Our SF school board is listening to folks who promote Jim Crow Education policies. For real!

Let me explain… (A thread. 🧵) 1/
It is not surprising many “Save Lowell” proponents (and others) are also fighting against anti-racist and LGBTQ-affirming education and believe CRT is “indoctrinating” our kids). 2/
Folks like Lawrence Lee promote the use of “grandfather clause” policies and “literacy tests” as a means of excluding low-income, disabled and English Language Learner students from applying for SFUSD’s most-resources high schools. 3/
You may have heard the term “grandfather clause” used to describe an old rule that continues to operate under certain conditions when a new rule or law takes effect. 4/
While many people are aware of this term, they're not aware that it originated after the civil war as a means of preventing Black Americans from exercising their rights to vote after that right was guaranteed by the 15th amendment. 5/
Grandfather clauses are among many other Jim Crow laws that were put into effect as a result of the civil war in an attempt to restrict Black Americans from exercising their rights as guaranteed by the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments. 16/
What does this have to do with education?
When Black Americans were guaranteed the right to vote as a result of the 15th Amendment, many white Southerners were upset by this, because they were outnumbered and wanted to maintain the political power they had established under the racial cast system of slavery. 18/
The 15th Amendment clearly stated that you could not prevent citizens from voting based on race. But, you COULD use other criteria. (Are you following me on this?) 19/
Based on this, a rash of new voting restrictions started popping up, in order to prevent Black Americans from voting.
(See the full list here: 20/ abhmuseum.org/voting-rights-…)
Among them were the following:

- Property tests required voters to own property.
- Poll taxes required people to pay fees in order to vote. 22/
- And literacy test prevented folks who were not literate from voting. (You may remember that enslaved Africans were not allowed in many states, to be taught to read. It was punishable by law.) 23/
Now this all seems well and good, (if you are a RACIST!) but there was a problem… 24/
There were also a lot of poor white Southerners, who would not be able to meet these requirements. 25/
In order to ensure the passage of these new laws, they established a “grandfather clause”, which allowed you to vote if your father or grandfather had voted in previous elections. 26/
Pretty sneaky, huh?

So, what does this have to do with our education system? 27/
Well, if you've been watching videos I've been sharing, proponents for “merit” admissions, use Jim Crow rationales to justify the need to eliminate a race-neutral lottery and go back to an admissions policy than has proven to be discriminatory. /27
A lottery doesn’t systematically exclude low-income, disabled or immigrant students. But, folks like Lawrence Lee (who favors “merit” admissions) use grandfather cause rationales to argue for a discriminatory admission system because “We’ve always had it that way.” 28/ @kron4news
It’s not just Lowell, BTW. Many elite public schools use tests as a means of excluding students. In Boston, they even call them “exam schools”. You won’t be surprised to learn many of these tests, have been proven to be discriminatory against Black and Latinx students. 29/
If you’ve been following this conversation nationally, you may remember @DrIbram, even advocated against Boston’s standardized admission tests. As he stated in his letter to the Boston School Committee, standardized testing has always has a problematic history. 👇🏽
30/
Jim Crow Education policies abound. I was shocked to learn that as recently as 2020, students applying to Thomas Jefferson High School in Northern Virginia, were required to pay a $100 application fee. (Sounds like a poll tax, to me.) 31/ washingtonpost.com/local/educatio…
If you’ve followed along on this epic thread… THANK YOU for doing your homework! 32/
It’s time we ALL get educated. The right-wing assault on our school boards threatens to “take back” our country to Jim Crow days, and dismantle our public education system along the way. We must fight for progress in our public education system! #NoJimCrow #SiSePuede
Closing out this 🧵. Face it—meritocracy is a scam. If we really valued “hard-working” kids, we would elevate students who literally work-harder: low-income, disabled and immigrant youth meet academic challenges while ALSO navigating poverty, ableism & language barriers. Fin/

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More from @AliMCollins

Jul 12
This article by @jiasunlee is everything that’s going on in SF. The dynamics outlined here animate political life and are destroying our city. We need folks from all backgrounds to start talking about this, and especially members of API communities. jiasunlee.com/white-supremac…
“From a racial perspective, think of White supremacy as the narcissistic parent, and BIPOC as its triangulated children. Black, Indigenous, Brown Hispanics and Latinx, and dark-skinned Asian Americans have been scapegoated.
“Yet, Asian Americans as a whole were proclaimed the Golden Child. The successes of our elites were put on a pedestal to aspire to, while they—and many of us—have been deprived of the necessary tools.
Read 5 tweets
Jun 20
This past Juneteenth, I was in New York and went to visit the site of Seneca Village in Central Park. A whole thriving Black town erased. To make a respite from urban life for the rest of New York City (and raise the value of its real estate.)
How is this any different that what happened to the Filmore in SF?

How is this constant erasure any different from what is happening around Lowell High School?
How can we be free if we don’t have equal access to housing and educational opportunity?
Read 28 tweets
Jun 19
This is a really good thread on how “respectable” journalism has been weaponized to spread disinformation to undermine public discourse (and our democracy). This is specifically about the SF DA recall of Chesa Boudin, but the same patterns apply coverage of the SF BOE recall.
This is really helpful language. The “self-referential loop of false information” fuels a large degree of SF stories meant to push political agendas under the guise of “facts”.
SF Media: “So-and-so said (insert right wing talking point) about X”

Yep. They said that.🙄

Never mind that so-and-so is not not an expert on X, and in fact most experts on X disagree with so-and-so’s uniformed opinions.

Publishing “what someone said” is not real journalism.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 10
This is a must listen episode of the @NomikiKonst show featuring @DrEricDing talking about the upcoming Omicron wave. It reaffirmed for me why being cautious is the best move when navigating this continuing epidemic. #CovidIsNotOver

A thread on some key points he shared. 🧵1/
.@DrEricDing said this new wave of Omicron 2.0 is 30% more contagious, with more reinfection potential. This does not bode well for a predicted April surge, considering a boosters ability to protect for infection is reduced by about half after 10 weeks from getting boosted.
.@DrEricDing says this is why we need “vaccines plus strategy” or we’ll keep playing whack-a-mole with new variants.

That means continuing with masking and enhanced HEPA air filtration in combination with vaccines.
Read 12 tweets
Oct 25, 2020
The banality of racism in education brookings.edu/blog/brown-cen…
“We are a country only a century-and-a-half removed from the enslavement of African Americans and its accompanying anti-literacy laws, which prohibited teaching slaves to read and write. The end of that era led not to some type of egalitarian or meritocratic society—“...
“or any sincere, sustained attempt to get there—but rather to the Jim Crow laws & de jure segregation of yesterday and the de facto segregation & structural racism of today. We are not a country in which current disparities just reflect how hard diff groups of people are trying”
Read 6 tweets
Oct 24, 2020
TY @DrIbram for your letter. SFUSD voted last Tuesday to suspend the regular admissions policy based on essay, exam and GPA due to similar concerns for COVID. Yet unlike BPS we will allow any student to apply via the general lottery.
As you can imagine, this was met with controversy and online harassment and targeting of me and @lopez4schools the Black and a Latinx female Commissioners and a Black female representative to the Board who is also a Lowell student.
I would welcome conversation with other Black educators on selective enrollment public schools. Like Boston Latin, Lowell has a long fraught history with underrepresentation and racism. Does anyone remember #BlackatBSU?
Read 11 tweets

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