The New White Flight
In Silicon Valley, two high schools
with outstanding academic reputations
are losing white students
as Asian students move in. Why?
By SUEIN HWANG November 19, 2005; Page A1
CUPERTINO, Calif. -- By most measures, Monta Vista
High here and Lynbrook High, in nearby San Jose, are among the nation's
top public high schools. Both boast stellar test scores, an array of
advanced-placement classes and a track record of sending graduates from
the affluent suburbs of Silicon Valley to prestigious colleges.
But locally, they're also known for something else:
white flight. Over the past 10 years, the proportion of white students
at Lynbrook has fallen by nearly half, to 25% of the student body. At
Monta Vista, white students make up less than one-third of the
population, down from 45% -- this in a town that's half white. Some
white Cupertino parents are instead sending their children to private
schools or moving them to other, whiter public schools. More commonly,
young white families in Silicon Valley say they are avoiding Cupertino
altogether.
![[flight]](http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/P1-AD726_WFLIGH_20051118155611.jpg)
White students are far outnumbered by Asians at Monta Vista High School in Cupertino, Calif.
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Whites aren't quitting the schools because the schools
are failing academically. Quite the contrary: Many white parents say
they're leaving because the schools are too academically driven and too
narrowly invested in subjects such as math and science at the expense
of liberal arts and extracurriculars like sports and other personal
interests.
The two schools, put another way that parents rarely articulate so bluntly, are too Asian.
Cathy Gatley, co-president of Monta Vista High
School's parent-teacher association, recently dissuaded a family with a
young child from moving to Cupertino because there are so few young
white kids left in the public schools. "This may not sound good," she
confides, "but their child may be the only Caucasian kid in the class."
All of Ms. Gatley's four children have attended or are currently
attending Monta Vista. One son, Andrew, 17 years old, took the
high-school exit exam last summer and left the school to avoid the
academic pressure. He is currently working in a pet-supply store. Ms.
Gatley, who is white, says she probably wouldn't have moved to
Cupertino if she had anticipated how much it would change.
In the 1960s, the term "white flight" emerged to
describe the rapid exodus of whites from big cities into the suburbs, a
process that often resulted in the economic degradation of the
remaining community. Back then, the phenomenon was mostly believed to
be sparked by the growth in the population of African-Americans, and to
a lesser degree Hispanics, in some major cities.
But this modern incarnation is different. Across the
country, Asian-Americans have by and large been successful and accepted
into middle- and upper-class communities. Silicon Valley has kept
Cupertino's economy stable, and the town is almost indistinguishable
from many of the suburbs around it. The shrinking number of white
students hasn't hurt the academic standards of Cupertino's schools --
in fact the opposite is true.
This time the effect is more subtle: Some Asians
believe that the resulting lack of diversity creates an atmosphere that
is too sheltering for their children, leaving then unprepared for life
in a country that is only 4% Asian overall. Moreover, many Asians share
some of their white counterpart's concerns. Both groups finger newer
Asian immigrants for the schools' intense competitiveness.
Some whites fear that by avoiding schools with large
Asian populations parents are short-changing their own children, giving
them the idea that they can't compete with Asian kids. "My parents
never let me think that because I'm Caucasian, I'm not going to
succeed," says Jessie Hogin, a white Monta Vista graduate.
The white exodus clearly involves race-based
presumptions, not all of which are positive. One example: Asian parents
are too competitive. That sounds like racism to many of Cupertino's
Asian residents, who resent the fact that their growing numbers and
success are causing many white families to boycott the town altogether.
"It's a stereotype of Asian parents," says Pei-Pei
Yow, a Hewlett-Packard Co. manager and Chinese-American community
leader who sent two kids to Monta Vista. It's like other familiar
biases, she says: "You can't say everybody from the South is a redneck."
Jane Doherty, a retirement-community administrator,
chose to send her two boys elsewhere. When her family moved to
Cupertino from Indiana over a decade ago, Ms. Doherty says her top
priority was moving into a good public-school district. She paid no
heed to a real-estate agent who told her of the town's burgeoning Asian
population.
She says she began to reconsider after her elder son,
Matthew, entered Kennedy, the middle school that feeds Monta Vista. As
he played soccer, Ms. Doherty watched a line of cars across the street
deposit Asian kids for after-school study. She also attended a Monta
Vista parents' night and came away worrying about the school's focus on
test scores and the big-name colleges its graduates attend.
"My sense is that at Monta Vista you're competing
against the child beside you," she says. Ms. Doherty says she believes
the issue stems more from recent immigrants than Asians as a whole.
"Obviously, the concentration of Asian students is really high, and it
does flavor the school," she says.
When Matthew, now a student at Notre Dame, finished
middle school eight years ago, Ms. Doherty decided to send him to
Bellarmine College Preparatory, a Jesuit school that she says has a
culture that "values the whole child." It's also 55% white and 24%
Asian. Her younger son, Kevin, followed suit.
Kevin Doherty, 17, says he's happy his mother made the
switch. Many of his old friends at Kennedy aren't happy at Monta Vista,
he says. "Kids at Bellarmine have a lot of pressure to do well, too,
but they want to learn and do something they want to do."
While California has seen the most pronounced cases of
suburban segregation, some of the developments in Cupertino are also
starting to surface in other parts of the U.S. At Thomas S. Wootton
High School in Rockville, Md., known flippantly to some locals as "Won
Ton," roughly 35% of students are of Asian descent. People who don't
know the school tend to make assumptions about its academics, says
Principal Michael Doran. "Certain stereotypes come to mind -- 'those
people are good at math,' " he says.
In Tenafly, N.J., a well-to-do bedroom community near
New York, the local high school says it expects Asian students to make
up about 36% of its total in the next five years, compared with 27%
today. The district still attracts families of all backgrounds, but
Asians are particularly intent that their kids work hard and excel,
says Anat Eisenberg, a local Coldwell Banker real-estate agent.
"Everybody is caught into this process of driving their kids." Lawrence
Mayer, Tenafly High's vice principal, says he's never heard such
concerns.
Perched on the western end of the Santa Clara valley,
Cupertino was for many years a primarily rural area known for its many
fruit orchards. The beginnings of the tech industry brought
suburbanization, and Cupertino then became a very white,
quintessentially middle-class town of mostly modest ranch homes,
populated by engineers and their families. Apple Computer Inc. planted
its headquarters there.
As the high-tech industry prospered, so did Cupertino.
Today, the orchards are a memory, replaced by numerous shopping malls
and subdivisions that are home to Silicon Valley's prosperous
upper-middle class. While the architecture in Cupertino is largely the
same as in neighboring communities, the town of about 50,000 people now
boasts Indian restaurants, tutoring centers and Asian grocers. Parents
say Cupertino's top schools have become more academically intense over
the past 10 years.
Asian immigrants have surged into the town, granting
it a reputation -- particularly among recent Chinese and South Asian
immigrants -- as a Bay Area locale of choice. Cupertino is now 41%
Asian, up from 24% in 1998.
![[library]](http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/P1-AD731_FLIGHT_20051118182104.jpg)
Students in the library at Lynbrook High School
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Some students struggle in Cupertino's high schools who
might not elsewhere. Monta Vista's Academic Performance Index, which
compares the academic performance of California's schools, reached an
all-time high of 924 out of 1,000 this year, making it one of the
highest-scoring high schools in Northern California. Grades are so high
that a 'B' average puts a student in the bottom third of a class.
"We have great students, which has a lot of upsides,"
says April Scott, Monta Vista's principal. "The downside is what the
kids with a 3.0 GPA think of themselves."
Ms. Scott and her counterpart at Lynbrook know what's
said about their schools being too competitive and dominated by Asians.
"It's easy to buy into those kinds of comments because they're loaded
and powerful," says Ms. Scott, who adds that they paint an inaccurate
picture of Monta Vista. Ms. Scott says many athletic programs are
thriving and points to the school's many extracurricular activities.
She also points out that white students represented 20% of the school's
29 National Merit Semifinalists this year.
Judy Hogin, Jessie's mother and a Cupertino
real-estate agent, believes the school was good for her daughter, who
is now a freshman at the University of California at San Diego. "I know
it's frustrating to some people who have moved away," says Ms. Hogin,
who is white. Jessie, she says, "rose to the challenge."
On a recent autumn day at Lynbrook, crowds of students
spilled out of classrooms for midmorning break. Against a sea of Asian
faces, the few white students were easy to pick out. One boy sat on a
wall, his lighter hair and skin making him stand out from dozens of
others around him. In another corner, four white male students lounged
at a picnic table.
At Cupertino's top schools, administrators, parents
and students say white students end up in the stereotyped role often
applied to other minority groups: the underachievers. In one 9th-grade
algebra class, Lynbrook's lowest-level math class, the students are an
eclectic mix of whites, Asians and other racial and ethnic groups.
"Take a good look," whispered Steve Rowley,
superintendent of the Fremont Union High School District, which covers
the city of Cupertino as well as portions of other neighboring cities.
"This doesn't look like the other classes we're going to."
On the second floor, in advanced-placement chemistry,
only a couple of the 32 students are white and the rest are Asian. Some
white parents, and even some students, say they suspect teachers don't
take white kids as seriously as Asians.
"Many of my Asian friends were convinced that if you
were Asian, you had to confirm you were smart. If you were white, you
had to prove it," says Arar Han, a Monta Vista graduate who recently
co-edited "Asian American X," a book of coming-of-age essays by young
Asian-Americans.
Ms. Gatley, the Monta Vista PTA president, is more blunt: "White kids are thought of as the dumb kids," she says.
Cupertino's administrators and faculty, the majority
of whom are white, adamantly say there's no discrimination against
whites. The administrators say students of all races get along well. In
fact, there's little evidence of any overt racial tension between
students or between their parents.
Mr. Rowley, the school superintendent, however,
concedes that a perception exists that's sometimes called "the
white-boy syndrome." He describes it as: "Kids who are white feel
themselves a distinct minority against a majority culture."
Mr. Rowley, who is white, enrolled his only son,
Eddie, at Lynbrook. When Eddie started freshman geometry, the boy was
frustrated to learn that many of the Asian students in his class had
already taken the course in summer school, Mr. Rowley recalls. That
gave them a big leg up.
To many of Cupertino's Asians, some of the assumptions
made by white parents -- that Asians are excessively competitive and
single-minded -- play into stereotypes. Top schools in nearby, whiter
Palo Alto, which also have very high test scores, also feature heavy
course loads, long hours of homework and overly stressed students, says
Denise Pope, director of Stressed Out Students, a Stanford University
program that has worked with schools in both Palo Alto and Cupertino.
But whites don't seem to be avoiding those institutions, or making the
same negative generalizations, Asian families note, suggesting that
it's not academic competition that makes white parents uncomfortable
but academic competition with Asian-Americans.
Some of Cupertino's Asian residents say they don't
blame white families for leaving. After all, many of the town's Asians
are fretting about the same issues. While acknowledging that the term
Asian embraces a wide diversity of countries, cultures and languages,
they say there's some truth to the criticisms levied against new
immigrant parents, particularly those from countries such as China and
India, who often put a lot of academic pressure on their children.
Some parents and students say these various forces are
creating an unhealthy cultural isolation in the schools. Monta Vista
graduate Mark Seto says he wouldn't send his kids to his alma mater.
"It was a sheltered little world that didn't bear a whole lot of
resemblance to what the rest of the country is like," says Mr. Seto, a
Chinese-American who recently graduated from Yale University. As a
result, he says, "college wasn't an academic adjustment. It was a
cultural adjustment."
Hung Wei, a Chinese-American living in Cupertino, has
become an active campaigner in the community, encouraging Asian parents
to be more aware of their children's emotional development. Ms. Wei,
who is co-president of Monta Vista's PTA with Ms. Gatley, says her
activism stems from the suicide of her daughter, Diana. Ms. Wei says
life in Cupertino and at Monta Vista didn't prepare the young woman for
life at New York University. Diana moved there in 2004 and jumped to
her death from a Manhattan building two months later.
"We emphasize academics so much and protect our kids, I feel there's something lacking in our education," Ms. Wei says.
Cupertino schools are trying to address some of these
issues. Monta Vista recently completed a series of seminars focused on
such issues as helping parents communicate better with their kids, and
Lynbrook last year revised its homework guidelines with the goal of
eliminating excessive and unproductive assignments.
The moves haven't stemmed the flow of whites out of
the schools. Four years ago, Lynn Rosener, a software consultant,
transferred her elder son from Monta Vista to Homestead High, a
Cupertino school with slightly lower test scores. At the new school,
the white student body is declining at a slower rate than at Monta
Vista and currently stands at 52% of the total. Friday-night football
is a tradition, with big half-time shows and usually 1,000 people
packing the stands. The school offers boys' volleyball, a sport at
which Ms. Rosener's son was particularly talented. Monta Vista doesn't.
"It does help to have a lower Asian population," says
Homestead PTA President Mary Anne Norling. "I don't think our parents
are as uptight as if my kids went to Monta Vista."
Write to Suein Hwang at suein.hwang@wsj.com
some random guy's response:
In some ways, this reinforces the model
minority stereotype�the good Asian kids who outperform in grades and
test scores. I get it, we can't get around that. But the model minority
stereotype is also about being "accepted" by whites (on their terms, of
course), and that's not happening here. Asians are not fitting in the
with the prescribed notions of being good little minorities. In fact,
they've become the majority, and that's just too much competition. It's
that fragile line where the model minority graduates to the yellow
peril. And it seems to be scaring a lot of these white parents, to the
point where they're sending their kids elsewhere to even things out
again. The overall attitude of this article bugs the hell out of me,
this presumptuous sense of entitlement. Aw, poor kid, the only white
student in your class? Tough. It happens, so how does it feel?
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