Changing Richmond’s schools

Change, even in Richmond, is inevitable. To back up that claim, one needs only to walk through Capitol Square to see the new Virginia Civil Rights Memorial that was dedicated on July 21, 2008. The sculpture, by Stanley Bleifeld, is about change. Three of its sides recall of the heroism of those who walked around the Massive […]

Change, even in Richmond, is inevitable.

To back up that claim, one needs only to walk through Capitol Square to see the new Virginia Civil Rights Memorial that was dedicated on July 21, 2008.

The sculpture, by Stanley Bleifeld, is about change. Three of its sides recall of the heroism of those who walked around the Massive Resisters then in power, as they marched toward fair treatment and a better education. The fourth side’s figures suggest changes yet to come.

The 18 figures of the piece are not presented in heroic proportions. They are just slightly larger than life-size and they all stand on a low-rise platform, allowing viewers to stand along side them. In that way the art suggests everyday people, on the level with the rest of us, can be heroes, too.

In 1951, when Barbara Johns led the “walk-out” demonstration at Moton High in Farmville, which the sculpture recognizes, the kids were risking their lives for change. Some of them may not have felt that, as much of the worst violence of the Civil Rights Era was yet to come. Others may have been so caught up in the spirit of the moment, surfing a wave of hope, they didn’t sense how provocative their peaceful gesture might seem to the authorities.

In the presidential campaign now underway Sen. Barack Obama has adopted the word “change” as a one-word slogan. After mocking him, his opponents began to use the very same word in their speeches. It seems change is not only inevitable, sometimes it is more universally welcome than others.

Now everybody is for change, but not necessarily the same changes. Obama has been talking about changes that come from the bottom up. He casts himself as one who would facilitate the sort of improvements people on the bottom — out of power — need to have a better life. If he wins and lives up to his lofty campaign rhetoric, he can be expected to then try to affect change from the top down.

To make meaningful changes that get traction it usually takes simultaneous pressure from the top and the bottom. Too much heavy-handed, top downism is asking for a trouble with workers and the underclass, a revolution. Too much bottom up is a revolution.

Unless a sitting governor’s wife had not decided she wanted to put a memorial to Virginia’s Civil Rights heroes in Capitol Square, Bleifeld’s well-executed statement simply would not exist.

The Farmville students’ call for change from the bottom up inspired a movement which inspired the artist. But the actual changes in public schools that have attempted to answer that righteous call had to have been made by those in power.

Likewise, the political push and fundraising for the memorial had to be done by those in power.

Back to schools, the extreme emphasis on test results that has loomed over public education in the last decade was a change from the top down. Before the Standards of Learning/No Child Left Behind era, parents weren’t calling for standardized testing to cure the ills of public education.

No, they were calling for better teachers and decent facilities. They still are.

Are our leaders in Richmond today listening to what parents and students say they need from public education? Or, are they busy driving their kids out to their private schools?

Richmond School Board member Carol A.O. Wolf asks, “What will it take to bring Richmond’s black and white middle class back into our public schools?

My best answer to her question is that it will take a sincere effort to change, both from the bottom up and the top down. And, it will take good leadership.

From the podium on Monday morning, before unveiling the monument, Gov. Tim Kaine recalled the photographs of his wife as a girl — Virginia’s First Lady Anne Holton, with her father, then-Gov. Linwood Holton — walking into a public school in Richmond. In its time that black and white image was an inspiration to millions looking for a sign of real change.

Now it’s time for Richmond’s political, business and religious leaders to send their children and grandchildren back to public schools. Instead of more studies, they need to be listening to their kids telling them what is really going on in public schools.

Fifty-four years after the Brown vs. Board of Education Decision, isn’t it time for Richmond’s government to guarantee that an honest effort will be made to offer a quality education to children in every neighborhood in town?

Can’t we elect fellow citizens to office who will see to it that change becomes our friend?

What will it take, indeed?

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School Board candidates gather for forum in North Richmond

The Richmond Crusade for Voters will be holding a candidates forum for the upcoming Richmond School Board elections this Tuesday, July 15th, at 7:00pm. The forum will be held at the Military Retiree’s Club at 2220 Sledd Street (off of Chamberlayne Avenue). In the 2nd District, current board member Lisa Dawson is being challenged by Kimberly […]

The Richmond Crusade for Voters will be holding a candidates forum for the upcoming Richmond School Board elections this Tuesday, July 15th, at 7:00pm. The forum will be held at the Military Retiree’s Club at 2220 Sledd Street (off of Chamberlayne Avenue).

In the 2nd District, current board member Lisa Dawson is being challenged by Kimberly B. Gray. In the 3rd District, Norma Murdoch-Kitt is the only name on the ballot; current board member Carol A.O. Wolf has indicated she may run a write-in campaign, having failed to get her name on the ballot.

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North Richmond News

School board rep makes pitch for North Side school

As the Richmond Council of PTAs launches its Build Schools Now campaign, North Richmond School Board member Carol Wolf asked for new North Side school be added to the South Richmond-weighted plan. The Times-Dispatch reports: The draft plan suggests phased-in new construction, renovation and closings that would ultimately touch every school in the district. Updating the […]

As the Richmond Council of PTAs launches its Build Schools Now campaign, North Richmond School Board member Carol Wolf asked for new North Side school be added to the South Richmond-weighted plan. The Times-Dispatch reports:

The draft plan suggests phased-in new construction, renovation and closings that would ultimately touch every school in the district. Updating the 2002 facilities plan is the School Board’s first step toward Mayor L. Douglas Wilder’s “City of the Future” plan.

Last night, School Board members Chandra Smith and Carol A.O. Wolf asked for a new North Side school to be added to the plan, while others pushed for speedier attention to schools in their districts.

Earlier in the evening, PTA council members urged cooperation between school and city leadership and presented their list of new schools to build and where. Also in the first phase, the council wants to include the construction of an elementary school in the Fulton area.

The PTA council also calls for new Summer Hill and Broad Rock elementary schools and for revamping the Richmond Technical Center to address the business community’s desire for high school graduates who are better prepared to enter the work force, Burton said.

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North Richmond News

Style picks up missing petition sheets story

An innocuous comment by sitting School Board representative Carole A.O. Wolf in a discussion at North Richmond News triggered stories in Style Weekly and the Times-Dispatch this week. Here’s Style’s take on the comment: [Wolf] all but accuses fellow board members Lisa Dawson and Chandra Smith of stealing the election petition sheets that might have allowed […]

An innocuous comment by sitting School Board representative Carole A.O. Wolf in a discussion at North Richmond News triggered stories in Style Weekly and the Times-Dispatch this week. Here’s Style’s take on the comment:

[Wolf] all but accuses fellow board members Lisa Dawson and Chandra Smith of stealing the election petition sheets that might have allowed her to qualify to run for re-election to her 3rd District seat in November.

In an Aug. 8 post, Wolf writes on the blog Northrichmondnews.com that “either the representative from the 2nd District [Dawson] and/or/both the representative from the 6th District [Chandra Smith], had both opportunity and motive to remove two full sheets [50 signatures] of signatures from the papers that I left unguarded during a Student Discipline Committee meeting.”

“I do not know for a stone-certain fact that either [or both] of my colleagues actually ate or otherwise removed the sheets,” Wolf writes. “I do know that they each had opportunity and motive and that the signatures somehow disappeared from that room that afternoon.”

The lack of those sheets, and Wolf’s subsequent 11th-hour failure to secure enough of the required valid registered voter signatures on her petition sheets, resulted in her opponent, Norma H. Murdoch-Kitt, running unopposed in the 3rd District.

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North Richmond News