Why Rural Schools Matter
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Why Rural Schools Matter

Mara Casey Tieken

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eBook - ePub

Why Rural Schools Matter

Mara Casey Tieken

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About This Book

From headlines to documentaries, urban schools are at the center of current debates about education. From these accounts, one would never know that 51 million Americans live in rural communities and depend on their public schools to meet not only educational but also social and economic needs. For many communities, these schools are the ties that bind. Why Rural Schools Matter shares the untold story of rural education. Drawing upon extensive research in two southern towns, Mara Tieken exposes the complicated ways in which schools shape the racial dynamics of their towns and sustain the communities that surround them. The growing power of the state, however, brings the threat of rural school closure, which jeopardizes the education of children and the future of communities. With a nuanced understanding of the complicated relationship between communities and schools, Tieken warns us that current education policies--which narrow schools' purpose to academic achievement alone--endanger rural America and undermine the potential of a school, whether rural or urban, to sustain a community. Vividly demonstrating the effects of constricted definitions of public education in an era of economic turmoil and widening inequality, Tieken calls for a more contextual approach to education policymaking, involving both state and community.

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Information

Year
2014
ISBN
9781469618494

Chapter One: The Meaning of a School

The drive to school was quick, just fourteen miles—U.S. Route 70 to Yellow Creek, a right onto Tennessee State Route 235, and then a left at the small red barn with the single cow at its fence. A couple of miles down on the right—after the green road sign marking the Vanleer town line, a string of apartments patrolled by cats, and a few closed shops, furniture piled in their dusty windows—was Vanleer Elementary School, an old wooden schoolhouse surrounded by a handful of trailers and a cinderblock gym. The drive from home to school was quick in the early mornings, a drive past smoke-ringed tobacco barns and long-fallow fields, just fourteen minutes down fourteen miles of empty open road.
It was still warm when I left home to get back for the school’s fund-raiser supper. The sun still glinted off steep barn roofs; the afternoon shadows still stretched across the fields; and the wide pavement still baked in the warmth of October. Quick up Yellow Creek and onto an empty Route 235, left at the lonely barn and then . . . standstill—a long line of cars filling the road, with pickups sidling onto gravel shoulders and minivans pulling to a stop.
The school’s lot was past full—people must have started arriving shortly after the last bell that afternoon—and cars covered the playground, the field, and the school’s short drive. We parked—me, the cars before and behind me, all pulling onto the grassy roadside—and joined the crowd walking toward school. I saw a few families and students that I knew—a couple of children were my own third graders—but most I didn't recognize. They knew one another, though, shouting greetings over parked cars, children running ahead and adults balancing pies and cakes in their arms. I made my way to the back doors of the cafeteria, which stood open to release the heat of food and crowds, the clatter of dishes and voices, and the sharp smell of turnip greens. Dark piles of the steaming greens, kettledrum vats of white beans, greasy wedges of cornbread, coolers of iced tea, and endless platters of desserts covered the serving line. The supply of food was immense, enough to feed armies.
The food didn't surprise me; I'd come to expect these quantities at suppers in Tennessee. It was the crowd that astonished me—all the cars that lined the darkening road and the people that now filled the cafeteria. Adults were squeezed in at tables made for children, babies were perched on laps and shoulders, Styrofoam trays were laid end to end, and a long line of hungry people was circling the tables and snaking toward the back. Even with the preparations all week—the farmer volunteering his acres of turnips, the teachers picking their leafy tops, the washed greens lying on towels throughout the kitchen, the beans simmering on the stoves, the pile of cookies growing in the back room—I still hadn't expected this crowd. This sleepy, no-stop-light, more-closed-than-open town and its surrounding, equally sleepy hollows had suddenly yielded an entire community of people, a community of students and parents and grandparents and alumni and cousins and friends stretching back generations, an entire community hungry for beans and greens, for food and fellowship. That night, this community turned out for its school. And it would again and again—for auctions and Christmas concerts and firehouse fund-raisers, to raise property taxes and christen a new school building, to fight off consolidation one more time.
It was here, over three years of beans and greens suppers, the ground-level skirmishes and compromises of education politics, and the quiet rhythms of ordinary school days, that I—a young teacher, new to Vanleer, new to life in a rural town—began to learn just what a school means to a community. The school, it became clear, was important socially; it sustained relationships between students and teachers, sustained ties among alumni and across generations, sustained me and my quickly growing roots in this place. And it mattered economically, too, bringing business to the few gas stations, the little meat-and-three, and the small bank right down the road.
But these more obvious lessons of fellowship and finance gave way to complexities. I would soon notice other patterns—cafeteria benches lined with singularly white families, classroom desks filled with nearly all white children, crowds less striking for whom they included than for whom they didn't. I would notice the silence about race and the quiet assumption that race simply didn't matter to a rural, almost entirely white school like Vanleer. And, eventually, I would hear rumors of a lynching tree, an old tree with smooth, wide limbs standing just outside town. I would wonder about the knotty racial histories hidden below this tranquil surface and wonder how the school was tangled in these histories and patterns, too.
And I would learn more about the tensions buzzing through the hallways and classrooms, tensions fueled by the growing power of the state and federal governments, tensions that led to a constant anxiety about the future. I would learn to prominently display my blue book of Tennessee state standards on my desk, and, for a few days every spring, I would send my students home with messages about the value of a good breakfast, arrange their desks at odd angles throughout the room, refuse to answer panicked requests for assistance, and pass out the state test booklets—and I would wonder about all of the things that now weren't getting taught. I would hear the threats of consolidation, whispered fears that would ripple through the staff, fears that the district’s smallest, most rural school would finally be deemed just too small and too rural to remain open and the children would be bused to other, larger facilities.
This relationship shared by school and community was complex. Built through histories of racialized inequalities and complicated by current education policies, it seemed to define and shape both school and community in meaningful and consequential ways. For better and for worse, this town depended upon this school.
Yet this relationship was also, largely, an ignored relationship. While I taught in Vanleer, legislators in the state’s capital and Washington, D.C., continued to issue educational policies that seemed mostly irrelevant—at best, meaningless to this school and the community that depended upon it; at worst, impossible in their demands and damaging in their effects. The irony was striking: there seemed to be so much useful and significant in the relationship tying rural school to community—an imperfect and important relationship—yet policy makers simply failed to acknowledge it, to appreciate its possibilities or address its flaws. For all the growing attention paid to education, with policies like No Child Left Behind and debates about standards and failing schools filling newspaper headlines, these policy makers seemed to miss so much.
And when I left Vanleer for graduate school, I was disappointed again, at least at first. What the policy makers missed, many academics did, too. Education research, in its focus on urban schools, mostly overlooks rural schools and communities. The books and articles assigned in my classes failed to reflect my experiences in Vanleer and, I would wager, the lives and understandings of rural community members elsewhere. These texts never mentioned the promise of a crowded rural cafeteria or the stark reality of an old lynching tree, never addressed the messy overlap of rural community and rural school, never examined the habits of inclusion and exclusion a rural school can perpetuate in a rural community. They simply didn't cover rural geographies, simply didn't notice the urban bias of school reform. They didn't ask the kinds of questions about community and race and power that seemed so consequential here.
But the questions remained. I wanted to understand this relationship, to understand whether and why and how a rural school matters to a rural community. I wanted to understand the particulars and complexities of this relationship, to grasp its imperfections. I wanted to know what roles a public school could play in a rural community, how it could shape a community’s economics and politics, its relationships and its demographics, its borders and its boundaries, and I wanted to see how context—long-standing racial contexts and current school-reform contexts—could color these roles. And, too, I wanted to return to a rural town, to know and be known in particular places and particular communities. I wanted to be back in a crowded cafeteria, sitting with a plate of beans and greens and feeling rooted once more.

RURAL TEACHER

I moved to Tennessee in 2002 to teach in a rural school. I had wanted a rural teaching job since getting my elementary teaching certification in college, since experiencing the awkward irony of reading about urban schools and talking about urban education and debating urban reform while student teaching in a small, rural Vermont elementary school. Rural teaching—even the short, sleepless stint of student teaching—seemed so different from these urban tales. Overcrowding wasn't an issue in my little Vermont school; undercrowding was. Cultural relevance meant four-wheeling and country music and hunting, never hip-hop or subways or high rises. I couldn't have avoided knowing my students if I'd wanted to. But other issues seemed strikingly, terribly similar: transience, poverty, drug and alcohol abuse. Rural teaching had all of the challenge and hard questions of urban teaching, yet remained somehow distinctive, and so, after graduation, I wanted more—more rural teaching.
I would find a rural teaching position, a position teaching third grade at Vanleer Elementary School, in Vanleer, Tennessee. But finding it—finding a rural position—was tricky. I was soon questioning what I even meant by “rural”—was “rural” about isolation? Sparse populations? Livestock and barns? Governmental designations were of little help. The federal government, for example, currently uses over fifteen different definitions of rural,1 each tied to the needs and purposes of a particular organization2—with many locales falling into the nebulous sometimes-rural category. The most common conceptions I found—those offered by the U.S. Census Bureau, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the Economic Research Service (ERS)3—have their own problems. The census and the OMB both rely on dichotomous classifications, with the census labeling geographic areas as urban or rural and the OMB using a metropolitan/nonmetropolitan distinction,4 while the ERS provides a more fine-grained classification system, parsing the metropolitan/nonmetropolitan categories by size of the metropolitan area and a nonmetropolitan area’s degree of urbanization and proximity to a metropolitan area. But these definitions rely upon distinctions that make “rural” or “nonmetropolitan” “residual” categories culled from what’s “left over”5—essentially, what “urban” and “metropolitan” are not.6 Even with all of the color-coded maps, these definitions seemed only to render rural invisible. They felt slippery and reductive; I was looking for a job in a place that wasn't there.
Ultimately, I chose Vanleer not for any official designation or specific demographics, but simply because it felt rural, in some real and authentic way. And it’s this feeling—something beyond the size of a population or its proximity to a city7—that many rural scholars and advocates feel should actually define rural: “the rural in rural is not most significantly the boundary around it, but the meanings inherent in rural lives, wherever lived.”8 “Rural,” then, is a matter of the commonplace interactions and events that constitute the rural “lifeworld,” a value mostly overlooked by the media and academia, and a significance impossible to quantify. This understanding, shared by many of the residents of rural communities, is tied to place; it provides a geography-dependent sense of belonging.9 Rural, in this conception, is not simply a matter of boundaries.10 It constitutes one’s identity; it shapes one’s perspectives and understandings; and it gives meaning to one’s daily experiences. This identity, this shared and place-dependent sense of rural belonging, gives rural its significance. It’s this rural that I found in Vanleer.
And I loved rural teaching. I loved the challenge of getting multiplication to make sense to third graders. I loved the silence when I reached the last pages of Where the Red Fern Grows and the feel of small arms wrapped around my waist. I loved the slow time outside the classroom: picking blackberries in my students’ backyards, learning to can peppers with the ladies in the cafeteria, hunting for morels if the spring rains had been just right. I loved seeing students and parents after school in the parking lot and then seeing them again at the gas station and then later at the football game and then on Sunday at Walmart. I loved that I couldn't separate the “rural” from “teaching,” that teaching here was completely and utterly tied to this very particular place.
But there were parts I hated. I hated the story problem about an escalator on the state’s math test, a problem many of my students would miss simply because they had never ridden an escalator. I hated feeling as though the teaching and curriculum books were never written for my teaching, the state and federal policies were never written for my school. I hated knowing that when the demographics of this little community changed, as they began to just before I left, there would be few resources available to support the necessary and hard work of changing practice, and maybe changing some hearts and minds, too. I hated that this school, by virtue of its geography, would always risk closure. I hated the rural invisibility—the neglect by policy makers that left racial and geographic inequalities unacknowledged and unchecked. I hated being a part of a system that I couldn't quite buy into. And so I left. I took all of my questions and confusions and indignations and went to graduate school.

A RURAL RATIONALE

I have now spent years flying in and out of Arkansas, years working on this study, years justifying my academic interest in rural schools and communities, years explaining to curious urbanites and race-conscious practitioners why I care about rural places. This curiosity—or incredulity—still surprises me, for rural America is hardly small or insignificant or raceless. The 2010 census recorded 51 million nonmetropolitan residents11 living in rural communities with varied geographies, demographic compositions, economies, histories, and social fabrics.12 Rural America covers Native American reservation communities in the West, small mostly white New England fishing villages, midwestern farm towns with growing Latino populations, African American communities scattered along the Mississippi Delta, and isolated hamlets tucked into the Appalachians and Rockies. Racial and ethnic diversity is increasing in rural areas. White residents made up 77.8 percent of the rural population in 2010, followed by African Americans at 8.2 percent and Hispanics at 9.3 percent, with Native Americans constituting the majority of the remaining share.13 But the proportion of white rural residents is dropping, while the Hispanic population is growing.14 And poverty is tied to geography and race in complicated ways: 15.4 percent of the nonmetropolitan population lived in poverty in 2007, compared to a national rate of 12.5 percent,15 though some towns—picturesque beachfront and ski towns, filled with retirees and second-home owners—enjoy resources and opportunities most communities in Appalachia and the Delta never will.16 Rural America is a vast, diverse expanse, stratified by the same race and class lines that slice urban America.
But the skepticism I encounter is likely less about population counts and demographics than about mythology, I think. Stereotypes and assumptions about rural communities and people are laced throughout popular culture and perpetuated by mainstream media,17 and can even creep into research and reform.18 Two somewhat contradictory myths dominate. The first is about deprivation and decline: “rural” is backwoods, backwater, and backward, its residents assumed to be ignorant, lawless, and provincial, its communities little different than those portrayed in the movie Deliverance. The second myth draws from a romantic nostalgia: this “rural” is equated with uncomplicated simplicity, with some sort of lost golden age, an image that, while kinder, is no mor...

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