City’s Public Schools
Have Broken Down. . . Nothing Less Than a Half Million bond Issue and Higher
Tax Rate Will Avert Disaster Says Educational Expert
Elizabeth City has reached a crisis in its public schools
and there is only one thing to do about it. Elizabeth City may as well face the
facts and prepare to spend $500,000 in new school buildings within the next two
years. And instead of paying a niggardly school tax of 50 cents on the $100
valuation of property, Elizabeth City may as well prepare to pay 75 cents to $1
on the $100, based on the old valuation of property.
Elizabeth City has, in round numbers, 2,200 school children
crowded into 46 inadequate class rooms, taught by 50 teachers. Elizabeth city’s
public school system actually needs nearer 79 school rooms and as many
teachers.
The High School Building on Road Street, built about 10
years ago, doesn’t at all answer the requirements of a modern High School and
should be used only for intermediate work.
The enrollment of pupils in Elizabeth City’s public schools
increases at a rate of 150 a year. That has been the rate of increase for the
past 10 years. The increase may be greater during the next 10 years; hardly
less. This means that Elizabeth City Schools require four ore school rooms and
four more teachers every year. There isn’t a square foot of space left in the
present building. In the High School Building, the basement, the auditorium
stage, dressing rooms, cloak rooms, etc., have been pressed into use for class
rooms. The building is not made of India rubber and can’t be stretched.
Unless Elizabeth City does something big and does it at once
150 to 200 children of school age will be turned into the streets when the
schools open next fall.
That is the situation to-day. And, to make matters worse,
the schools are in debt--$57,843.07, according to figures supplied this
newspaper by Supt. S.L. Sheep this week.
Elizabeth City is trying to carry on its public school
system with a school tax of 50 cents on the $100. That is the average for the
entire state, including the sorriest rural schools. Only eight states in the
union pay less taxes for support of schools. Our otherwise backward sister
South Carolina pays 81 cents per $100. Tennessee pays 88 cents per $100.
Dr. L.A. Williams, an educational expert from the School of
Education of the University of North Carolina spent Monday and Tuesday of this
week in Elizabeth City, making a survey of the city’s schools. Mr. Williams
found only what those in close touch with the situation already knew. The idea
in getting him here was to add the weight of an impartial expert outside
testimony to the appeals of local advocates of higher school taxes and better
schools.
Dr. Williams says Elizabeth City should at once launch a
half million dollar program for school betterment. To begin with there should
be a bond issue of $250,000 to build a new High School Building next year. This
should be followed in another 12 months with an additional quarter million
dollar bond issue with which to build an elementary school for white children
and a school for colored children.
Dr. Williams did not say much about the colored children. He
said: “The less we say about our Negro schools, the better.” The truth of the
matter is, Elizabeth City should hang its head in shame for its treatment of
its Negro children. The Negro public schools of Elizabeth City are a disgrace
to a civilized community.
In the colored public school of the city an enrollment of
595 children from the first to the fifth grades are packed into 10 dilapidated
school rooms. None are taught beyond the fifth grade. About 200 who have gone
beyond the fifth grade have been unloaded on the State Normal School. The last
session of the General Assembly threatened to put an end to this near graft,
but out of sympathy for the Negro permitted the practice to go on upon the
condition that Elizabeth City pay the salaries of two teachers at the State
Normal.
In one Negro public school in our town, the Sawyertown
School, 108 colored children are taught by one teacher in one room. The teacher
is Mrs. Annie E. Jones and she is a remarkable woman. With 108 small Negro
children ranging from 6 to 13 years of age, this colored woman is accomplishing
educational wonders, doing the work of two or three teachers and doing better
work than most primary grade teachers do. There are few educators who could not
learn something in methods of primary instruction from Annie Jones. After
observing her work one day this week Dr. Williams said: “You’ve got to hand it
to her; she knows her work.”
And so here are the conditions in Elizabeth City’s public
schools to-day, facts which the public must face. Dr. Williams presented many
of the facts here at a mass meeting of citizens Monday night. Only two of the
city’s larger tax payers were present at the meeting. This means that the big
tax payers as a rule don’t want to face the facts and are not going to take the
lead in reconstructing our school system. The plain people have got to take the
thing into their own hands and not wait for the leadership of the big tax
payers.
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