Afro-Centric Schooling or Modern-day Segregation in Toronto?

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On January 28th 2008, the Toronto District School Board voted to approve the creation of a highly controversial black focused public school. This black focused school is a supposed solution to the high dropout rate among black youth in Toronto, which runs as high as 40 percent. The school, which is one of three recommended across the city, will focus on black culture and history, as opposed to the mainstream education system which is seen to be Eurocentric. Although the goal of the school is to be open to students of all ethnic background, the title sends a divergent message. The use of the words “black” or “Afro-centric” within the title of the schools creates a distinct and obvious separation within society. It creates an ideology that black or African-descended students are incapable of succeeding in mainstream education, therefore specialized schools, such as black focused schools, will help solve the issue. Although it sounds like the “right thing to do”, creating a black focused school will not completely bolster black student’s attitude and achievements in school. Furthermore, the topic of black focused schools in Toronto is a moral panic, which corresponds to a form of voluntary racial segregation and deteriorates Toronto’s image as a “cultural mosaic”. This essay will explore the background of what a moral panic is and why this strategy is used in society. In addition, this essay will examine the correlation between black focused schools and two sociological theories, the social-conflict theory and the structural functionalist theory. Lastly, this essay will convey the many important reasons why black focused schools will turn Toronto into a partitioned city.

A moral panic is the “magnitude or severity of feeling shown i...

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...st effective solution to the African-Canadian high dropout rate in Toronto.

Works Cited
Dei, G. (1996). Anti-Racism Education. Nova Scotia: Fernwood Publishing.

Dragnea, C. (2008). The Effectiveness of Africentric (Black-Focused) Schools in Closing Student Success and Achievement Gap. Toronto: Toronto District School Board.

Ekwa-Ekoko, I. (2008). Afro-centric Schools within a Multicultural Context: Exploring Different Attitudes Towards the TDSB Proposal within the Black Community. Toronto: Ryerson University.

James, C.E. & Brathwaite, K.S. (1996). Educating African Canadians. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company Ltd.

Silverman, H. & D’Oyley, V. (1976). Black Students in Urban Canada. Toronto: TESL, Talk.

Toronto Board of Education, T.D.S.B. (1996). Education of Black Students in Toronto Schools. Toronto: Toronto Board of Education.

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