Reginald Mosley tried giving the school the benefit of the doubt. Two years ago, the single father of six had moved from Tennessee and enrolled three of his children, ages 5, 6, and 7, in Sankofa Academy in Oakland, California. He and his children liked the community of parents and kids.
But it didn鈥檛 take long for Mosley to see the staggering challenges the school faced. It was woefully short on basic supplies like paper and pencils. Too often, the young, inexperienced teaching staff was doing more crowd-control than teaching. Especially troubling: The school test scores were far lower than the state average. Only 7 percent of the children were proficient in math, compared to the state average of 38 percent, and just 11 percent were proficient in English, compared to the state average of 49 percent.
鈥淭hey were failing the parents and the kids,鈥 says Mosley, who is currently studying to complete a computer programming degree. In his spare time, he tried to lend a hand. He volunteered in his kids鈥 classrooms and frequently checked in with their teachers to ensure his children were on track. He also attempted to organize a PTA, but gave up due to a lack of interest from other parents and little support from the administration.
Mosley felt this lack of support most especially from the principal. 鈥淪he wasn鈥檛 there for the kids,鈥 says Mosley. 鈥淪he was just there for herself.鈥
The printer was the last straw. The school didn鈥檛 have one. Some teachers would beg parents to copy worksheets at their offices. Other teachers gave up on handing out homework altogether. Mosley asked the chief information officer at the University of California at Berkeley if the school could donate a printer. They immediately said yes. The principal, Mosley recounts, wasn鈥檛 interested in the donation. 鈥淚 said, 鈥榃hy would you not want a printer if you don鈥檛 have one?鈥 She said, 鈥榃e don鈥檛 want junk.鈥欌
When the brand new printer arrived at the school, the principal, says Mosley, remained strangely resistant, almost disdainful, of the much-needed donation. Mosley didn鈥檛 stick around to see if the staff ever made use of it. 鈥淭he day they brought it. I left the school,鈥 says Mosley, who transferred his kids to Montclair Elementary, a higher-performing public school.
His children say they prefer their teachers and their new school, but Montclair is not what Mosley wants for his children.
The biggest issue? In a word, says Mosley, 鈥淩ace.鈥
A broken system
About 70 percent of Sankofa Academy students are African American; only 13 percent of the students at Montclair Elementary are black. Mosley wants the best education for his children and he also wants them to be able to grow up in a community where they are not a tiny minority. He doesn鈥檛 want to have to choose between community and academic rigor. Unfortunately, in his experience this is too often the case. Across the nation, lower-income schools, especially those serving mostly African American and Latino students, have fewer resources and place more demands on less-experienced teachers. Perhaps not surprisingly, they also struggle to meet basic academic standards.
鈥淭here are schools that have, and schools that don鈥檛 have,鈥 says Mosley. After witnessing a system he feels is broken, Mosley intends to change that equation. In short order, he鈥檚 become one of those uber-active parents. He serves on Montclair鈥檚 student site council (SSC). He started an English Language Learners (ELL) Committee. When faced with pushback on the need for one, he says he calmly but firmly informed the principal, 鈥淚t鈥檚 against law not to have one.鈥
Next, he鈥檚 taking his mission to the top by running for the school board. Sitting on a board of four to seven people, parents like Mosley can make sweeping changes that will allow them to improve thousands of students鈥 lives. Indeed there is to get more people like Mosley involved with their local school board.
The making of an activist
Mosley had never even attended a local school board meeting before he considered running. So he started attending meetings twice a month. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important parents attend to see what鈥檚 going on, and if the school board is advocating for them,鈥 says Mosley, who found a support base through , a parent-empowerment organization that helped train Mosley to become an effective education activist.
鈥淲e鈥檙e focusing on disrupting the system and empowering parents to focus on their kids,鈥 says Lakisha Young, executive director and founder of , a nonprofit that educates parents on improving their schools. 鈥淚t鈥檚 huge to show power to power; the power of parents in numbers communicating to decision-makers. That鈥檚 a whole different orientation rather than just talking to your teacher and principal.鈥
Historically, the American education system requires a lot involvement from parents. Parents volunteer in the schools, raise money for the PTO, organize reading clubs, and drive carpools for sports teams. But nationwide, organizations like The Oakland REACH are cultivating a new generation of parent leaders who want to make a deep and lasting impact on their school system. They鈥檙e fighting for educational equity in their communities with hope of leveling the disparity between the haves and have-nots.
This nationwide trend is evidenced by a new breed of parent-empowerment organizations, many of which didn鈥檛 exist 10 years ago, including , which has five California bases; in L.A; Houston鈥檚 ; in Washington state; and the . Each of these organizations focus on training and mobilizing parents to become leaders in transforming public education.
鈥淭hese parents aren鈥檛 necessarily part of the PTA,鈥 says Young. 鈥淏ut they are strong advocates for their child. If you get a bunch of troublemakers together, you can do some stuff!鈥
Taking power into their own hands by running for school board
Mosley laughs when asked if he is just such a troublemaker. “Yes, I feel there are people who think that way about me. When you are being a troublemaker, you keep calm, you don鈥檛 get too excited and don鈥檛 focus on anything other than the facts.” For Mosley, “the facts” mean pushing the school and district to adhere to the law so that, he says, “every child has that basic American right, an equal opportunity to a good education.”
To date, through intensive canvassing, Young says her organization has had more than 4,500 one-on-one conversations with Oakland parents and put 250 of them through a six-week training program called Oakland Family Advocacy Fellowship. Having completed his fellowship, Mosley knows that this is just the first stretch of the marathon he’s committed to in running for a spot on the school board in 2020.
While most school boards nationwide are populated with political players with plenty of financial resources, Mosley says he鈥檚 undeterred. 鈥淚t will require a lot of time and effort and energy. But I鈥檓 willing to go through it.鈥 Along with getting an education, and much guidance, from The Oakland REACH, he鈥檚 also involved in , another educational advocacy group.
In the run up to his campaign, Mosley is a star student, diligently doing extra homework by attending meetings every Wednesday night, alternating between Oakland Unified School District鈥檚 (OUSD) school board meetings and PTA meeting at his kids鈥 school. For tips and tactics on launching a school board campaign, .
At a recent OUSD school board meeting, Mosley sits quietly among the large crowd of frustrated parents and students, who are demanding that a cut food program be reinstated, and OUSD staff, who have various demands and grievances. A long line has formed of people waiting to step up to the microphone to address the school board sitting up on the stage. Just recently, Mosley has felt confident enough to stand up and speak to those in power. But at this particular meeting, Mosley intentionally stays seated the entire time, listening. This, he says, is also his strategy: Rather than blustering thoughtlessly ahead, he is carefully watching what to do (and what not to do) so that he can be the most effective possible school board member.
鈥淚f I want things to be different, how do I do it?鈥