Saturday, April 16, 2011

A Peaceful Sit In: Students Protest the Privatization of Public Schools and Say No to Charter Schools

For my friends and family who say that they are not trying to privatize education....... this is a must read! Like I said. Pay attention people! They are trying to pull the wool over your eyes. There is a much bigger plan here in the works.

Reprinted from http://defendpubliceducation.com/2011/04/16/detroit-students-occupy-catherine-ferguson-academy-high-school/

With support from hundreds of Detroiters, students at the Catherine Ferguson Academy occupied their school for several hours after school on Friday April 15. Their peaceful sit-in was in protest of the proposed closure or charter school conversion of their school along with dozens of other Detroit Public Schools. Throughout the day, supporters brought food, water, sleeping bags, art supplies, baby items, and words of encouragement, and rallied outside the school.


Students and supporters created posters and discussed their reasons for the protest with each other and media, posted videos and tweeted to gather more support, and made plans to stay in the school as long as possible. When agents of the Emergency Manager Rob Bobb appeared and gave the first warning to leave, the occupiers secured themselves in the library and read their demands (listed in press release below) and gave inspiring speeches via loudspeaker to a roaring crowd outside who continued chanting even over police sirens.


Just a few police cars arrived at first, including a K-9 unit. Supporters blocked them for a while. When they did eventually get in, they gave a warning to all inside to leave or be arrested. As the group circled together and decided to sit down, police announced everyone was under arrest. The first person taken into custody was a professional film-maker who had recorded footage of the entire day. Her camera and film were confiscated by DPS police. Two mothers with their young children were given the choice to leave with their children, but then as they were walking out, officers took the mothers into custody as well and said they would turn the children over to protective services. (The children were released outside to the school principal and home with their mothers within hours.)


The occupiers sat down as police put the cuffs on. Police brutally dragged and choked several protestors, using excessive force on Ashley, a very petite student, choking and slamming her against the police car. A supporter picketing outside was also slammed down onto a car and arrested. All protestors were ticketed for being unauthorized persons on school property and released.


I’ve never felt such solidarity as I did riding to the police station with two students chanting for the entire ride, “Public Education is a right! By any means necessary, we will fight!” and hearing over the police radio that 60 of our supporters were on their way to meet us at the station, then walking out and seeing the crowd and being surrounded by students in a great group hug. It was especially encouraging to see how integrated the crowd was. As the chant goes “Black, Latino, Asian and white, for public education we will fight!” One supporter told me, “this is just the tip of the iceberg. We’re ready now.”


As their teacher, I am humbled by the courage and determination of the students, and encouraged by the outpouring of community support. Several people have said things like “those girls are lucky to have you” and “they learn so much from you”, but the truth is they were leading me all along and I am lucky to know them.


All supporters are asked to sign our petition, committing themselves to support actions to public education and boycott any charter school that attempts to take our schools and displace our students.


OCCUPATION AT CATHERINE FERGUSON HIGH SCHOOL!


STUDENTS AND SUPPORTERS SIT-IN TO DEMAND THAT NODETROIT PUBLIC SCHOOL CLOSES


Following in the civil rights tradition of Dr. Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, Catherine Ferguson students — along with their babies and toddlers, teachers and supporters — have begun a peaceful occupation of Catherine Ferguson Academy (CFA). CFA, located at 2750 Selden, is a Detroit Public school that is slated to be closed in June. The students who are sitting down have five demands:



•No School Closings
•Keep All Detroit Schools Public – No More Charters or Privatization
•Reinstate all programs and services that have been eliminated, including art & music as well as counselors & social workers
•Student Control of Curriculum and School Character to assure that every Detroit school provides equal, quality education for all
•No discipline or retaliation against any of the participants in the occupation
Catherine Ferguson Academy (CFA) is a Detroit public high school for pregnant and parenting teen girls– the only one of its kind in the nation. Providing an excellent education and services for both the teen mothers and their children, CFA has received international attention, numerous awards and is the subject of several documentaries.



“When people at my regular high school realized that I was pregnant, I was told my chances of being a success in life were over. At Catherine Ferguson, they told me they wouldn’t allow me to be anything BUT a success. I love CFA, and I am prepared to fight to keep it open, not only for myself, but for all the girls who will come behind me,” said Ashley Matthews, a junior at CFA.



With approximately 200 students who come not only from Detroit, but also from the surrounding suburbs, every year Catherine Ferguson achieves a 90% graduation rate and 100% of those who graduate are accepted to two- or four-year colleges, most with financial aid.



“If this school closes, or if any of our services are eliminated, I believe that over half of CFA students will drop out of high school because they don’t have anyone to watch their baby while they attend classes,” said Dalana Gray, who is a senior at CFA. Also, this school benefits our children, because the early education program teaches them a lot that they wouldn’t learn if they were kept at home.”



The school provides pre-natal and parenting classes, and offers high school student mothers the opportunity to finish their high school education immediately after giving birth by providing on-site daycare, early childhood development services, and pre-school for their children, as well as on-site medical, dental and social services, so the young women don’t have to miss school to attend appointments. What also makes CFA unique is its organic garden and farm with chickens, goats and a horse, which the students maintain as part of their science education.



Nicole Conaway, a science teacher at CFA who decided to join her students in the occupation said, “As a teacher, I can find another job, but for my students, if Catherine Ferguson closes, there are no alternatives. The same can be said for many of the students at other schools on the closing list – the Day School for the Deaf; Rutherford, which is the home of two autistic programs; Moses Fields, which educates many learning disabled children, and several neighborhood schools that are the anchors for their communities. It’s time to say: no more. ”



”The massive school closures that have been carried out in DPS since 2004 have led to the depopulation of Detroit and to the deepening financial crisis of the district. Public schools are being closed to make way for charters and are part of the national attack on public education. Today Detroit– tomorrow, every city in America. The parents and students of Catherine Ferguson are fighting to maintain the right of every student in our nation to a free, quality public education. Every supporter of public education should do everything possible to support their fight and make sure they succeed”, said Shanta Driver, National Chairperson of By Any Means Necessary (BAMN), which is helping to organize and coordinate the occupations.

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