Parent Files Complaint Against Atlanta Elementary School After Learning the Principal Segregated Students Based on Race

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An Atlanta mom filed a federal complaint against her daughter’s Atlanta elementary school after she learned that the school was separating students on the basis of race.

In the discrimination complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights, parent Kila Posey claims the principal at Mary Lin Elementary School, a K-5 school in the Atlanta Public Schools system, put a segregation policy in place because she thought it was best for all students.

“We’ve lost sleep like trying to figure out why would a person do this,” Posey told local TV news station WSB. Posey and her attorney Sharese Shields believe the policy is a violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Posey found out last year that the elementary school would be putting Black students in two different classrooms with two different teachers and white students into six classrooms with six different teachers.

Posey protested the policy when it was allegedly put into place by Principal Sharyn Briscoe last year. “First, it was just disbelief that I was having this conversation in 2020 with a person that looks just like me — a Black woman,” Posey said. “It’s segregating classrooms. You cannot segregate classrooms. You can’t do it.”

Posey, who is vice president of operations for the parent teacher association, according to the school website, first learned of the separation after she contacted Briscoe to request that her daughter be placed in a specific classroom with a certain teacher. Briscoe replied by saying that would not work because the teacher’s classroom wasn’t for Black students, Posey claims.

“She said that’s not one of the Black classes, and I immediately said, ‘What does that mean?’ I was confused. I asked for more clarification. I was like, ‘We have those in the school?’ And she proceeded to say, ‘Yes. I have decided that I’m going to place all of the Black students in two classes,’” Posey said.

According to Shields, “Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 says that you cannot treat one group of people differently based upon race, and that is what is going on at Mary Lin.”

Posey pushed for her daughter not to be placed in a segregated classroom. “I explained to her she shouldn’t be isolated or punished because I’m unwilling to go along with your illegal and unethical practice,” Posey said.

In a recorded phone call between Posey and an assistant principal, the administrator confirmed that it was the principal’s idea to separate the students.

“I just wish we had more Black kids, and then some of them are in a class because of the services that they need,” the administrator said.

The district told WSB-TV in a statement, “Atlanta public schools does not condone the assigning of students to classrooms based on race. The district conducted a review of the allegations. Appropriate actions were taken to address the issue and the matter was closed.”

Posey wants Briscoe and the administrators to be removed for allowing the system of segregation to be in place.

The US Department of Education is currently investigating the issue.
 

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I'm glad to see it's a black woman who is against this. Because the outrage would grant no traction otherwise.

I'd actually like to see how this would play out. Would white kids have a less disruptive and more challenging curriculum? Would black kids do better with more attention from someone with their background and experience teaching and guiding them?

I feel like the kids could develop racist views from segregation that they wouldn't normally have at that age, leading to a lot of bullying. And any superiority complexes shown by the white kids would be labeled white supremacy.
 
I'm glad to see it's a black woman who is against this. Because the outrage would grant no traction otherwise.

I wonder if the white parents were fine with this, or simply didn't know about it. But ignorance seems extremely unlikely after they see the class setup on the first day of school.

Either way, none of the white parents seemed anxious to get their kids to hang out with the black kids.
 
I'd actually like to see how this would play out. Would white kids have a less disruptive and more challenging curriculum? Would black kids do better with more attention from someone with their background and experience teaching and guiding them?
The White classes would be doing upper level course work and trouncing AP tests while the black classes would be easily mistaken for a chimp exhibit that was seeded with switchblades and drugs.
 
The answer to this has proven to be no multiple times.
Yeah, but we don't have to tell them that. In the mean time we can make sure our children reach the excellence they were always meant to achieve. I mean fuck! This is right out of the democrat play book. Just tell blacks you're doing something good for them, and make it sound all preachy and "anti-racist" and they'll go along with it even it's dogshit meant to hurt their communities.
 
I wonder if the white parents were fine with this, or simply didn't know about it. But ignorance seems extremely unlikely after they see the class setup on the first day of school.

Either way, none of the white parents seemed anxious to get their kids to hang out with the black kids.
I think they probably didn't know. It sounds to be a new policy that didn't get much publicity on purpose. Only reason this black mom realized what's going on was do a rejected request to be with a certain teacher and so if no white parents needed move their kids or they asked be transferred to another white class it wouldn't have come up.

The school sounds to be mostly white fairly large margins so not having any black classmates might not have stood out as anything that out ordinary. I went mostly white schools and only had one none white classmate. It had nothing to do with segregation, it just so happened that all the other none whites got assigned or had reasons to be in different classrooms like special program or class schedules. When there was only few going around and race was not seen as an issue worth paying attention, that sort of thing just happened sometimes.
 
I wonder if the white parents were fine with this, or simply didn't know about it. But ignorance seems extremely unlikely after they see the class setup on the first day of school.

Either way, none of the white parents seemed anxious to get their kids to hang out with the black kids.
Not sure it's really that unlikely, I mean how many parents are really going over to visit their kid's class and then inspecting other classes to see what their racial makeup is. They'd probably just notice at the start and end of the day when dropping off and picking up their kids that there were both white and black kids around.

As far as what the principal was doing with the segregation, there's actually been studies suggesting black kids do better with a black teacher. There's not much said about what it does to the white kids under those teachers of course. Some reasons often suggested for this phenomena is that the kids feel less ostracized, they have a role model, and the black teachers know better how to 'handle' the black kids.

The issue of not wanting to feel like an outsider due to their skin color even comes up when they talk of 'gentrification' of black neighborhoods, since they want to keep having neighborhoods that feel like 'theirs'. So a lot of them do seem to like this idea of segregation and believe it'd help them in school.

On a side note, it's hilarious reading some of the shit about black parents thinking the joke of a learning experience that is distance learning was better for their kids than having them go to school. 72% of black parents surveyed, 66% of latino and 36% of whites were satisfied with distance learning when nearly everyone has been having to teach almost nothing due to how awkward it is doing lessons that way.
 
As far as what the principal was doing with the segregation, there's actually been studies suggesting black kids do better with a black teacher. There's not much said about what it does to the white kids under those teachers of course. Some reasons often suggested for this phenomena is that the kids feel less ostracized, they have a role model, and the black teachers know better how to 'handle' the black kids.

The issue of not wanting to feel like an outsider due to their skin color even comes up when they talk of 'gentrification' of black neighborhoods, since they want to keep having neighborhoods that feel like 'theirs'. So a lot of them do seem to like this idea of segregation and believe it'd help them in school.
Who would have thought segregation was better for Black people?
 
The part that's interesting to me is that the school was apparently 1/4 black, which seems like a healthy proportion insofar as managing the classroom while not making any one kid feel vastly outnumbered.

Like if it was 1/8 black or 1/8 white I can see the pragmatic benefits, but this is strange.
 
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