Long
Island University Conference Looks "Beyond Brown: Taking Brown
v. Board of Education into the 21st Century"At one of many college
and university conferences being held this spring to commemorate the 50th anniversary
of the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark Brown v. Board of Education desegregation
decision, the Department of Education at Long Island University's Brooklyn Campus
convened a national conference on April 1-3, 2005 to focus on the far-reaching
positive impacts Brown has had and to ask the question: "What is Left
to be Done?" Speakers from California, Massachusetts, New York, and
North Carolina described Brown's legacy and its long-term impacts on the
civil rights movement, on Latino and Asian/Pacific Islander rights, on language
and disability rights, and on the women's movement and gay and lesbian rights.
The entire final day of the conference explored current equity issues, including
re-segregation of schools and school funding litigations across the country, as
well as high-stakes testing and the federal
education law, NCLB. Also, Dr. John Y. Lee, founder and director of
the Urban Teacher Education
(UTE) program at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, discussed his successful
efforts to improve teaching and school effectiveness in low-performing schools.
UTE partnership schoolswith 40% of the classroom teachers trained by UTEhave,
on average, doubled their student achievement in math and reading in only a few
years. Dr. John Baugh, Professor of Education and Linguistics at Stanford,
spoke on "Teaching for change: The role of schools to promote positive social
change." He summarized the linguistic diversity in American classrooms and
research that demonstrates the biases people with accents face in our society.
He also presented strong evidence that we know how to create successful schools
and students, but questioned whether we have the political will to do so. The
conference was co-chaired by Dr. David Ramirez, Dean of the Department of Education
at LIU, and by Dr. Stefan Rosenzweig, from California State University, Long Beach.
Dr. Ramirez is an internationally recognized researcher, educator and advocate,
especially in the design and evaluation of education programs for language minority
students. For references to some of the many other organizations and events
honoring the Brown anniversary, see Numerous Events. Prepared
by Molly A. Hunter, April 6, 2004 Copyright Campaign for Fiscal Equity, Inc.
2004
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