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Serial

Nice White Parents - Ep. 2

Serial

Serial Productions & The New York Times

True Crime, News, Society & Culture

4.581.9K Ratings

🗓️ 20 August 2020

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

White parents in the 1960s fought to be part of a new, racially integrated school. Where’d they go?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

These first two episodes of nice white parents are free, but to hear the whole

0:07.1

series you'll need to subscribe to the New York Times, where you'll get access

0:10.9

to all the serial productions and New York Times shows.

0:14.0

And it's super easy.

0:15.6

You can sign up through Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

0:18.7

And if you're already a time subscriber, just link your account and you're done.

0:25.0

The New York City Board of Education has an archive of all of its records.

0:30.0

Everything that goes into making thousands of schools run for years and years is sitting in boxes in the municipal building.

0:37.0

I love the BOE archive.

0:40.0

First of all, to look through it, you have to go to a century old municipal building downtown

0:46.7

Arch doorways lots of marble and echo vaulted ceilings really makes a person feel like she's up to something important.

0:54.8

You sit at a table and a librarian rolls your boxes up to you on a cart.

1:00.1

Inside the boxes are all the dramas of a school system.

1:03.0

Big ones, tiny ones, bureaucratic, personal, it's all in there.

1:07.0

There's a union contract and then a zoning plan

1:10.0

and special reports on teacher credentialing.

1:12.0

A weird personal note from a bureaucrat to his assistant,

1:16.4

a three-page single-spaced plea from Cindy's grandmother who would please like for her not

1:21.4

to be held back in the second grade.

1:24.4

An historian friend once pulled a folder out of the archive and a note fell out,

1:28.7

something a teacher clearly made a kid right in the 1950s that read quote I am a lazy boy.

1:36.0

Miss Fitzgerald says when I go in the army I will be expendable.

...

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