[Previous entry: "Hostage Hassan pleads for her life"] [Next entry: "Consumption of Resources Outstripping Planet's Ability to Cope"]
10/22/2004:
"A Teacher's Account of How Recruiters Preying on Students:"
by Jesse SharkeyWe first began to realize something was wrong when teams of teams of men with suits and clipboards began walking through the halls of our high school during the first week of classes. We had heard that the U.S. Navy was planning to open a "Naval Academy" on Chicago's North Side, but it never occurred to us that they would try to put it in our building. After all, we were already using our building!
Nonetheless, it became clear that the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) was in fact targeting our school after we crashed a meeting at the 48th ward alderman's office--and discovered that CPS was planning a "community forum" at Senn to sell the idea.
In some ways, Senn High School is a pretty typical "inner-city" school. Ninety-two percent of our students are poor. We don't have lots of resources, our building needs paint, and our students are not the ones who test into the fancy magnet programs.
But in other ways, our school is a remarkable community resource, with plenty of morale. Our students come from 70 nationalities, speak 57 different languages and still maintain a sense of unity and mutual respect. Senn students have performed 70,000 hours of community service over the past five years and have been recognized with a national service award. Senn has also developed some of the city's most successful academic programs for at-risk kids.
So instead of waiting for the ax to fall, we began to fight back. We researched the effect that the military takeover would have on our school and community, and wrote fact sheets. We made flyers about our concerns and put up 3,500 of them, with another 500 in Spanish. We reached out and met with community organizations, launched a Web site, wrote press releases and organized to get people out to support us. On October 5, we brought about 700 people out to the CPS forum at our school.
The mood in the room was electric. Students had been preparing all week--they had written speeches, drawn dozens of handmade signs and brought along many of their parents. When CPS officials tried to show us a slick promotional video about the Navy ROTC program, the room rebelled. The entire audience stood up and turned its back to the presentation.
David Pickens, the deputy chief of staff for schools CEO Arne Duncan, glared at the angry crowd for the next five minutes in a dramatic standoff, while the heckling grew louder. Then someone in the audience started to chant "We say no," and soon, the whole crowd was booming its opposition.
counterpunch.org