Every weekend I send an all-staff email to everyone at KPEA that sometimes includes some words of motivation, inspiration, or random thoughts going through my mind. Below is a lightly edited version of what I sent this weekend.
On this long weekend that we have in honor of Dr. King, I know that like many of you, I’ve been thinking about his legacy, recent events in our country, and our work at KIPP. On one hand, it seems so long ago that the Civil Rights movement had to fight so hard for such basic ideas as fairness under the law, equality in opportunity, and more broadly the understanding that all citizens of this country are a party to the Constitution in the same way.
On this long weekend that we have in honor of Dr. King, I know that like many of you, I’ve been thinking about his legacy, recent events in our country, and our work at KIPP. On one hand, it seems so long ago that the Civil Rights movement had to fight so hard for such basic ideas as fairness under the law, equality in opportunity, and more broadly the understanding that all citizens of this country are a party to the Constitution in the same way.
But
the events of the past year have shown that those same challenges continue to
define us as a country. Voting laws that are passed with the explicit desire to
make it harder for Black and Latino Americans to vote are upheld by the Supreme
Court even though it’s literally impossible to find more than 20-30
examples of voter fraud in the whole country over the past few decades. The
head of a Hollywood studio feels comfortable joking
that Barack Obama must be a big fan of Kevin Hart movies (not meant as a
compliment to Obama BTW). We know all about the examples of Black men &
young men barely older than children, being shot/choked to death by police
without charges being filed against the officers and now we have an example of a Black police
chief in Oklahoma being shot by a man 4 times when the chief came to a
house to investigate a bomb threat. When I tell you that no charges were fired
against the shooter, I don’t even need to tell you his race, do I? Closer to
home, we know from our work with our kids and their families of countless
examples of prejudice, inequality, and just plain old heartache caused by
bone-grinding poverty – the cause
that Dr. King was working on when he was killed.
We
know that society is not how it should be and we all work here because we want
to do our small part in making the world more just. Each day when we come to
KPEA we do important work to make this world a better place, both in the sense
of giving our students a great education but also in the macro sense of helping
to prove what students and families in North and West Philly are capable of
when they have a great school working with them. This would be more than
enough, but many of us do this work in other ways in our off-hours through
church groups, volunteering at mission-aligned organizations, and direct
activism.
At
the same time we’re all trying to make this world a better place for our kids,
we also know we need to prepare them as best as we possibly can to be
successful in a world that is not yet as just as we would hope. That means
character education. It means art and music. It means being surrounded by
people who love them and who they love back. And it means teaching them to
read, write, speak, and do math at the highest possible level.
Our
society is unfair and unjust, but at least in the aggregate, it’s sadly predictable.
We know the more our students know in elementary school means they will know
more in middle school, which will lead to higher ACT scores in high school.
This will give them more college options and help them get into a good school
where the odds are much higher that they will graduate, thus giving them a
better chance at having a happy, choice-filled life. That string of causality
is not destiny – students who aren’t reading well in 4th grade can
catch up just like students in high school w/high ACTs aren’t guaranteed to
graduate college. Like riding a sled down a hill over and over, we know from 11
years of history at KIPP Philly and 20 years of KIPP nationally that especially as kids
get older, the path they are on gets dug deeper and deeper, and that forging a
new path one almost impossible.
As
just one example of this, take the class of students who just graduated from
KDCA (our high school) this past May and then break out the roughly 50% of that class who were
KPCS (one of our middle schools) promoters in 2009. I looked at how they did on the ACT in 11th
grade and compared that with their MAP percentile score in 8th grade
when they were finishing up at KPCS. 100% of the students who scored above
the 75th percentile in 8th grade scored above the
“college ready” bar of 21 on the ACT. Even with the great education kids get at KCA, of the students who scored below the 50th
percentile in 8th grade, only 2% scored a 21 or above on the ACT.
100%
vs. 2% -
that’s about as drastic a difference as you can get. And make no mistake about
it, those ACT scores matter. From our information on KIPP alumni in college, we
know that students who scored above 21 on the ACT go to schools where +80% of
first generation and/or students of color graduate. Many of our alumni who
don’t get those high ACT scores end up at colleges where the odds of graduating
are in the 20s and 30s percents, at best.
So
why all of these potentially depressing stats?
<Some school specific details omitted here, but basic idea is our academic results are higher so far this year than last year.>
To
remind us all that the work we do each day matters so much because our kids
aren’t going to get the 2nd/3rd/4th chances in
life that more affluent peers get. Remember that stat we looked at last month
that showed high school drop-outs from wealthy families were making more money
as adults than college graduates who came from poor families? There is a huge
difference for our kids in the future if they are reading on grade level vs.
almost on grade level. It’s not right, but it’s real. We work each day to make
the world better but we also know that our kids need an amazing education
urgently for them to have the lives everyone who loves them wants for
them.
This
is heavy shit. There’s no getting around that what we do each day adds up over
13 years to having major impact on what our students’ lives will be like. But
if this work is so important, it’s vital that we have people like you all who
are so smart and dedicated doing it each day. Our results in past years and
even more so this year are showing that we are putting many of our students on
a different path in life that will lead to them having great options about what
they want to do with their lives.
Whether
it’s community service, activism, or recharging w/friends & family, enjoy
whatever you are doing today and know that when we get back on Tuesday we’re
going to keep doing our small part to make the world a better place and help
our kids grow up to be anything they want to be.