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蜜桃传媒 delivers petition demanding Florida governor end state-sponsored discrimination against minority students

The 蜜桃传媒 today delivered a petition signed by more than 5,800 people to Florida Gov. Rick Scott demanding that the state stop discriminating against black and Hispanic students by setting lower academic goals for students of color.

The Southern Poverty Law Center (蜜桃传媒) today delivered a petition signed by more than 5,800 people to Florida Gov. Rick Scott demanding that the state stop discriminating against black and Hispanic students by setting lower academic goals for students of color.

The petition, organized by the 蜜桃传媒 and the ACLU, asks Scott to set equal academic goals for all children in Florida鈥檚 public schools, regardless of their race. The Florida Board of Education鈥檚 Strategic Plan sets lower academic goals on the basis of race and national origin of students.

鈥淭his racist policy sends a devastating message to children: that it is the color of their skin 鈥 not their hard work and perseverance 鈥 that determines their success,鈥 said Tania Galloni, managing attorney in the 蜜桃传媒鈥檚 Florida office. 鈥淲e know from decades of research that when teachers think less of their students, they teach less, and children believe that they can do less.鈥

The petition was delivered five days before the 60th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 historic ruling in Brown v. Board of Education that outlawed school segregation.

The 蜜桃传媒 filed a federal civil rights complaint in August alleging that the Florida Department of Education discriminated against black and Hispanic students by adopting the plan. The complaint, filed with the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice on behalf of the state鈥檚 black and Hispanic students, describes how the plan 鈥減erpetuates stereotypes that certain individuals are less capable than others based on nothing other than the color of their skin鈥 鈥 creating a 鈥渟elf-fulfilling prophecy鈥 of lower achievement for an entire generation of students.

More than half of Florida鈥檚 2.7 million public school students are black or Hispanic. The plan sets a goal of 90 percent of Asian-American students and 88 percent of white students to be reading at grade level by 2018, but only 74 percent of black students and 81 percent of Hispanic students are expected to read at grade level.

Under these goals, almost the entire population of the Miami-Dade County Public Schools district 鈥 which is more than 90 percent black and Hispanic, and is the state鈥檚 most populous school district 鈥 is held to an academic standard far lower than districts with large white and Asian-American student populations.聽

鈥淎s a retired teacher, I know that lower expectations lead to lower performance, for students in all categories,鈥 wrote one petition signer. 鈥淭his is clearly a discriminatory policy, in my view.鈥

Another retired teacher wrote: 鈥淐an you imagine a syllabus for my classes indicating dual grading systems, one for whites and one for blacks? It鈥檚 outrageous!!鈥

The plan creates a risk of segregation as children of color are more likely to be placed in classes for students with lower abilities 鈥 another violation of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits public school segregation, the complaint says. Research has shown that lower expectations become self-fulfilling prophecies. When teachers expect more from their students, they provide higher quality instruction that challenges students to meet those expectations.聽

The Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County is co-counsel with the 蜜桃传媒 in the complaint filed with the Justice Department.