Supporters of a policy in Wake County, N.C., that seeks to integrate the district鈥檚 schools based on family income levels celebrated the outcome of school board elections last week.
Despite organized opposition, two candidates who back the policy won seats on the nine-member board in the Nov. 8 runoff. Their victories continue a six-person majority in support of the economic-integration effort.
鈥淚t means that the public in these two [parts of the district] approves of the direction that our system is moving in,鈥 said Eleanor Goettee, one of the two winning candidates. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not backing away and trying to undo what has been done.鈥
Debate had intensified in recent weeks over the district鈥檚 nationally known, 5-year-old practice of assigning students to schools so as to limit the concentration of poverty at any one school. Candidates questioning the policy were backed by a parents鈥 group, Assignment By Choice, and an evangelical Christian organization, Called2Action.
Meanwhile, the Wake Education Partnership, a nonprofit organization led by business and civic leaders, appealed to voters to support continuation of the student-assignment system. Disagreement over the policy was heightened by a recent, largely favorable front-page story in The New York Times.
In 2000, the Wake County district set the goal of having no school in which more than 40 percent of students are eligible for subsidized lunches under federal guidelines. District leaders also said no more than 25 percent of a school鈥檚 enrollment should be composed of students scoring below grade level on state tests.
The district uses magnet schools to draw suburban students into the Raleigh area, and year-round schools to attract city students to the system鈥檚 outlying areas, with family income factoring into a child鈥檚 chances of getting into either type of school.
The district also takes family-income levels into account when making changes to attendance zones for assigned schools. All but 32 of 133 schools are under the 40 percent poverty threshold.
Robert Saffold, the president of the Wake Education Partnership, argues that the integration policy has played a key role in the district鈥檚 success. With 120,000 students, Wake County is the highest-performing large district in the state.
鈥淭he body of national research is pretty clear that once a school community reaches a certain level of poverty concentration, there are deleterious schoolwide effects on student achievement, on teacher recruitment and retention, on parent involvement, and on overall school climate,鈥 Mr. Saffold said.
Tales of Two Districts
Many point to North Carolina鈥檚 Charlotte-Mecklenburg district, where the concentration of poor and minority students increased dramatically in many urban schools after racial-integration efforts ceased in 2002, as offering a cautionary tale.
Student performance in 10 Charlotte high schools is so low that last summer, the North Carolina education department sent in teams of specialists to began working on turning them around. Countywide support for the 124,000-student district has wavered, and the political scene has become fractious, with parts of the district threatening to secede.
A blue-ribbon panel of Charlotte civic leaders has hired consultants to recommend ways to get the district back on track. Their report is due next month.
鈥淭here鈥檚 been increasing concern that we could go the way of Charlotte in very short period of time,鈥 said John Dornan, the president of the Public School Forum of North Carolina, a think tank based in Raleigh.
Critics of Wake County鈥檚 student-assignment policies say claims of their benefits are overblown. They note that the district has a lower percentage of students living in poverty than the state鈥檚 other big districts, and that it serves a highly educated population, with many residents working in what is known as the Research Triangle.
Cynthia Matson, the president of Assignment By Choice, said that district leaders stress that only about 6 percent of students are reassigned to different schools solely for integration. Most integration is accomplished through school choice programs, such as the magnet schools.
鈥淥n the one hand, they say we don鈥檛 bus many kids for diversity,鈥 Ms. Matson said. 鈥淏ut on the other, they say diversity is the reason we鈥檙e doing so well.鈥
Dave Duncan, the group鈥檚 vice president, said members aren鈥檛 against the goal of integrating by family income, but want parents to have more say over where their children go to school.
鈥淲e always felt it shouldn鈥檛 be the Holy Grail,鈥 he said of the diversity goals. 鈥淚t should be balanced against stability.鈥
Even with the outcome of last week鈥檚 election, many say the Wake County school board will be rethinking the way it assigns students to schools. The district is growing by several thousand students annually. Already, most reassignments are due to growth and space limits, not economic-integration efforts.
Ms. Goettee said she鈥檚 open to considering changes in how the district determines which schools students can attend, so long as efforts still are made to avoid high concentrations of students at risk of academic failure. 鈥淎ll of us are wanting to minimize bus time,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut the commitment to keep schools balanced overrides everything else to me.鈥