What’s the quota?

“Where’s the diversity?” asks Wednesday Journal head.  “[One] minority among 36 new teachers ‘unacceptable,’ says Collins.”

Of the 36 teachers hired for the current school year in District 97, one is a minority, a development that the Oak Park’s elementary district’s superintendent calls troubling and unacceptable.

She’s not kidding:

Along with hiring one black teacher, the district hired one minority administrator, an assistant principal, who also is black. In a stern statement read during the board’s meeting last week, Superintendent Constance Collins vowed the district will do better next year in finding and hiring minority teachers and administrators.

Nothing against white teachers, you know:

The superintendent and board . . . stressed that they’re not displeased with the new staff members but only want more diversity moving forward.

And fewer whites, who do nothing for diversity.

The super feels really bad about it:

“It is disappointing and troubling to discover that we have not been true to our mission, which says that we are committed to the needs of a diverse population,” said Collins, the district’s first female and first black superintendent, who was hired in 2005.

“The needs of a diverse population,” yes.  Such as?

I asked in an on-line comment, “Is there research showing same-race teachers get better results? I’d like to see it.”

Is there?

Short histories are best

My Short History of Oak Park, Vol. 1, 2004-2005, announced on the first page, is based on my Wednesday Journal columns of those years.  They drew on my life-long affiliation with this, the world’s once largest village, home of Hemingway, Rice Burroughs, and Ray Kroc.

Ditto for Short History, which is in the self-publication tradition of

Margaret Atwood, William Blake . . . Robert Bly, Lord Byron, Willa Cather, Pat Conroy, Stephen Crane, e.e. cummings, W.E.B. DuBois, Alexander Dumas, T.S. Eliot, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Benjamin Franklin, Zane Grey, Thomas Hardy . . . Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ernest Hemingway, Robinson Jeffers . . . Stephen King, Rudyard Kipling, Louis L’Amour, D.H. Lawrence . . . John Muir, Anais Nin, Thomas Paine, Tom Peters, Edgar Allen Poe, Alexander Pope, Beatrix Potter, Ezra Pound, Marcel Proust, Irma Rombauer, Carl Sandburg, Robert Service, George Bernard Shaw, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Upton Sinclair, Gertrude Stein, William Strunk, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoi, Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, and Virginia Woolf.

I am delighted to see Shelley among them. Blithe Spirit in this context is, of course, based on “To a Skylark,” as was Noel Coward’s play title. I make that clear enough on the third page of Short History, quoting:

Hail to thee, blithe spirit!

Bird thou never wert-

That from heaven or near it

Pourest thy full heart

In profuse strains of unpremeditated art.

— from Shelley, “To a Skylark”

Go Shelley.  Go Short History of Oak Park.

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Later, from fellow Midwest Writers Assn. member Hal Higdon, in the matter of self-published authors, with a Hemingway-esque twist:

I hope you didn’t miss Rick Yager, the long-time Buck Rogers artist. His older sister was a friend of Hemingway, who once fired a revolver in the Yager house. The bullet may still be in the ceiling. Of course, I tell you this after the fact.

More about the industrious and adept Higdon, who ran seven marathons in his 70th year (he told me, and I believe it), here.  Indeed, soon to be published is his novel Marathon.

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