Dozens of students shared their views on the upcoming high school redesign at a meeting last night hosted by Portland Public Schools. The event attracted middle school and high school students from across the districtโ€”most of whom were concerned that the proposed changes would leave them with fewer choices.

The district is planning to turn two or three of its nine neighborhood schools into small โ€œfocus optionโ€ magnet schools, and the rest into more standardized โ€œcommunity comprehensiveโ€ schools. Students would then be required to attend the school in their neighborhood, or apply to a focus school.

Nearly every current high school was represented at the meeting, with two glaring exceptions: Roosevelt, which has been split into three focused academies, and Jefferson, whose North Portland students are some of the poorest in the district. While the redesign is meant to increase socioeconomic and racial equity, the students itโ€™s supposed to help were absent from the meeting.

After a brief slide show outlining the district’s vague goals (close the “opportunity gap,” increase the graduation rate), students broke into groups of ten for pizza and discussion. The groups then presented their concerns to each other and to Zeke Smith, Superintendent Carole Smithโ€™s Chief of Staff.

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โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of information missing,โ€ said one groupโ€™s representative. โ€œWeโ€™re missing an explanation of how the community comprehensive schools can support a broad offering of elective courses.โ€

Other students echoed this concern, that more standardized schools will impede individual exploration. โ€œWe need an independent learning style,โ€ said a Renaissance Arts Academy student from Gresham. โ€œChange wonโ€™t create greater demand.โ€

The rest of the students, who had been instructed to stand up whenever they heard something they agreed with, got a lot of exercise. Some of the most ardent testimony came from students in the Grant cluster. Grant, with over 1,600 students, is considered a โ€œmodelโ€ school and the prospect of its closure has raised fierce opposition from students and parents.

โ€œThe creation of focus schools will compound the flight from what are represented as โ€˜badโ€™ schools,โ€ said one student. Some framed their skepticism more bluntly.

โ€œItโ€™s a fact that there are black people in one area and white people in another,โ€ said a student representative. โ€œDiversity will still be a problem.โ€

What plans there are at this point call for strict limitations on students’ ability to transfer out of their neighborhoods. Students feel that tying high school attendance to residence will exacerbate segregation. โ€œIโ€™m living next to similar people who have lives just like me,โ€ said a student representing another group. โ€œThis would take away the uniqueness of the schools.โ€

Zeke Smith acknowledged that segregation is an important factor, but noted that transfer restrictions would increase racial diversity. He cautioned students against judging other schools. โ€œItโ€™s easy to make assumptions about schools that youโ€™re not at,โ€ he said.

The student added that the districtโ€™s proposals so far seem โ€œvery idealisticโ€ฆ. Youโ€™re not going to the high schools,โ€ she told Smith and Board of Education member David Wynde. โ€œWe are.โ€

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