After learning about and visiting Little Rock
Central High School and Simmons High School we've been analyzing what it means
to be a "good school."
There is the obvious necessity of teachers
that can teach and proper materials and resources to put to use. But I've also
decided that a good school should be an environment in which the students feel
that their presence is valued and they are comfortable around their peers and
teachers. Dr. Sybil Jordan-Hampton, not a member of the Little Rock Nine but
the first African-American to complete three years at Central, was able to
complete her education, but at no point during her time there did she feel
comfortable. When she spoke to us she told us that she knew she had to do this
for her race, but it was obviously going to take away from her high school
experience. Even though she was in a school with the right materials, she was not
able to get the most out of high school like her white classmates. Meanwhile at
Simmons the kids had an extreme sense of community, but many of them lacked the
drive to help push them through high school and onto college. A quality
education is a two-sided operation, the first side being the institution and
it's teachers, while the other is the students themselves.
Aerin Abrams
Aerin Abrams
12th
grade, The Park School
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