Equal, quality education for all needed
STEVE SMITH
My father was a man of very few words. He did not often initiate
conversations with me, and I could not tell you today whether he
voted Democratic, Republican, or whether he was a closet communist.
I inherited my big mouth from my mother, who never had an opinion
she did not wish to share.
Poles apart as they were, one of their common beliefs was evident:
They had a less than zero tolerance for discrimination of any type.
That behavior, that kind of talk was strictly forbidden.
My father was the plant manager for a large company that
manufactured mirrors. He was very good at what he did, despite his
sixth-grade education. One of the things he learned early on was that
female manual dexterity was far better than that of men. Looking at
one of the assembly lines in “his” factory, one would see women at
the end, sans gloves, picking up 12” squares of glass with sharp
edges and tucking them neatly into packages without missing a beat.
No one looked at the end of the assembly line and was outraged at
the absence of men.
I could offer countless examples of similar employment situations
in both the public and private sectors in which the staff does not
reflect the ethnic make-up of our society or even our local
community.
That may or may not be a good thing, or it may not be a thing at
all, depending on the circumstances. Private enterprises have more
control over their hiring practices. What I am concerned about is the
knee-jerk reaction to have every aspect of our public employment
numbers become a direct reflection of a community’s ethnic makeup.
Two potential discrimination issues have popped up recently, one
public, one private. Through a letter in the Daily Pilot yesterday,
if the facts are taken at face value, we were told that the ethnic
makeup of the faculty at Orange Coast College falls far short of
matching the ethnic make-up of our population.
The other development was a report by the Gay & Lesbian Alliance
Against Defamation that stated that gay, lesbian or bisexual
characters on scripted network shows fell to its lowest count since
they began keeping track in 1996.
We have 10% Asians? Well, then, 10% of our teachers and
administrators must be Asian, too.
Got 5% Hmong here in Newport-Mesa? Don’t forget to ramp up those
employment figures to match that count.
And whatever figure there is for the gay, lesbian and bisexual
community, we must make sure that the exact number, no more, no less,
is shown on TV.
Or is more OK? I wonder whether those who advocate these mirror
images would be pointing all this out if their group had
proportionally higher numbers than the society at large. Something
tells me that such a group would have a hard time calling a press
conference to advocate the hiring of more heterosexual middle-aged
white men for, for example, OCC faculty positions.
This is the type of mess in which we find ourselves when we play
only by the numbers.
If there are not enough black, Asian or Latino public employees
anywhere, I want to believe that it is not a conscious decision to
exclude these groups but rather that it was a matter of hiring the
best, most-qualified people for the positions and that, sadly, there
were not enough minority candidates.
If, as I believe, there were not enough people of the right
ethnicity to fill what would be a quota, it is largely because they
did not have a chance at the same quality of education many years
ago.
The case in point here are the results of the recent API scores
for the Newport-Mesa School District. On the Westside of Costa Mesa,
some of the scores were so low, one would think we are living in a
third world country, not one of the richest areas in America.
Yet, I have not read or heard one syllable of outrage or despair
from anyone on the school board. No one stood up and said “Enough!”
and offered to come up with a plan to move these kids toward the
higher test scores of the rest of the community.
I don’t like that there aren’t more Asians or Latino or Nepalese
on the OCC faculty, not because of the numbers and their relationship
to the community, but because it tells me that too many kids are not
getting the right start to their education, the type that will make
them qualified candidates for college faculty positions.
The corrective action we need to take starts in an equal, quality
education for all from elementary school through high school, not in
hiring people simply because they are a percentage point.
My father would have hired a man for an assembly line position if
that guy could handle the products the way the women did, not because
he was seeking perfect harmony in his employment numbers.
Actually, he did hire a guy to work the line one time. But I was
so bad at it, I spent most of my time sweeping up broken glass from
the factory floor.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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