Education

Bennett: Minorities Can Meet Higher Goals

By Julie A. Miller — January 27, 1987 2 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

At an event commemorating the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr., Secretary of Education William J. Bennett said last week that educators can honor the slain civil-rights leader’s dream by raising their expectations for poor and minority children.

With the legal battle for desegregation over, Mr. Bennett said, the main obstacle to equal educational opportunity lies in the doubts of educators themselves.

“There are doubts today that make a prescription for inaction, a self-fulfilling prophecy of despair,” Mr. Bennett said. “There are doubts, for example, that poor children--grandchildren of segregation and descendants of slavery--can truly be educated.”

“These doubts are faithless,” he said. “These doubts are dangerous. And, in fact, these doubts are false.”

“Defeatism is shown false each4day in schools all over America--schools whose students come from circumstances of poverty, but schools which teach their children the meaning of true freedom and the means to achieve it,” the Secretary said. “I have seen these schools in the ghettos of Brooklyn and the Bronx, in the East Los Angeles barrio, in Cleveland and Dallas and Washington, D.C.”

Mr. Bennett specifically praised Atlanta’s Benjamin Elijah Mays High School, a predominantly black school he had visited earlier in the day. He called the school an embodiment of his own dream, the model school he described recently in James Madison High School, a report proposing a tough, classical model curriculum.

“I mean it for everyone,” Mr. Bennett said. “All of our children deserve this education--our best education--and access to a school that provides it should not be an accident of where a student lives or of how much money his parents make.”

The speech came during a busy two-week period in which Mr. Bennett also addressed, among others, the New Hampshire state legislature, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the American Council on Education.

Speaking to the Mecklenburg County Medical Society in Charlotte, N.C., he defended his approach to aids education and reiterated his call for widespread, routine aids testing.

“I think it is important that we face up to the harsh fact that we have not acted as seriously and responsibly as we should have in confronting aids,” he said. “If we had adopted routine testing measures when the aids virus was identified and when testing first became available, many thousands of lives might have been saved.”

Related Tags:

Events

Jobs Regional K-12 Virtual Career Fair: DMV
Find teaching jobs and K-12 education jubs at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar
CTE for All: How One School Board Builds Future-Ready Students
Discover how CPSB uses partnerships and high-quality digital resources to build equitable, future-ready CTE pathways for every student.
Content provided by Cengage School
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
Making AI Work in Schools: From Experimentation to Purposeful Practice
AI use is expanding in schools. Learn how district leaders can move from experimentation to coordinated, systemwide impact.
Content provided by Frontline Education

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Education Opinion The Opinions EdWeek Readers Care About: The Year’s 10 Most-Read
The opinion content readers visited most in 2025.
2 min read
Collage of the illustrations form the top 4 most read opinion essays of 2025.
Education Week + Getty Images
Education Quiz Did You Follow This Week’s Education News? Take This Quiz
Test your knowledge on the latest news and trends in education.
1 min read
Education Quiz How Did the SNAP Lapse Affect Schools? Take This Weekly Quiz
Test your knowledge on the latest news and trends in education.
1 min read
Education Quiz New Data on School Cellphone Bans: How Much Do You Know?
Test your knowledge on the latest news and trends in education.
1 min read