ST. LOUIS 鈥 They packed into the Fox Theatre on Monday for a convocation, an event that鈥檚 become rare in 50度灰视频 Public Schools considering the work and expense involved in getting nearly 4,000 staff 鈥 from teachers to cafeteria workers to district administrators 鈥 into one space.
But on Monday, they arrived in more than 70 buses to hear Bryan Stevenson, author and founder of the Alabama-based Equal Justice Institute, get them focused on the upcoming school year.
Next week, about 27,000 students as young as preschool will file into district classrooms throughout the city. One in five of these children will be homeless at some point during the school year, based on historical data. And statistically, one in two starting high school won鈥檛 graduate.
Stevenson urged every adult in the room to disrupt the cycle of poverty and create better outcomes.
People are also reading…
鈥淵ou are the children you are trying to serve,鈥 he said.
Stevenson is a public-interest lawyer who has won national attention for his work challenging bias against the poor and minorities in the criminal justice system. He also serves on the task force on community policing created by President Barack Obama.
鈥淲hen I come to 50度灰视频, when I come to Missouri, I cannot judge our education system by seeing how they treat the rich kids, the powerful kids, the talented kids,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 have to look at how we鈥檙e treating the poor, the marginalized, the disabled.鈥
The vast majority of 50度灰视频 school students are low-income, black, and come to school with health and emotional needs that often go unaddressed. Stevenson urged city schools staff to think more critically about the challenges those children face in and out of school.
鈥淭here is a narrative behind why poor and minority kids have been so underserved,鈥 Stevenson said. 鈥淭here is a narrative behind our failure to confront many of the challenges that we鈥檙e dealing with.鈥
In the last 15 years, that narrative has increasingly led to an overuse of suspensions nationwide to address disruptive behavior in children as young as 4. It has also led to more police officers working in school buildings, putting children closer to the criminal justice system than ever before.
In Missouri, black elementary school children are more likely to be suspended than in any state in the nation, according to a report by the Center for Civil Rights Remedies at UCLA. Missouri also has the greatest disparity between how often black and white students get out-of-school suspension for infractions.
鈥淲e have to believe and see that all children are children, even the ones with behavior problems, even the ones with learning disabilities, even the ones that have done very bad and destructive things,鈥 Stevenson said. 鈥淭oo many school systems are looking to throw away the broken children. We expel, we suspend, we tell them not to come back. Those are the very children that need us.鈥
Superintendent Kelvin Adams has worked to reduce the out-of-school suspension rate since 2008, when he began leading the school system. The numbers are down by lf, district data show, partly because disruptive older students have been steered instead to alternative schools and online education programs.
But the district鈥檚 suspension rate remains one of the highest in the state, with about 4,000 suspensions issued in 2013-14. It was in a study by UCLA that examined racial disparities in school discipline across the nation.
A therapeutic school for elementary and middle schoolers is about to open to serve children grappling with trauma. In Jennings, a district that touches 50度灰视频鈥 northern border, teachers and counselors are learning how to be so they can help children overcome circumstances of crime and poverty 鈥 an approach that Stevenson says shows promise.
Adams was interested in getting Stevenson to talk to staff after he read Stevenson鈥檚 book, 鈥淛ust Mercy,鈥 and heard his . Stevenson was the only person short of Obama who Adams wanted for the keynote, he said.
鈥淗is message was the appropriate message for where we are right now in light of what鈥檚 happening in this country and this region in the last year,鈥 Adams said afterward.
The district paid to rent the Fox. The 50度灰视频 Public Schools Foundation and the Parsons Blewett Memorial Fund paid for Stevenson to come.
District staff gave Stevenson three standing ovations. Some teachers wore matching T-shirts emblazoned with their school鈥檚 name. They received mugs with the slogan, 鈥淐hange Lives.鈥
Stevenson told them that by changing lives of students, they could change the world.
鈥淥ur hope is essential in making a difference in the lives that we serve,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been to school where I鈥檝e seen hopeless teachers, hopeless administrators. Those kids are not going to get what they need to be successful.鈥