Survey Data: The Parents of Lynnfield METCO Students
Recently, the Superintendent of Lynnfield, Massachusetts, a Boston suburban
school system, proposed terminating a small program enrolling black students
from Boston. The Civil Rights Project has prepared a special report from
its 1995-96 survey of METCO (Metropolitan Council on Educational Opportunities)
parents to show the aspirations and experiences of the African-American
families from Boston who send their children to Lynnfield's schools.
The survey included all METCO families and had a very high (75%) response
rate. In Lynnfield, it included data from the parents of 40 students,
almost all of the transfer students. 72% of the children attending Lynnfield
schools under the program had enrolled by third grade.
Highlights include:
- Among the most important factors influencing parents' decision
to send children to the suburban system were the promise of the suburban
academic program (68% of surveyed parents) and preparation of their
children for college (65% of surveyed parents).
- Though families and students expressed concern about crossing the
city's color line, they actually had highly positive interracial
experiences. 93% of parents reported a good or excellent experience
for their childen in "learning to get along with other groups."
- The families participating in METCO expressed a need for more help
in consolidating educational gains. 46% of students gave this as their
highest priority for improving the program. 39% pointed to the need
for better, more sensitive counselors.
The basic picture that emerges from the survey of the parents is one
of a program that is an important success in a difficult setting but could
be significantly better.
For More Information
Contact Gary Orfield at 617-496-4824 or Christine Sanni at 617-496-5873