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Response
to Diana Slaughter-Defoe's
"What Shall I Tell My Children Who are Black?": A Focus
on Research
MaryBeth
Gasman, Ph.D.
Graduate School of Education
University of Pennsylvania
I
was asked to comment on this Clayton lecture from the perspective
of someone doing research in the field of higher education. In
listening to Dr. Slaughter-Defoe, I am reminded of the power of
research. Her understanding and interpretation of past research,
especially the Moynihan Report, are very telling and should make
us stop and think about what we as researchers (including student
researchers) do and how we interpret and use the research of others.
We must ask ourselves about the background and purpose of the
research: "Who is putting it forth?" "What is their
background and experience?" "Who is publishing it?"
and "How is it being used to inform policy and policy makers?"
In the case of Daniel P. Moynihan (1965), a report that might
have been well-meaning was dangerous to the African American community
and served to undermine the structure of the African American
family. Not only did Moynihan's work blame the victim rather than
the oppressor for the black families in situations of poverty,
it also vilified black women and pitted them against black men.
If Moynihan had consulted members of African American families
and been familiar with African American history and culture, he
might have crafted a richer study that was less susceptible to
misinterpretation and misuse. In addition, his research might
have been not only more accurate but also more useful to the very
community he claimed to want to help.
I'd
like to talk about a parallel incident of the dangerous consequences
of research in the realm of higher education. In 1967, two esteemed
Harvard sociologists, Christopher Jencks and David Riesman, published
an article in the Harvard Educational Review entitled "The
American Negro College". Because of the prestige of the journal
and the institutional affiliation of the authors, their work received
much attention in both the academic community and in the popular
press including Time, Newsweek, The New York
Times, and The Washington Post. Jencks' and Riesman's
article severely criticized Black colleges, describing them as
"academic disaster areas" and labeling their presidents
as "cowardly and tyrannical".
Among
Black Americans there was a sense of shock, dismay, and betrayal.
Although the Black college community came together to formally
respond to the Jencks and Riesman article - critiquing its method
and tone of racial superiority - they could not erase the national
stigma that the article placed on these post-Bellum, once legally
segregated, institutions (Wright et al., 1967). Although there
are those who would say that the Black community would not have
been accepting of any kind of critique, it was the particular
approach of Jencks' and Riesman's research that was most objectionable.
The Harvard sociologists visited only a few Black colleges and
relied primarily on the work of others and hearsay to generate
their conclusions. Their lack of knowledge of black culture and
history, in particular the history of black education, led to
certain mistaken assumptions. For example, rather than comparing
Black colleges to the whole spectrum of higher education and in
particular to predominantly White institutions belonging to the
same category, they measured all of these colleges against the
standard of the elite northeastern institution - such as the colleges
of the Ivy League. In fact there were many White institutions
that were failing according to the measures used by Jencks and
Riesman, but this was not mentioned in their research.
The
Brown v. Board decision combined with the Jencks and Riesman'
article has created a tendency by policy makers, media, and the
government to lump all Black colleges together, or to view race
as their defining characteristic and ignore the diversity among
them. Closer attention to African American research on Black colleges
and consultation with those working within the Black college community
would have shown the varied missions, student populations, and
leadership of these institutions. The Jencks and Riesman article
caused the media to denigrate every aspect of Black colleges'
performance; it was the reason several funding agencies and foundations
decided to support predominantly white institutions trying to
attract Black students instead of Black colleges; and it provided
the impetus for several decades of continued government scrutiny
over these institutions (Gasman, 2003).
Significantly,
Columbia University professor Earl J. McGrath (1965) conducted
a study one year prior to that of Jencks and Riesman's which,
although critical in its portrayal of Black colleges was a collaborative
effort with Black college presidents. The findings of McGrath's
study were more nuanced and its comparisons considered more valid
by the Black community. Had McGrath's findings received as much
media attention as Jencks and Riesman's, they would have had a
more helpful impact on policy formulation. Moreover, McGrath's
research might have opened people's eyes to the complexity of
issues surrounding black colleges, rather than inviting them to
see the black college question as simply "Should black colleges
continue to exist?" However, McGrath did not have the national
name recognition of sociologist David Riesman nor were his findings
what policymakers wanted to hear. In thinking of this study by
McGrath, I am reminded of the Bush study mentioned by Dr. Slaughter-Defoe.
As you can recall, Bush, when trying to answer the question, "Can
Black mothers raise our sons?" went to the source - interviewing
Black mothers to gain their perspectives. The results were surprising,
and didn't fit into any predictable discourse about what black
mothers are or are not. Again, I wonder if policymakers really
want to hear this perspective.
Looking
at a broad cross section of studies on African American education
gives us reason to ponder both the positive and negative potential
of research. Although some positive results came out of both the
Moynihan and Jencks and Riesman studies (for example, African
Americans created their own body of research to refute both Jencks
and Riesman and Moynihan), these uninformed examinations of African
Americans emphasize the need to have an understanding of the history
and culture of those we study. In the case of Black colleges,
Harvard professor Charles V. Willie provided scholars and policy
makers with a comprehensive and historically rooted study of Black
colleges in 1978. He stated, "This study was an overt response
to the poor scholarship of Jencks and Riesman" (personal
communication, September 2, 2003). In the case of African American
children and families, scholars like Asa G. Hilliard and Dr. Slaughter-Defoe
herself have shown us how scholarship that begins with the perspective
of the African Americans involved is most effective and long lasting
in its transformation to meaningful policy.
Recently,
I read a newspaper article by Black conservative scholar Thomas
Sowell of Stanford's Hoover Institute. He pointed to the Moynihan
report and the work of Jencks and Riesman as "the last honest
assessments of African Americans" (Sowell, 2003) suggesting
that work that has been done in more collaborative ways is less
than candid about the situation for blacks in the United States.
I want to be clear that I am not calling for covering up or softening
research results that pertain to "sensitive" topics.
Instead, I am saying that the problem lies in the research method.
By planning our studies with knowledge of history and culture
and by structuring them with an opportunity for collaboration
and input from those who would be affected by the study, we are,
in the words of Dr. Slaughter-Defoe, "considering the social
and political ramifications that the ethical researcher is duty-bound
to respect."
References
Gasman,
M. (2003). Salvaging 'academic disaster areas': The Black college
response to Christopher Jencks' and David Reisman's 1967 Harvard
Educational Review article. Paper Presented at the annual
meeting of the History of Education Society, Chicago, Illinois.
Jencks,
C. & Reisman, D. (1967, Winter). The American Negro college.
Harvard Educational Review, 37 (1), pp. 3-60.
McGrath.
E. (1965). The predominantly Negro colleges and universities
in transition. New York: Teachers College Press.
Moynihan,
D. (1967). The Negro family: The case for national action. In
L. Rainwater & W. Yancey. (Eds.), The Moynihan report and
the politics of controversy. Boston, MA: M.I.T. Press.
Sowell,
T. (2003, October 3). On racial censorship and Rush Limbaugh.
Jewish World Review. Retrieved from www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell.asp.
Wright,
S., Mays, B., Gloster, H., Dent, A., Jencks, C., & Reisman,
D. (1967, Spring). 'The American Negro college': Four responses
and a reply. Harvard Educational Review, 37 (3), 451-468.
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