The Minneapolis school board on Tuesday night backed off a plan to leave the Twin Cities' oldest voluntary integration district.
Superintendent Bill Green presented the school board last month with a resolution to leave the West Metro Education Program (WMEP) in the 2009-10 school year. In arguing for the withdrawal, Green said WMEP, which began in 1989 and operates two schools, was no longer an effective vehicle for school integration and had failed to live up to its own mission.
Parents and other WMEP supporters, including the University of Minnesota's Institute on Race and Poverty and the NAACP, criticized the district's reasons for wanting to withdraw from the integration district at a packed hearing last week.
At Tuesday night's meeting, the Minneapolis board was unanimous in backing Green's decision to table the plan. Board member Pam Costain said she hopes to see WMEP foster more engagement among its member districts with the goal of improving achievement among all minority and low-income students.
"We can't just have islands of excellence," said Costain. "That's true for Minneapolis public schools and it needs to be true for its suburban partners."
Thomas Luce, research director for the University of Minnesota's Institute on Race and Poverty (IRP), said earlier Tuesday that Minneapolis public schools' reconsideration of the proposal was welcome news.
"We think working to make these schools better than they are now is better than pulling out of the program," Luce said. "There have been positive steps that have made at these schools."
In making their argument for pulling out of the integration district, Minneapolis schools leaders pointed out that WMEP's two schools were racially imbalanced themselves: the Fine Arts Interdisciplinary Resource school in Crystal, which serves grades 4-8 and has an arts focus, is 69 percent white. In comparison, the district's other school, the Interdistrict Downtown School in Minneapolis, is 33 percent white.