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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=90TT1091>
<title>
Apr. 30, 1990: Blackboard Jungle
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EDUCATION, Page 106
Blackboard Jungle
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A TIME correspondent revisits his troubled alma mater
</p>
<p>By Richard Chavira
</p>
<p> In its 94-year history, Los Angeles' San Fernando High
School has turned out enough distinguished graduates to fill
a classroom. They include Heisman Trophy winner Charles White,
former National League Rookie of the Year Gary Matthews,
University of Louisville basketball coach Denny Crum and
rock-'n'-roll legend Ritchie Valens. San Fernando also produced
Xavier Velazquez, an honor student and school vice president
who was one of a group of students who met with President
George Bush last year to discuss education. But Velazquez, a
senior who hopes to attend M.I.T. in the fall, is one of the
fortunate few: roughly half of those who began tenth grade with
him have dropped out, lured by the drugs and gangs that infest
the surrounding neighborhoods.
</p>
<p> San Fernando, my alma mater, is fairly typical of the
sprawling L.A. Unified School District, the nation's second
largest. And typically, it is in deep trouble. Despite vigorous
efforts by a strongly committed core of teachers and
administrators, the school's vital indicators are startlingly
bleak. The yearly 20% dropout rate is more than double the
California average, and a quarter of the student body is absent
on any given day. In reading and math, San Fernando seniors
rank in the bottom 5% statewide.
</p>
<p> When I graduated in 1968, dope and gangs were already
invading our campus, which is tucked into the far northeastern
corner of the San Fernando Valley. Black and Latino students
were in ferment over civil rights, and there were ugly clashes
with white students and teachers. Black pupils rioted for
several days to protest the murder of Martin Luther King Jr.
Only a full-scale police occupation of the campus restored
order. Today nine security guards, two of whom carry pistols,
keep violent confrontations and drug use on the premises to
a minimum.
</p>
<p> The racial balance has changed dramatically. During my time,
Latinos represented about 40% of the school population and 15%
district-wide. Now Hispanics, many of them newly arrived and
poor, account for 92% of San Fernando's student body; in the
district they form 59% of the total, up from just a fifth in
1978. Of the school's 3,000 pupils, nearly half are enrolled
in bilingual or English-as-a-second-language classes. "This is
very much a port-of-entry school," says Bilingual-ESL Program
coordinator Pat Reynosa. That means, says Reynosa, that in
addition to having limited or nonexistent English, many of the
students must cope with the pressures of grinding poverty (a
median family income of $17,000; 18% on welfare) and the anomie
common to refugees. And since Hispanics are America's
fastest-growing ethnic group, San Fernando's problems will be
increasingly echoed throughout U.S. public education.
</p>
<p> "I've never had so many kids with so many needs," says
school nurse Susan Mitchell. In a typical week she and other
officials assigned to the school's crisis-intervention team may
counsel students who abuse drugs and alcohol (or whose parents
do so), aid rape victims, deal with youths contemplating
suicide or Central American refugees suffering war-related
stress. Student pregnancy is so common that there is a
minicampus for expectant mothers and a nursery for students'
children. "If these kids came from nurturing families, we could
all go home," says Mitchell. "But these are families who have
to work in sweatshops twelve hours a day. The children have
nowhere else to turn." In contrast to two decades ago, today
San Fernando's teachers and administrators are addressing home
and community problems that affect students. "I had a student
who wasn't getting her work done," recalls Bud Schindler, who
runs a campus counseling program and teaches English
composition. "Well, it turned out she had seen a person shot
dead in front of her home. She had to see a psychologist before
she could focus on her classwork." Says principal Bart
Kricorian: "We are an island in this community. We can't keep
problems from coming in."
</p>
<p> Critics of the mess blame everyone: parents for not
stressing the importance of education and responsible behavior,
teachers for succumbing to burnout, the system for failing to
adapt to the changing needs of L.A.'s inner-city schools. All
are valid observations. Yet even if those challenges did not
exist, San Fernando and L.A.'s other troubled schools would be
facing a daunting financial crisis. The school district this
year must trim an estimated $200 million from a $4 billion
budget, and some 3,000 jobs will be eliminated. Assistant
school superintendent Amelia McKenna calculates that even
without the cuts, the system is short 1,500 critically needed
bilingual teachers. Thirty years ago, California was nearly
unsurpassed in its expenditure per student; today it ranks 40th
nationwide. "We are the richest country on earth, but look how
little we are doing for these students," says community
activist Lupe Ramirez.
</p>
<p> L.A. school-board member Leticia Quezada, a Carnation
executive, says that unless government invests sufficiently in
the rehabilitation of schools like San Fernando, the U.S. will
continue to slip as an economic power. "We have success
stories, but overall there's a sink-or-swim attitude, and
increasing numbers of kids are sinking," she says. "Are we
willing to pay the price for not investing in education?"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>