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Feb. 56, 2009

Feb. 5, 2009
From left
above, Mickey Aberman, Deacon Jones, Jim Henderlite
and Araminta Johnston listen as the voice of the Century Foundation's Richard Kahlenberg,
shown at left,
comes over the speakerphone Thursday morning. The
conference call with the Washington-based expert focused
on how to deliver on the state's constitutional mandate
to ensure that every child has access to a sound basic
education. Charlotte-Mecklenburg's creation in 2002 of
high-poverty schools deny such access: Test data and
equity studies have repeatedly shown that the
high-poverty schools in CMS fail to draw highly
qualified teachers – the most important resource that
the school system can commit to making the
constitutional imperative a reality. Kahlenberg warned
against trying to "improve" high-poverty schools. The
reason, he said, was because research shows that
low-income children thrive when they share an
environment with higher-income children, compared to
similar children left in high-poverty schools.
Thursday's conversation occurred in the context of the
school board's discussions of how to cut 5% or 7% or
more of the budget for next year because of the current
national economic crisis.