Victor Dunn-Aiken, 17, keeps the tears from his eyes, but not
his voice as he describes a typical school day.
Every morning, he gets up by 5:30 so he can catch a CTA bus from
his home in the Austin neighborhood to Wells Community Academy in
West Town. There, he struggles to learn in a packed building where
tensions run high between students of different ethnic backgrounds
and gang affiliations.
"You don't even know if you're going to walk to the bus stop
without being jumped by kids," Dunn-Aiken said.
He would have preferred to stay closer to home, but his local
school-Austin Community Academy High School-was in the midst of
being phased out in 2004 when he started high school.
A top student in eighth grade, Dunn-Aiken applied for a coveted
spot at one of the city's selective enrollment high schools and was
put on a waiting list.
Coming up on four years later, he still languishes at Wells.
Dunn-Aiken's experience is not unique in this West Side
neighborhood, where the closing of Austin High School after more
than 100 years has left a void in education and frustration in the
community.
Parents and students acknowledge that Austin High School, 231 N.
Pine Ave., had become a "dumping ground" plagued by violence and
low achievement. They are not sure, however, whether Mayor Richard
Daley's Renaissance 2010 plan to close underperforming schools and
replace them with new ones is the best way to fill the education
gap.
Once the lifeblood of the Austin community, the old Austin High
School is now divided into Austin Business and Entrepreneurship
High School on the first floor, and Austin Polytechnical Academy,
scheduled to open upstairs in the fall. A third school is slated
for 2008.
Underlying the changes in education is the idea that new schools
can help transform a community. And Austin could use a revival.
Older residents recall when the neighborhood flourished with
opportunity and the high school racked up trophies in athletics and
academics. In the glory days, Austin High School anchored the
large, racially diverse community. But racial strife, white-flight
and the loss of industry stripped the area of vital jobs, ushering
in unemployment, poverty, drugs and gangs.
On many blocks, crumpled paper and empty liquor bottles litter
untended lawns and groups of young men flood street corners.
"Years ago, Austin wasn't like this," said longtime resident
Dorothy Henderson, 63. "People cared about the property. The
schools weren't that bad to go to."
Leaders at Austin Polytechnic say the school will train students to
reinvest in their neighborhood, ultimately resurrecting Austin's
economic base.
But changing the atmosphere of a school-and the direction of a
community-is not easy, and some youth feel more like causalities
than beneficiaries of change.
"It takes tremendous effort to turn things around," said Giacomo
Mancuso, former director of school demographics and planning for
Chicago Public Schools. "Maybe what CPS is trying to do is to start
doing that, even though it will take time and it's going to be
traumatic.
"But the real issue," he added, "is what happens in the meantime to
the kids who are scattered all over the place."
Some end up like Dunn-Aiken.
He estimates that he spends $75 a month commuting to and from
Wells.
"I been out there with no bus fare at times," he said. "I have to
walk home. It's hard trying to keep bus fare when you don't have a
job, or you're working a job, but you don't get paid enough."
Dunn-Aiken has become the poster child for a campaign to build a
large, new traditional neighborhood high school in Austin. Led by
Virgil Crawford of Westside Health Authority, a group of youth
called the Student Freedom Riders is calling for a state-of-the-art
building that can accommodate more than a thousand students.
In July, Dunn-Aiken went before the Chicago Board of Education to
ask for the new high school. The month before, Alderman Isaac
Carothers (29th) and members of the Westside Ministers Coalition
came with the same request. Both times, President Rufus Williams
said officials were looking at the complex situation in Austin but
made no promises.
The neighborhood is home to approximately 6,600 high school-aged
youth, according to CPS. The old Austin High School could take
1,500 students, but population had fluctuated for years, with many
opting to travel outside their neighborhood for school, said CPS
spokesman Malon Edwards.
When the high school closed, officials made room for students at
Wells Community Academy, Orr Community Academy, Roberto Clemente
Community Academy, Hugh Manley Career Academy High School, John
Marshall Metropolitan High School and George W. Collins High
School.
Of those six, three-Orr, Clemente and Wells-ranked among the worst
in the city at sending graduates to college, according to a 2006
study by the Consortium on Chicago School Research at the
University of Chicago.
Some students remained in Austin at Michele Clark Academic
Preparatory High School and Frederick Douglass Academy, a middle
school that was expanded into a high school.
"I don't feel like I'm getting a real high school experience," said
a boy who attends Douglass. "Sometimes, we don't get all our
books."
Jillona Flowers, 16, was lucky enough to test into Michele Clark,
but she described cramped classrooms and routine violence.
Those problems are bigger than Austin, said Carol Lee, a professor
in Northwestern University's School of Education and Social
Policy
"What's unfortunate is that there are so many bad high schools in
the city," she said. "It really doesn't have anything to do with
geography."
Lee is chairman of the board of directors for Betty Shabazz
International Charter School, which opened DuSable Leadership
Academy three years ago. The small school is one of three that
replaced DuSable High School on the South Side as part of
Renaissance 2010.
While acknowledging that issues arise with every transition, Lee
said the promise of a new school outweighs the small number of
students who may feel left out.
Typically, small schools are built from the ground up, even if they
are put into an existing building. The Austin schools start with
about 150 freshmen and add another grade each year until they hit a
maximum of 600 students at each of the three schools, Edwards
said.
Austin Business and Entrepreneurship High School, which opened last
year, aims to prepare students for college while also teaching them
how to write a business plan.
At Austin Polytechnic, the goal is more specific and deliberate.
Alongside traditional classes in English and world studies, the
school will teach students about complex manufacturing techniques
and connect them to future employers.
"We really see the school as training the next generation of
leaders in manufacturing," said Dan Swinney, project manager for
Austin Polytechnic and executive director of the Chicago
Manufacturing Renaissance Council.
Swinney envisions a day when the site of the old Brach's Candy
Factory on Cicero Avenue bustles with investment.
Not everyone is buying in, though.
Ross Stolzenberg, a sociology professor at the University of
Chicago, said the school's strategy does not make sense "unless
you're going to somehow chain these people to their neighborhoods
for the rest of their lives."
He pointed out that people and companies tend to move, so there is
no guarantee a student will apply their training in their
hometown.
Lee questioned any school's ability to transform a community.
"If there is inadequate housing, inadequate access to jobs,
inadequate access to health care in the neighborhood, a school's
not going to be able to do anything about that," she said. "It's a
job of a school to educate kids well despite their
neighborhoods."
Even if Austin Polytechnic succeeds, the small school cannot save
everyone.
Although students won't have to take an entrance exam, Swinney said
the school is selective, in a sense.
"We had a battle with CPS not to be defined as a neighborhood
school," he said. "We want kids to be here who want to be here. We
didn't take on the obligation to solve the problems of CPS."
He and assistant principal Bernina Brazier said they support the
community's push for a large new high school to take more students,
but their focus is on Austin Polytechnic.
In creating something new, they must decide how much of the old to
preserve.
Brazier recently walked in to see a clean-up crew carelessly
throwing away old trophies. She told them, "Wait a minute. This is
history; you have to keep this."
She is considering opening up the courtyard so students can eat
outside, and new windows are scheduled for late fall.
But the most significant change will be in the school's atmosphere.
Brazier promises administrators will have an open-door policy and
get to know students and their families. Swinney eagerly describes
the school as a springboard for community development.
Meanwhile, Dunn-Aiken is preparing for his last year at Wells. He
plans to study architecture and business in college, but his focus
is not on himself as he volunteers with the Student Freedom
Riders.
"My little sisters, one just graduated (from eighth grade)," he
said. "And I'm wondering where she's going to go to school at,
because I certainly do not want her to come to Wells."
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