Until January Ashley Evans seemed to be defying the
odds. Unlike 65 percent of New York City 's
minority youth, the 18-year-old cheerleader was poised to graduate from August Martin
High School this June after four years
in the Jamaica , Queens school. Evans would have been one of the estimated
120 students to walk across the stage on graduation day.
But during the early morning hours of Jan. 27,
Ashley Evans became part of a new set of statistics. Evans and six others
ranging in age from 14 to 23 have been charged in connection with murder of
28-year-old Nicole duFresne on the city’s Lower East Side. Evans is being held
at Riker’s Island Correctional Facility facing second-degree murder charges. She
is among the black and Hispanic youth who comprise 95 percent of the city’s
total juvenile inmates, according to the Correctional Association of New York.
A report issued last year by the Civil Rights
Project at Harvard University found that New York State
has the worst overall graduation rates for black and Hispanic minority
students. While nationwide 50 percent of minority youth graduate within four
years, in New York
the figure stands at 35 percent. The report also said that due to discrepancies
in reporting, the actual drop-out rate may be even higher.
Jason Blonstein, a professor of urban education at
Steinhardt, said there are several causes that can explain New York state’s dropout rate. First, he
noted that New York City
minority students have a tendency to change school districts several times even
before they reach high school. “Students who move from school to school,
neighborhood to neighborhood, seeing the world through the lens of poverty and
its attendant tendencies toward crime and hopelessness” are more likely to lack
adult mentors and role models and oftentimes turn to criminal activity or
drugs.
“No school reform effort, particularly the lame
attempt at uniformity by the New York
City system, aimed at cognitive achievement will
affect [this issue],” Blonstein said.
He also cited school class size as a factor. More
effective schools, he said, must have smaller class sizes and more
extracurricular programs “to compete with the opportunities for sloth and
escape outside the school.”
Evans likely had class sizes nearing 35 students,
the average at August Martin. Her school averages 13 more students per class
than New York
state’s average of 22 students, according to the National Education
Association.
The Center for Civic Innovation reported that more
female than male students graduate within four years, 54 percent to 45 percent.
In fact, the school enrollment numbers for women have been steadily increasing
according to a January 2005 report by the Community Service Society of New
York. While male enrollment dropped by 1.2 percent from 1996 to 2003, females
in New York
City schools increased their enrollment by 7.1 percent.
The Women In Prison Project reported that from 2002
to 2003, the number of female prisoners nationwide rose by 6.3 percent, nearly
double the increase by men. Many of these women were, like Evans, of high
school age. The National Criminal Reference Service reported that in 2003, 20.4
percent of all females arrested were juveniles.
The Women In Prison Project noted that of among
incarcerated women, more than 60 percent lack a high school diploma and only 44
percent can read above an eighth grade level.
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