Family Struggles Mom says costs are major issue to getting children back See page 5 Battles of Addiction Hands Across the Bridge to unite roads to recovery See Metro, page 11 JSnrtianh Al 'City of Roses’ Read back issues of the Portland Observer at www.portlandobserver.com Volume X X X X I. N u m b e r 35 Wednesday • August 31. 2011 Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity On Mission to Change the Numbers Advocate for children, parents tackles barriers by M indy C( x > per T he P ortland O bserver Ron Herndon, 65, has worked his entire adult life fighting the battle to eliminate the barriers to a quality and equal education for low-income and minority children. As the Board chair of the National Head Start A ssociation and the D irector of Portland’s Albina Head Start since 1975, Herndon has seen what works and doesn’t to proclaim that when a child begins pre­ school, they should be convinced college graduation is their academic goal. Herndon believes the support from par­ ents and the community and a ‘head start’ in education is the only way to fight the odds against children who attend a school sys­ tem that does not work well for economically disadvantaged and minority students. “I wish public education functioned well enough that they could take any kid and help them realize their potential,” he said. “But if you look at the statistics, school systems often do a horrible job educating low income and minority children. And this begins in kindergarten.” According to Herndon, the numbers show only 48 percent of economically disadvan­ taged students graduated from Portland Public Schools in the 2009-2010 school year. For black students, the number was 46 per­ cent. He calis the public school system drop out factories, because less than 60 PHOTO BY M indy C ooper /T he P ortland O bserver percent of students graduate from high A long-time advocate for quality and equal education, Ron Herndon directs the pre- school with a regular diploma. school Head Start program in Portland. Herndon is also chair o f the National Head Currently, said Herndon, there are more Start Association. low-income children within the country than there has been for years. “Many low-income children aren’t able to have the experiences that middle income- children have that will enable them to become successful in public schools,” he said. And within Portland— the rate of student’s graduation isn’t any higher. He said, however, “if children could see encouragement and academic exposure, they can do well.” Growing up in a small town in Kansas, Herndon said all of his primary school teach­ ers were African American like himself, and truly instilled in him early on the value of education. “I grew up in an era when schools were segregated in the 50s, and because o f racism and segregation, one o f the few professions the smartest black people could enter was education.” If you were black, smart and had a college degree, you couldn't work in business or for the city or county, he said. Instead you be­ came a teacher. He said his first and second grade teach­ ers, many with Master and Doctorate de­ grees, talked to them about college, and why they needed to go. “We were being taught by some of the smartest people in town, so they not only had expectation,” he said, “but everyone in the black community expected you to do well.” Several decades later, he still believes ad­ vocacy from parents, mentors and the com­ munity for children determines if they receive an education that will enable them to gradu­ ate from college. Growing up, he said there was not an assumption that if your black and poor you couldn’t go to college. “Quite the contrary,” he said. continued on page 4 Pa rent's By the Numbers: An Academic Failure Rate Corner in R on H i rndon Editor s note: The following column by Ron Herndon, a long- time advocate fo r educational op- portunities fo r African-American children, begins in the Portland dents, Hispanic students or black Hispanic students it was 34 per­ Observer this week. Herndon has students. cent; and black students, 46 per­ served a director o f Head Start in By the numbers, Portland Public cent. Portland since 1975. Schools’ four-year high school If your child, grandchild or rela­ graduation rate for economically tive is currently in one of these jn a few short weeks parents will disadvantaged students was just groups, the odds are against them again place their children in a school 48 percent in 2009-10. For limited graduating from high school in four system that does not work well for English proficiency students, the years. economically disadvantaged stu- graduation rate was 33 percent; for The numbers are actually worse when compared with skills re­ quired to live independently and earn a living in today’s world. The prestigious National As­ sessm en t of E d u catio n al Progress, called the “N ation’s Report Card,” measures the aca- continued on page 5