Here's something to think about: how many people would be upset about Vashon's academic standing if it weren't in the news for its basketball team? I taught for two years at an elementary school a few blocks from Vashon. My girlfriend taught for a year at Vashon and year at its freshman center, the year that was created. We were at the game when they won the championship in 2006. I listened to the rich, white parents of the losing team boo the kids from the hood as they celebrated their win. I've met Floyd Irons. His $90K salary wasn't just for coaching basketball. He was also the district's athletic director. $90K is not an outrageous salary for an experienced, top-tier administrator of a large school district. I have incredibly conflicted feelings about this whole thing. I guess I won't go into my typical educational equality screed here on SportsFi. But I think it's important to note that both of the Hills graduated from high school. That, in itself, is a significant accomplishment in that community. They're in college. Kids from St. Louis (I don't know anything about Alton) don't go to college unless one or more adults takes an active interest is helping them get there. Floyd Irons appears to have done that for these boys. I think he did a lot of sketchy things in his years at Vashon, but there's no arguing with the fact that many kids got opportunities they would otherwise not have gotten thanks to his successful basketball program. Also, pointing at Vashon's low academic standing and implying that it therefore shouldn't have a successful basketball program seems wrongheaded. That school needs all the success it can possibly find, from anywhere it can find it (it certainly did not find it in its PhatLobley-coached soccer team, but that's a story for another day). Who is to blame for the poor academic standing? What can we do about it? Quitting while I'm ahead.
Here's something to think about: how many people would be upset about Vashon's academic standing if it weren't in the news for its basketball team? One here. My girlfriend taught for a year at Vashon and year at its freshman center, the year that was created. My understanding was that the Freshman center was created in order to enhance the learning environment for the entire freshman class. Also, the seniors that were projected to graduate, were moved to college programs off campus. University of Missouri Saint Louis and Ranken Technical college are involved as well. All of which I think is great and will ultimately benefit the student's future and then the school's rank. The problem I have is, these changes were put in place just a few years after building the 40 million dollar campus. And it left the "new" campus at 50-60% capacity. And since, the superintendent who made these changes has been removed by the schoolboard after an audit. I am not convinced that education was on the top of the list when the new campus was built. I think he did a lot of sketchy things in his years at Vashon, but there's no arguing with the fact that many kids got opportunities they would otherwise not have gotten thanks to his successful basketball program. Agreed. But the oppurtunities should be available for the kids in the district. Maybe there were two young men in the district that should've been on that basketball team, but the roster was full because Floyd Irons pulled in the Hills' from out of state. Also, pointing at Vashon's low academic standing and implying that it therefore shouldn't have a successful basketball program seems wrongheaded. If you feel that's what is implied, let me rephrase my take on this. If the school in question is a privately-funded operation, and they want to run their academics into the ground, but produce the greatest shotput team in the state, fine, do it. Why? Because parents have the choice to send or not send their kids to that school. But when the school is a city, state, and tax dollar funded public high school, the primary goal should be on education, or the only kids that will have a future will be the ones with superior athletic ability. Why? Because that area of Saint Louis is primarily low-income households, those parents do not have the option to pick a private school that meets their child's needs. They need to rely on the Saint Louis School Board to provide the best possible level of education to their kids.
Please don't take anything I said to imply support for SLPS management. That district is a god-awful mess and it is going to take years to get it on the right track. I'm not sure that the either/ or focus on athletics vs. academics is as zero-sum as you describe. The basketball team had a contract with Nike and brings in a lot of money from admissions and playing in tournaments. I agree that SLPS's focus should be on academics- it's a school district for crying out loud- but I'm not sure that all of their sports teams need to be as bad as my soccer team was (we didn't even have practices!) in order to do that. I can definitely understand how superfluous and extravagant basketball at the V seems, but I guess I saw the good things it did for the boys on the team. Irons might have been personally corrupt in a lot of ways, but the kids on the team (at least the ones that talked to my girlfriend about it) walked the straight and narrow because they knew Irons wouldn't tolerate them doing otherwise. I don't know for sure if the basketball team was a net loss or gain for the district academically, but my perspective walking in here was from the point of view of the players it helped personally. It was also cool to see the community rallied around the school to some extent. It's not like middle-class America where that's your natural and passionate entity to pledge allegiance first. If I wasn't so passionate about Detroit, I'd look forward to returning to StL to fix its schools someday. BoKnows, I'll leave it up to you!