By Jarret Liotta

WESTPORT — So the school’s Equity Study was released this past week, but maybe a lot of people didn’t notice because they were on vacation. (I think the same thing happened with one of my best columns, wherein I took the risk of interviewing one of Westport’s most colorful parents during February break, but it seemed like no one read it based on the absence of meaningful compliments I received.)

BOE to Hear Presentation Today

Well, the Board of Education will hear an official presentation about the Equity Study tonight (Monday night), so hopefully people will both tune and chime in as they see fit. Based on the substantial emotion its production generated among many locals, it would be a shame if the work went unnoticed or ignored, if only in terms of closure.

All In Favor

People who know me personally — and I think there are about four of you — understand that I take concepts like equity to heart. As I hope I’ve expressed in past editorials, anything we as a community can do to not only augment untarnished acceptance of everyone, but also help generate true feelings of belonging in the hearts of all people — are essential, right, and just good life-policy.

So on that level the entire concept of the study is positive to me. In particular, if awareness of conduct among staff members as it relates to cultural variants can be expanded — and staff and the community at large can lovingly be shown some new outlooks, strategies and practices to help make some others feel more accepted and an equal part of said community — that is a terrific outcome brought about by this well-intentioned endeavor.

But …

That said, I’m struggling to not find the study a disappointment in that it states the obvious, outlines sad but unsurprising facts that most of us have been aware of for years, and then concludes with four near-meaningless pedagogy-sodden recommendations sadly akin to “Education President” George H. Bush’s nonsensical Education 2000 goals.

(“All children in America will start school ready to learn … Every school in America will be free of drugs and violence …” Yes, Mr. President, tell me more broad, unnecessary gibberish aimed at giving a purpose to top-heavy bureaucracy while legions of dedicated educators continue to struggle on the ground actually trying to take action to amend these problems year after year after year …)

Likewise, the Equity Study’s profoundly pointless pronouncements include a suggestion that Westport “Invest in Ongoing Professional Learning” and also “Develop Welcoming and Affirming School Communities.”

Wow! Aren’t we lucky to get such great advice!!

Tell Me Why … (but I honestly don’t want to know)

Why is it I find this so tragically annoying and pointlessly bureaucratic? Maybe because I find bureaucracy in all its forms so tragically pointless and annoying.

Maybe it’s things like the mere second sentence of this analytical study’s Executive Summary, which states with a straight face: “We offered a capacity building approach in conducting the equity study by employing an evidence-based root cause analysis process that examined both quantitative and qualitative data and beliefs, policies, practices, and procedures to unveil the root causes of student experiences and outcomes.”

Personally, I think the school district should hunt down another $40,000 grant to do a study on what a “capacity building approach” even is, because it can mean many different things and I’m not convinced anyone even knows for sure.

The New York Times Syndrome

I don’t want to make light of the issues and experiences highlighted in this document based on personal interviews with Westport parents, students and staff, but I’ve always found the unnecessary need to quantify and over-examine things according to some version of academic authority to be just so much cow kah kah. It’s like when The New York Times finally reports on something that’s been underground knowledge for years, and then it becomes accepted as real because the Times is authoritative according to some pedant’s perception.

According to the study the first session of the work opened with Supt. of Schools Tom Scarice highlighting “current district priorities,” which apparently already include “examining policies that limit access to students, developing welcoming environments, and fostering inclusive curriculum and instruction.”

Sooooo …

So, what did they need to tell us?!

I think (hope) you see my point.

Looking back at much of the criticism of the study, one key claimed complaint centered on the district not involving a broad-enough swathe of the public in its planning and execution. I say to these critics, “You’re silly to have fought so vehemently for involvement, because from a bureaucratic standpoint it’s actually rather meaningless, as this whole exercise is, in essence, the authoritative New York Times affirming what we’ve known all along.”

But that’s how bureaucracy — laws and policy — are forged, so you can’t fight City Hall, or Central Office, etc. It had to be completed and it was … In the end I’ll concur (concede) that that’s a good thing.

Of course, some people will still argue against the validity of the sometimes bitter content and claims made in the Equity Study …

But they’re just idiots!

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