Originally posted by bainsidhe
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Black Valedictorian at Arkansas School has a White "Co-Valedictorian" appointed
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Originally posted by Nyoibo View PostPart of the court document mentiones that Thompson "read something in the handbook" I'm now wondering what that might have been.
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I saw this article earlier.
my HS was predominantly white as in 99.9999% white (1500) with 10 black students. my HS was really the only "white" HS in the city of 11 HSs. 3 were mixed (from 30% to 60% black) to 7 that were predominately (90%) to all black
that did change after I left as court ordered bussing was forced upon the city
it also depends on how the defination of Valedictorian is defined.
some schools define it as
the highest GPA and no other criteria
some schools define it as above mixed in with participation in any combination of clubs, sports, community activities/service, school participation, mentoring, student council, or any number of a variety of extra-curicular activities.I'm lost without a paddle and I'm headed up sh*t creek.
I got one foot on a banana peel and the other in the Twilight Zone.
The Fools - Life Sucks Then You Die
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i haven't read the article yet but out of curiosity... does the school normally have a "runner up"?
if the school normally does this anyway then it's not racism.
if they did it specifically for this instance it could qualify - assuming race was the reason for it.
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Typically you have a Valedictorian and a Salutatorian*. In cases where the GPA is a tie, they will declare Co-Valedictorians (or Salutatorians, depending on who ties). That happened to my sister. I'm guessing that the white girl would have been the Salutatorian anyway. (Still pretty good, I was Salutatorian and I got the title, a sash, and got invited to meet the Governor.)
I do think these things should be based solely on GPA, with class difficulty figured into the formula. You start adding extra-curricular activities into the mix, and the decision is no longer objective, it's subjective, and that leads to a lot of drama and hurt feelings.
*I know some very large schools have eliminated this because they wind up with 14 Valedictorians. Other schools have eliminated it because they don't want to hurt feelings by celebrating academic excellence.
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that's what i'm wondering too....
it could easily be something that would have happened anyway regardless of the skin color of the Valedictorian. The real issue may be that some groups want to create a race-based scandal even if race was never a factor.
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Why are you folks trying so hard to downplay the role of race? We're talking about a school that has systematically discouraged non-white students from taking honors classes. A school that, despite having an almost even ratio of white to black students, hasn't had a black valedictorian in over 20 years. A school that, after initially announcing Wimberly as valedictorian, changed their minds and announced a co-valedictorian because of "something in the handbook", as if they were just looking for an excuse to downplay Wimberly's acheivement.
Suppose she was regarded as less worthy because she was a woman with a child. Does that make it all better?"The future is always born in pain... If we are wise what is born of that pain matures into the promise of a better world." --G'Kar, "Babylon 5"
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Because assumptions are not fact. Even if they are most likely correct, it's also possible that by assuming the easiest reason is the reason, the real reason will go unaddressed.
What we do know is that there is bigotry involved. That is undisputed. What form that bigotry takes is still in the discovery phase and will be brought to light as the case proceeds.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Simple... just because someone claims "OMG IT'S RACISM!" doesn't mean it really is.
Navy example I learned about in my Leadership Course.
Junior sailor (JS) was race X. Most of his division (if not all) was race Y. JS wasn't being granted some of the privileges the others had, and was being given crappier jobs and duties.
JS reported it to the command as racism. Was it?
The answer?.... No. It wasn't racism. Even though he was X and everyone else was Y. How is that? JS had been assigned qualifications to complete (Navy calls it PQS). Completing the PQS was required (for all races and genders) before moving up in the division to the better watches and more privileges.
lesson of the day?... pulling a race card doesn't automatically mean it's racism or even related to race.
as for the co mentioned in the article... her grades were lower than the winner... but how much lower... and by the school's ranking system was she truly in second place or much lower?
I mean the way people talk it sounds as if the V was an A+ student and the co was a D+ student, but that may not be the case at all.
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Originally posted by PepperElf View Postas for the co mentioned in the article... her grades were lower than the winner... but how much lower... and by the school's ranking system was she truly in second place or much lower?
I mean the way people talk it sounds as if the V was an A+ student and the co was a D+ student, but that may not be the case at all.Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you. -Flyndaran
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There's also the issue of the separate announcements. If they have a system of co-valedictorians already in place, why announce one person as *the* valedictorian, then announce later that another person is sharing that title?Do not lead, for I may not follow. Do not follow, for I may not lead. Just go over there somewhere.
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