The Metropolitan Council
for Educational Opportunity is a state-funded educational program
that buses children from Boston to suburban metropolitan communities.
In September of 1966, 220 children from Boston's communities of Roxbury
and the South End were enrolled in seven suburban communities. The
school committees of Arlington, Brookline, Braintree, Lexington, Lincoln,
Newton and Wellesley elected to be the initial participants in this
unique plan. The school systems determined the number of children
they could enroll and which grades they would include.
The initiative for this program can be traced to the concern for
quality education in the African American community, as demonstrated
by the Boston Chapter of the NAACP. In 1963, the NAACP's Education
Committee challenged the Boston School Committee on educational
policies, including the racial imbalance of the schools. Subsequently,
legislation was filed making imbalance illegal and penalizing school
systems by withdrawing State appropriations until suitable plans
to alleviate racial imbalance had been approved by the State Department
of Education. The Boston Public Schools were among the entities
penalized. Suburban communities realized that their children were
inadequately educated as well because of racial isolation. This
combination of concerns resulted in the establishment of the METCO
program.
In 1966, the Newton School Committee voted unanimously to participate
in METCO. This vote was officially supported by many groups within
the community, including the P.T.A. Council, the Newton Fair Housing
Committee, the League of Women Voters, the Roxbury-Newton Freedom
School, and Myrtle Baptist Church, as well as many individuals.
The program began in this community in September 1966, and involved
50 African American students in grades three through six, attending
seven schools in Newton. Newton now sponsors the largest METCO program
with all 19 schools involved and an enrollment of 415 students of
color in grades K-12. Zervas has been a participating school since
1974.
The children are brought by bus from their homes in various Boston
communities and returned by bus at the end of the day. On Tuesdays
and Thursdays, in addition to the regular bus, there is a late bus
at 3:00 p.m. for children to engage in afternoon activities or visit
with their METCO cooperating families and friends. A support system
of families in the Zervas community provides hospitality for the
children and communicates with their parents about school activities.
The METCO coordinators and representatives work with school, families
of both communities, and the METCO office to help the program operate
smoothly. They welcome questions, suggestions, and participation.
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