franciscans live in the shadow of a technology and wealthy renaissance that have exploded the incomes of their white neighbors.

In community college my Black computer science professor stated: “If the lot of you don’t figure this out, many of you wont be living here much longer.” So what’s the cause of Black families raised in the Bay Area being left out of the economic boom? Here are key educational statistics about the next generation of Black workers in San Francisco as they finish high school:

In 2021, 47% of Black students in SFUSD that are high school juniors don’t even come close to meeting English-language proficiency. That’s 9% higher than the state average for Black 11th graders — which is also abysmal. That means for every one of two Black students leaving San Francisco high schools they can’t read for their age. Including students who are close but still not proficient: 71.5% of Black high school juniors in San Francisco cannot read at a proficient level, compared to 20.3% of Asian students, 22.6% of White students, 32% of Filipino students and 61.8% of Hispanic students. It was bad pre-pandemic as well but it’s gotten a few percentage points worse.

These are not numbers from a red state in the Deep South but San Francisco. The technology capital of the world, which has propelled the incomes of white and Asian households tremendously, and for which Latinos largely and Black people almost entirely have been completely left out. Without meeting the most basic literacy standards, Black and Latino high school graduates aren’t even qualified for the most basic office jobs. Computer science is totally out reach — the mathematics proficiency standards are in the single-digits for Black high school graduates.

San Francisco’s educational system is producing a generation of Black San Franciscans destined to fail before they’ve even got started. I ask why should Black San Franciscans care about an economy or a city like San Francisco which is propelling so many into wealth while Black residents walk around with Great Recession-era earnings?

But it’s not just the San Francisco education system. Oakland’s even worse than San Francisco, though it trended in the right direction in terms of severely illiterate Black juniors during the pandemic. Region-wide, in district after district, about half of Black high school juniors are not sufficiently literate. Same in California and same throughout the United States. Black boys in particular struggle with literacy far below peers and Black girls as early as the 3rd grade. Moreover, the school shutdowns during the pandemic made the crisis from bad to worse and there doesn’t appear to be much mainstream focus on resolving it.

It’s not that these students will just turn out as under-average paid adults — that’s a best case scenario — but poor literacy rates are a significant indicator for being incarcerated or stuck in the criminal justice system. A study from 2014 found that the average incarcerated person is significantly illiterate compared to the general population. A study from 2003 found 80% of juvenile criminals were illiterate for their age.

The old urban legend that prisons are constructed based on literacy skills of 3rd graders is a myth. But it’s based off the real phenomenon that academic proficiency in the 3rd grade is generally locked in till high school graduation. If you’re a bad student by the 3rd grade, the likelihood of graduating and meeting academic proficiency is significantly smaller. That these results are so racialized, is clearly related to the ongoing income inequality among races re-shaping the Bay Area and leading to intense tensions between groups of people.

In my Substack on Black and Asian race relations in San Francisco, the most common criticism I received was that Black San Franciscans could solve their problems with better cultural practices. That Asian Americans also had been discriminated against in the past such as the Chinese Exclusion Act or WWII concentration camps, and thus Black Americans have no excuse. AKA the old model minority idea.

It’s a particularly silly criticism because the majority of Asian Americans are foreign-born and the 96% can trace ancestry after or around the 1965 immigration act. However, discrimination against Asian Americans is still rampant, particularly in the immigration and employment system; and in Silicon Valley’s management positions.

In comparison, only 9% of Black Americans are foreign born — rather the inverse of Asian Americans. Vast majority of Black Americans trace their ancestry back to slavery. When controlling for Black Americans of foreign ancestry, they have educational attainment on par with immigrants broadly, including 41% degree-attainment among African immigrants, comparable with Asian Americans.

This matters because foreign-born Americans on average tend to commit less crime than U.S.-born Americans. So, yes, when talking criminal justice and poverty, it is a cultural problem. But it’s an American cultural problem of centuries of imposed segregation and disinvestment against Blacks, that was explicitly legal until one and a half generations ago. Asking wide swaths of Black America to imitate foreign cultures they don’t know as a means to break 400 years of imposed suppression in the country they’ve lived in for generations is moronic and absurd. No other ethnic group can do it or has been expected to.

Moreover the idea that Black people don’t value education is absurd. My father was illiterate and was very conscious about it. He was dedicated to ensure I could read so that I wouldn’t struggle as he did. As early as Kindergarten my father made me do ‘Hooked on Phonics’ sets at grades beyond my age level. He had me read books and I had siblings to read to me at night. Thus, I never once struggled with English classes in grade school or college and breezed right through them.

This is not a success story, rather it’s the problem. For a whole host of reasons such as income inequality, incarceration, immigration and more, we do not all have parents or supportive communities with enough flexibility to sacrifice for their children. At least not to an extent necessary to overcome these educational and economic disparities.

Census 2021 finds that 64% of Black children and 50% of Native American children are growing up in single-parent households — compared to just 24% of white kids and 15% of Asian kids. Single-parent households are one of the greatest indicators of future poverty and substandard education for children. And the single-parent rates have an obvious explanation: Black men are the most likely of any group to go to prison, combined with living in an American culture where multi-generational families are discouraged.

All children do not have working families with enough economic flexibility to read to them at night, monitor their homeowner and give them that leg up in school the next day. Our public education system was created to be the great equalizer. Single parent, dual parent, your race, your family’s income or your ancestry, should not determine your education and your future. But it does and that’s the problem.

Much media hay has been made about a report suggesting each Black resident in San Francisco receive $5 million. It’s obviously not going to be paid especially by a local government (though it ought to be federally done). However, there’s suggestions in the report that are education-related such as a Black-run schools and cash for at-risk students that are wise.

Ensuring students with truancy or criminal records have parents at home who can supervisor their children, or give those kids spending money to keep them away from thefts and drug dealing is smart. Having Black educators who come from informed backgrounds to address Black students is very much akin to the proliferation of tutoring centers in Asian communities that are key to helping their children outside of class, too. People who make cultural arguments should especially support the Black educators provision. And let’s not forget that the Bay Area’s leading corporations should take an active role in employing these young people (and the Black community broadly) rather than hand-waving it away as a “pipeline” issue.

These are some of the solutions to the racial income gaps and it starts with schooling. With racialized literacy rates as poor as California’s, new generations of adults whose only future are low wages or crime. It should be an even bigger story that the climbing crime rates because it is why those crime rates are climbing. Half of graduating Black students aren’t even equipped to get a decent job, how many are going to find breaking car windows attractive? Downtown and Silicon Valley won’t hire them but drug dealers will.

It’s not incidental that 6-years of literacy improvement being erased during lockdown also correlated with an across-the-board increase in crimes. The pandemic generation hasn’t even fully reached adulthood yet, consequences for the lack of learning will effect us for years to come.

To be clear: this conversation isn’t new. The academic gap has happened every decade since schools have existed in the U.S. However the stakes are worse because the rise of the Information Economy requires a degree of intelligence beyond the basic trade skills of the past, and we’re not even reaching the bare minimum for Black children.

If we’re going to make our educational system so heavily dependent on the activities of children at home rather than in-class, the least we can do is financially and culturally support families. You cannot erase decades of poverty, drug addiction, environmental pollution and impaired child development, explicit disinvestment and redlining in Black neighborhoods by just saying “try harder.” We’re not just investing in the future of those families or a race, we’re investing in the future of our cities and nation.

Many people don’t see it this way and I’m sure they’ll tell me so. I’ll predict their arguments: “It’s not my job to take care of other people’ kids. It’s not my job to fix Black people’s cultural problems. My family / this ethnicity dealt with racism and overcame it; so to can Black people.”

If your response to these longstanding issue of inequality in education is the same exact responses made by reactionaries and anti-social individualists since the Emancipation Proclamation, then be content with what you create. If you like racial strife and drug addiction in San Francisco, keep doing it. It you like high homicide rates in Oakland, keep doing it. If you like soaring rates of homelessness, keep doing it. If companies like the reputation the Bay Area is getting from pandemic crime increases, keep doing it.

If you want to solve these problems we can do something different for once.

https://darrellowens.substack.com/p/half-of-black-students-can-hardly (Archive)
 
The book *Evicted*. I don't know where the author got his data.

it seems like that book is specifically about Milwaukee. I can't tell from the fawning accolades how much real data the guy used along with his personal stories about the 8 families he followed.

I very very sincerely doubt that American black people in general don't want to live in nice neighborhoods with good schools.
 
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Including students who are close but still not proficient: 71.5% of Black high school juniors in San Francisco cannot read at a proficient level, compared to 20.3% of Asian students, 22.6% of White students, 32% of Filipino students and 61.8% of Hispanic students. It was bad pre-pandemic as well but it’s gotten a few percentage points worse.
What the fuck? How are blacks even worse at reading than the literal first generation immigrants who don't care about English because their communities speak an entirely separate language?

Moreover the idea that Black people don’t value education is absurd. My father was illiterate and was very conscious about it. He was dedicated to ensure I could read so that I wouldn’t struggle as he did. As early as Kindergarten my father made me do ‘Hooked on Phonics’ sets at grades beyond my age level. He had me read books and I had siblings to read to me at night. Thus, I never once struggled with English classes in grade school or college and breezed right through them.

This is not a success story, rather it’s the problem. For a whole host of reasons such as income inequality, incarceration, immigration and more, we do not all have parents or supportive communities with enough flexibility to sacrifice for their children. At least not to an extent necessary to overcome these educational and economic disparities.

This is literally you contradicting your own point. "Everyone in the Black community does this so anthropologists or sociologists wouldn't claim that to be personal choice".

"My dad made a personal choice and I succeeded".

Also, income inequality, incarceration, and immigration? One of those things is not like the other. The reason you don't have parents is because black men are getting arrested, and black women only put out for black men who have been arrested. Again, this is a cultural problem.

The author is right that foreign-born Africans succeeding proves they can do it. They might not have the best IQs around, but they can at least function in society without being niggers. But to say that this is an "American" cultural issue, when it doesn't affect anyone else in America, is flatly wrong. It's clearly a black American cultural issue. How can there be inequality if the rest of us aren't succeeding more than you? You don't have to mimic foreign cultures that you've never heard of, just mimic the American cultures around you.

But that's the real issue, isn't it? You all know exactly what you have to do to succeed. Pay attention in school. Don't skip class. Don't pick fights. Don't join a gang. Don't hook up with a guy when you're twelve, and don't have unprotected sex before 18. All of these things are basic, simple, and easy. But while to everyone else, they're common sense, to black people they're white. And so you all have chosen to be the opposite of that, and you bully each other anytime someone wants to break away from it. So yes, that is all individual choices, and it is the result of your culture being completely worthless trash made by completely worthless trash people.
 
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School is just one part of education, the other parts are society and home; you know which has the lowest impact, school. Because if things like morals, behavior, education aren't reinforced in the home or in society (neighborhood, whatever, the outside world you live in and how it affects you); your performance in school is gonna show. There's a lot of ways to approach this, but people won't like it because it'd require undoing close to 100 years of reforms, and civil rights and shit. So they'll keep dumbing everything down and claiming racism, because actual change is too hard/unpopular... and with each passing year I find myself understanding why Dictatorship/Regency is a superior to Democracy.
 
'Who cares, they are dumb slaves who'll do Whitey's job for a lot less whilst also having the kind of schlong which gets the White Bitches wet...'

^ Libtard thinking 101
 
A few things stood out to me while reading this:

Guy puts his finger squarely and precisely on the solution. His family gave a shit, they made little baby him learn how to read, so he did fine academically. There you go, problem solved, drop the mic. My parents got me bunches of Richard Scarry books, they spent time reading them with me, so holy shit, I learned how to read. And yet what he draws from this is somehow not "more families need to give a shit and actually raise their children", but "it's racism".

In the list of the everybody who is doing better than the black kids, he mentions the Asian kids, then mentions that the bulk of them are foreign-born. Guy, you're saying that a pile of kids who don't have English as their first language are managing to vastly outperform the black kids in reading English, in addition to being non-white and immigrants. That's kinda making the black kids look worse, not better.

He also includes the fact that immigrating black kids from Africa are doing much better than the local-born ones. So... is he claiming that African black kids are somehow not subject to racism? He doesn't seem particularly interested in exploring any causes for these other black people to be able to get an education. As a side-note, I once worked with a black man who owned an insurance office, successful business guy. He was from Africa, didn't specify the country, but did mention that when he was a kid, his dad shipped his ass off to a boarding school and he had to produce good grades if he wanted to stay in his family's good graces. Huh, it sounds like that family prioritized education, so he got educated and was successful in life. I wonder what connection there might be.
 
It's always strange to me reading articles like this making these seem like a "black" problem, when there are quite a few black Americans who seem to have overcome this problem. None of my black coworkers are illiterate. None of them are criminals. None of them are incarcerated. Neither are any of their kids.

It is a particular section of black culture that refuses to do even the most basic things to better their situation, and the hand wringing that either implies or directly states that these people are too stupid and worthless to do better without a white savior doing the work for them. It's bizarre.

Cultural shifts start from individuals. If you don't even try to improve things in your own community, I don't know what anyone else is going to be able to do about it. Teachers can't force your children to care about education. That comes from the family and the community.
 
Rap is the one genre of music where I do not understand why anyone likes it. It's not pretty to listen to, it requires the least technical proficiency, the subject matter is usually about niggers beefing, it's not even the best at improv.
Not all rappers but...

Rap becomes infinitely more enjoyable when you can understand what's being said, but that's really gone out of style and ebonics made it hard to understand in the first place.

Slick Rick is a good example of understandable rap, since the flow is much more impressive when intelligible, but I get the aversion in general: most rap is shit because it's allowed to make money on the shitty end especially so there's little reason besides personal pride to make yourself understood much less turn off the reverb and auto-tune.
 
Oh hey, Darrell Owens. I came across him a while ago because he's an urbanist who hates cars. Like all urbanists he seems to have trouble saying the quiet part out loud:

Don't "Ban Cars", Just Ban Cars​

Of course banning cars isn't a winning message in the U.S., that's why you don't ban the car, you just ban what cars use.
You say “ban cars” and the conversation is over. Any radical slogan like that turns off most of the population.
And of course he wants transit fares to be free. He also advocates for "taking urban planning into your own hands", which he apparently deleted some time ago, presumably because advocating to break laws isn't a good look. He's recently been shitting his pants in excitement over some "Builder's Remedy" in California, which honestly doesn't seem like it's going well since not much more is being built.
 
I have a friend who is black and highly educated, and he said the problem that has been happening for decades is the black community crab bucketing each other. The whole time he was in school and college, he was accused of 'selling out' and 'acting white' and trying to impress white people when all he wanted to do was be educated enough to get a good job to support his chronically sick mother. He had to fight tooth and nail against his own community for daring to work his way out of the projects and be successful. There is nobody more discriminatory against educated black people than other black people. So yeah, any black person who wants to be educated is immediately ostracized from their community. They leave and never come back, and the ones that stayed behind raise their children with this same mentality that being educated is betraying their race and then wonder why black kids are getting dumber.

I don't think it's going to change anytime soon, especially with the BLM movement saying that whiteness is evil, and since black people tend to view higher education or education at all as a 'white' thing, it's just gonna get worse.
 
Most black countries average IQ is below mental retardation level. With genetics even if the parents are smart there is a regression to mean in their offspring. Most pure black kids realize this even if thier white teachers try to handwave it away. Many prominent examples of black success are "half-breeds" which is often lost on white people.

The kids realize they are retarded and give up. The education system treating them like their not retarded isn't doing them any favors. At least white kids get special education for that.
 
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