I I» ■ . - W * . ■ ■ # ► ** 9 • *** PORTL ERVER VOLUME XX NUMBER 16 by Prof. M cKinley B u rt This recent headline in a number of big city newspapers indicates a pos­ sible successor to such media priorities as disposable diapers, spotted owls; Lithuania and the Hubble telescope. Clearly, our print and electronic men­ tors have shown themselves able to identify those issues important to sur­ vival (whose?). Aside from this tongue- in-cheek comment, let us examine the rather serious implications o f such a statem ent The most recent example is an ar­ ticle in last Wednesday’s San Francisco Chronicle (originated by the N.Y. Times News Service). The study was per­ formed by two anthropologists, a Black female at Rutgers, Signithia Fordham, and an African at U.C. at Berkeley, John U. Ogbu. Critical conclusions range from, * * Many Black students may perform poorly in high school because of a shared sense that academic success is a sellout to the white world,” to ‘‘Fear of acting white and fear of be­ coming the “ other” was a motivating factor in underachievement in the school context.” “ This phenomenon may be one of the subtlest and most insidious among the many social and economic factors that contribute to lower academic per­ formance by Blacks,” said Ms. Fordham. Implicit here is a recognition of the very same factors o f cultural attrition that I liave advanced the past few weeks. Nothing “ genetic” , as we have docu- m ented-nothing which can be distin­ guished (except in time) from the proc­ esses that brought about the description “ inferior” in reference to early white immigrants before they were allowed to “ m elt” into the American Dream. Along with academic success, the study listed more than a dozen other types o f behavior that the students con­ sidered to be “ acting white.” These in­ cluded, speaking standard English, lis­ tening to so-called white music, going to the opera or ballet, studying in the li­ brary, going to the Smithsonian Institu­ tion, doing volunteer work, camping or hiking and being on time. It is rather scary, I think, to contemplate that these youths will soon be parents; I’m sure it occurs to you that there is an adult group of Blacks who have been turned off in the same fashion. Let us examine this issue through other eyes. Newspaper Excerpt: James Comer, a professor of child psychiatry at Yale University, said black youths internalize messages about being black that are transmitted by society. He said fear of “ acting wh ite ” could be a factor among “ non-mainstream- oriented poor black children,” but not among middle-class black children. On the other hand, Wade Nobles, director of the Center for Applied Cul­ tural Studies and Educational Achieve­ ment at San Francisco State University, said black underachievement in educa­ tion cuts across socioeconomic lines. If fear of “ acting white” does play a role, Nobles said, it comes in a context in which “ black children learn rela­ tively early that their attempt to achieve is not rewarded in the school system.” At high schools like Capital High School in Washington, the one studied by Fordham and Ogbu, teachers and students tended in interviews to express far more concern about the larger so­ cioeconomic factors that bear on aca­ demic performance. It is important to note that some edu­ cators have taken pointed exceptions to the conclusions of the study-or have downplayed the significance. Bill Bib- biani, director of research and testing for the Pasadena United School District in California has the following com­ ment: “ hard-working students of all races have been taunted as grinds and n erds-I don’t know that Black people have comerd the market on teasing people about academic achievement." The Chronicle article was careful to point out that Mr. Bibbiani is white. Well, that is another perspective to deal with for the Black engineers and scientists I described last week as being terribly concerned about the horren­ dous failure rate for minority engineer­ ing students (78%); it is Dr. Decatur Rogers, Dean of the School of Engi­ neering, Tennessee State University whom I quote. “ While, it is not that educators in affected schools across the country are failing to perceive this problem, more of them (from my expe­ rience) need to direct countervailing activities toward the acculturation re­ quired for economic and professional success in America. I am aware of some activity in this direction under pressure of the Portland School District’s “ Desegregation Pro­ gram ” . But this is due as much (if not more so) to individual initiatives on the part of ‘ ‘ teachers o f excellence ” ; inter­ action with the symphony, Center for Performing Arts, OMSI, the Firehouse Theatre, and similar cultural enterprises. I am immediately reminded, however, that the Black Educational Center pio­ neered this kind of activity almost twenty years ago. It takes a committed admini­ stration, not one who must be dragged kicking and screaming into the race for survival. Certainly, not one that has just cut back the related specialists to half-time. Video Presentation Produced To Recruit Minorities To Education The University o f Oregon College of Education in partnership with Eu­ gene District 4-J schools is developing a multimedia video presentation en­ titled “ Teaching Can Be For You” to help recruit minority students to ca­ reers in teacher education. The presentation, which depicts Lane County minority teachers and adminis­ trators speaking about their own educa­ tion and careers and working with stu­ dents in the classroom, will be used by the Diversity in Education Consortium as part of a minority education recruit­ ment program. The consortium was formed to re­ cruit and retain more minorities in teacher education and includes representatives from the UO College of Education, Lane Community College and Lane County schools. The video is the first recruitment tool that the consortium has created, according to Kathy Pyfer, UO College of Education adviser and an executive officer of the consortium. “ In Lane County, there aren’t very many teachers or administrators of color,” Pyfer said. “ The problem is, if you don’t ever see someone who looks like yourself in a leadership position, you don’t ever aspire to that particular leadership position. “ The first goal (of the video) is to provide a vehicle for students to ob­ serve people of diverse ethnic back­ grounds in leadership roles,” Pyfer said. A second goal of the presentation is Aprils, 1990 'The Eyes and Ears o f The Community" Academic Success Seen As Selling Out, Says Study On Blacks to give minority students professional objectives so that they finish high school and go on to college even though they might not remain in teacher education, according to Pyfer. Pyfer conceived the idea for the video along with Anselmo Villanueva, Mi­ nority Community Liason for Eugene District 4-J and consortium member. Pyfer received a $1,000 grant from the UO College of Education Alumni As­ sociation to develop the presentation. The consortium hopes to adapt a model program in Portland, the Port­ land Teacher Program, to the Eugene Area. In Portland, 15 minority students a year enter Portland Community Col­ lege in a program that includes tuition waivers along with retention and men­ torship programs. The retention pro­ gram focuses on orientation to college, study skills and test-taking skills. After two years at PCC the students transfer to Portland State University with a continuation of the retention programs and tuition waivers. “ We are working on making all that happen down here, but we need to re­ cruit the students in the first place,” Pyfer said. “ The slide show is a re­ cruitment tool in order to start the minority students thinking about enter­ ing the field of teacher education.” The consortium hopes to have 15 students start at LCC in the fall of 1991 under a similar program and transfer to the University of Oregon after two years. The 12-minutc presentation, produced by Ursi Reynolds, UO doctoral student in curriculum and instruction, consists of slides, narrative and original music transferred to videotape for portability and ease of presentation. The story line of the presentation fo­ cuses on a Eugene high school student, Melissa Davis, as she meets with mi­ nority educators at various Lane County schools and the university. The narra­ tive features Davis and Eugene District 4-J staff members Rapheal Mosqueda, Jefferson Middle School teacher; Misa Joo, Madison Middle School teacher; and Bob Bolden, Kennedy Middle School assistant principal. This fall, the video will be shown to Lane County middle and high school minority students by school counsel­ ors. Teachers and administrators of color will be present during the presen­ tations. The students then will observe and help these teachers and administrators in their classrooms and offices. Stu­ dents who become interested in teacher education will be assigned teacher or adminstrator mentors to assist and counsel the students. Ultimately, the consortium plans to make the presentation available, at no cost, to schools throughout Oregon. Because of the format, other schools will be able to insert easily pictures of their own minority educators into the slide/video presentation. lessons will be given at: Creston Pool, SE 44th and Powell; Dishman Pool, 77 NE Knott; Grant Pool, 2300 NE 33rd; Montavilla Pool, 8219 NE Glisan; Mt. Scott Pool, 5530 72nd; Peninsula Pool, 6400 N. Albina; Pier Pool, N.Seneca & St. Johns; Sell­ wood Pool, SE 7th & Miller; and Wilson Pool, 1151 SW Verm ont Children and adults interested in Portland Parks and Recreation’s swim lesson program this summer can reg­ Minority Business Owners Hold Annual Conference Community Trust Changes Name To Meyer Memorial Trust Trustees of the Fred Meyer Chari­ table Trust announced they are chang­ ing the name of the philanthrophic or­ ganization to Meyer Memorial Trust, effective today. Chairman Oral B. Robertson said the name change was intended to end confusion between the trust and Fred Meyer, Inc. “ Many people mistakenly believe that the trust is the philanthropic arm of the Fred Meyer retail stores,” Robertson said. Since its inception in 1982, the trust has been a private, independent foun­ dation representing the personal phi­ lanthropy of the late Fred G. Meyer, not a company foundation related in any way to Fred Meyer Inc. “ What we do share is the same founder, who strongly believed in giv­ ing something back to the communities which supported his company for so many years,” Robertson said. “ From that philosphy, the trust was bom .” When Meyer died in 1978, he left the bulk of his estate to create a chari­ table trust The bequest consisted mainly of stock in Fred Meyer Inc., according to Charles S. Rooks, executive director of Meyer Memorial Trust Assets in the trust have grown from $120 million in 1982 to more than $275 million in 1990, he said. In eight yeras, the trust has awarded more than $77 million in grants to communities in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Alaska, Montana, Utah and California. The bulk of the grants have been awarded in Oregon. In 1989, the trust awarded $15.2 million in grants for social welfare, arts and humanities, education, health and other organizations. These have ranged from a $654,000 grant to Albina Ministerial Alliance for an elementary school program for at- risk children, to a $1,500 grant to the city of Ashland to purchase a piano for its multi-purpose community center. The Oregon Association of Minority gon and Washington, public and pri- Entrepreneurs is holding its 1990 OAME vale sector. Ron Steen Group will be Entrepreneurship Conference at the Lloyd Center Red Lion on May 15. Workshop topics include imaging; advertising, sales and marketing; busi- ness planning; financial planning; in­ suring and bonding; technology updates; IB providing the networking music. Oregon Congressman Ron Wyden will deliver the luncheon speaker intro­ duction, followed by the keynote speech doing government business; franchis­ ing and strategic planning. Anyone starting a business, or want­ ing to increase business opportunities should attend the conference, which will also provide networkring possibili­ ties between minority entrepreneurs and purchasing and contracting officers of business and agencies wishin to contact minority-owned businesses. Highlights of the conference include: Morning speech by US WEST Com­ munications Vice President and CEO/ Small Business Services, Solomon Trujillo. by Parren J. Mitchell, retired U.S. McDonald Corporation and South­ Representative from Maryland’s sev­ land Corporation presentation on fran­ enth district chising. To register for the conference, lunch­ Networking at 4:00 p.m. will in­ eon and reception, call OAME at (503) volve purchasers and buyers from Ore- 236-1190. Program Outline Registration 8:00-9:00a.m. Opening Session 9:00-9:30a.m. Work Session I 9:30-10:30 a.m. •Im aging •Finance fir Financial Planning for the Business Owner. Part I. •Using Today s Technology United Way Funds Child Care Center Seventy-two children in Northeast Portland previously enrolled at St. Vin­ cent de Paul Child Development Cen­ ter will continue to receive money for child care under an agreement reached between United Way of the Columbia- Willamette and Albina Ministerial Al­ liance. Up to $30,000 will be available to the families of these children through June 30. AMA will manage the distri­ bution of the funds and is in the process of contacting families to offer assis­ tance in meeting their chid care ex­ penses. The center closed Feb. 28 because of financial difficulties after operating for nearly 51 years. Most parents were paying the minimum fee of $160 each month at St. Vincent de Paul and found their child care expenses increasing an additonal $100 to $200 per month at other facilities. United Way board chairman Jerry Halverson said that funds previously allocated to S t Vincent de Paul ($162,151 in 1989-90) would remain in Northeast Portland to meet child care needs in the future. He added that no decision has been made on how the money will be spent Mail-In Swim Lesson Registration Started Swim lessons will be given in­ doors at: Columbia Pool, 7701 N. Chautauqua; metropolitan Learning Center Pool, 2033 NW Glisan; PCC Sylvania Pool, 12000 SW 49th. Outdoor pool summer 1990 swim ister by mail beginning in mid-May. To receive information and registra­ tion forms at your home, send a self- addressed, stamped legal-size enve­ lope to Aquatics, Portland Parks and Recreation, 1120 SW 5th Avenue, Room 502, OR 97204-1976. Break 10:30-10:45 a.m. Work Session II 10 45-11:45a.m. • Finance Be Financial Planning for the Business Owner. Pari II. •Advertising, Sales fir Marketing • Business Planning Luncheon 11:45a.m.-1:45p.m. Introduction— Congressman Ron Wyden Keynote speaker— Parren J. Mitchell Break 2:45-3:00 p.m. Work Session IV 3:00-4:00p.m. •Using Today's Technology •Strategic Planning— 1990 s •Advertising Sales and Marketing Hosted netw orking Reception 4:00-7:00 p.m. Music by Ron Steen Public and private industry buyers and purchasers meet with m inority manufac­ turers. suppliers construction, service Af retail firms. Make contacts! Task Force Recommends Programs To Reduce Infant Mortality Rates In N/NE Portland The statistics are alarming. Each year in Multnomah County, nearly 100 infants die before their first birthday. Statewide, almost 10 percent of women giving birth do not receive sufficient prenatal care. That figure doubles among women in the North/Northcast section of Portland. On April 23,10:00 a.m., the North- Northeast Economic Development Task Force presented its report (with action plan and recommendations) to reduce infant mortality in North/Northcast Port­ land. The report was developed by the Family Services Committee of the Task Force. Information included in the re­ port was obtained during a series of forums with health professionals oper- I 5. -, Work Session III I:45-2:45p.m. •Insurance 8f Bonding—Can You Get It? •D oing Business with the Largest Buyer in the World: Government •Franchising n e tw o rk in g Session A M u stl -, - .. . . • • 25C - - a ; ating in or serving residents of North/ Northeast Portland The recommenda­ tions respond to the causes o f infant mortality among low-incomcresidents. Support for the health care forums was provided by the Black United Front of Oregon, the Albina Ministerial Alli­ ance, the United Way of the Columbia- Willamette, and the Oregon Commu­ nity Foundation. Present at the press conference were Amina Anderson and Cometta Smith, co-chairs of the Family Services Com­ mittee of the North-Northeast Task Farce; representatives of local health provid­ ers; a representative of the United Way; and a representative of the Oregon Com- munity Foundation.