Townhall
Vouchers:
My Personal Case
Larry
Elder
Jul 25, 2013
A
Must Read!!
"I
think you should check out
the APEX program," my high school counselor Mrs. Workman suggested.
APEX
stood for Area Program
Enrichment Exchange, and involved several L.A. area high schools,
including
Fairfax High. Intended for "advanced" students, the program allowed
them to take courses not offered at their home school.
In
my case, I had exhausted all of
the Spanish courses at Crenshaw High, the predominately black
inner-city school
I attended. But Fairfax, predominately Jewish, had higher-level courses
and
would accept me.
"It'll
be a way for you to
continue your Spanish -- where, I see from your transcript, you excel.
I'd
suggest you do this," she said.
"How
does the program
work?"
Each
morning, she explained, a
school bus would pick up the APEX students -- by definition a group of
supposedly "high-level, college-bound kids" -- and bus them to their
chosen school. We would attend two classes each morning at the APEX
school,
after which we would be bused back to Crenshaw.
"Where
do I sign?"
Mrs.
Workman laughed, "I
expect you to do well."
About
that I had little doubt.
After all, I made mostly A's, and did particularly well in Spanish. I
ranked sixth
or seventh in a class of 250. Of course I would do well.
But
I didn't.
I
knew I was in for a ride when I
walked into class that first day at Fairfax. The teacher greeted me in
Spanish.
But I noticed that everyone in the class spoke in Spanish. I don't mean
the
halting way I spoke, with iffy grammar and conjugation. These kids were
fluent!
I was shocked.
Despite
the stack of Spanish course
A's I had piled up since middle school, I never really thought
achieving
fluency in a class setting was possible -- unless you lived in Mexico
or Spain
or had Spanish-speaking parents.
But
it became clear that from the
time these Fairfax kids took their first Spanish course -- and, for
that
matter, every other course -- teachers demanded far more from students
than
Crenshaw teachers demanded of us. The Fairfax kids also demanded more
of
themselves. And they were matter-of-fact about the high expectations
their
parents had for them.
When
I came home from that first
day at Fairfax, I cried.
"These
A's I'd been getting,"
I told my mom, "were crap. Probably C's at Fairfax. It's as if I'd been
playing Little League baseball -- and now I'm playing against the
Dodgers."
"You're
right," she said,
"it's not fair -- but do your best. You'll rise to the occasion."
I
got an F on my first test. This
was followed by more F's and D's. There was a lot of oral class
participation,
and the teacher and students were patient as I butchered the language.
They
felt sorry for me.
The
final exam, which accounted for
most of the grade, was a written book report on Don Quixote -- also to
be given
orally, without notes, while standing in front of the class. Holy bleep!
I
busted my butt, worked my way
through the book, and wrote and memorized my presentation. I checked
and
rechecked my report. Then I practiced it in front of the bathroom
mirror. Never
had I worked as hard on anything in school. I vowed not to be
embarrassed…
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