History
METCO HISTORY
• 1964
Boston’s School Committee has refused to improve the decrepit schools available in black neighborhoods demanded by the NAACP, or to acknowledge the unconstitutional segregation exposed by the Kiernan Commission, or to comply with the Racial Imbalance Act that required a plan from cities with demonstrable racial segregation.
Fed up, a group of parents boycott their assigned schools and attend “Freedom Schools” set up by churches and community centers. Many white students from the suburbs join them in solidarity. Still, white activist parents and officials reject all city proposals to improve schools or bus students.
• 1965
Taking matters into their own hands, two African-American parents, Ellen Jackson and Elizabeth Johnson, lead “Operation Exodus” as the school year begins. Four hundred Roxbury students enroll in mostly white schools in Boston neighborhoods with surplus capacity.
School leaders in Brookline and Newton begin to ask how they can participate. With the NAACP's Ruth Batson, they develop the Metropolitan Council for Educational Opportunity. They advocate for a state funding stream for any town that wishes to enroll Boston students in its public schools in order to address racial isolation.
• 1966
The first 220 students, aged 5 to 16, ride buses from Boston neighborhoods to schools in seven suburbs: Arlington, Braintree, Brookline, Lexington, Lincoln, Newton, and Wellesley. The U.S. Department of Education and the Carnegie Corporation foot the bill.
• 1968
The state legislature passes Massachusetts General Law Chapter 76, Section 12A, which grants school committees the right to “adopt a plan for attendance at its schools by any child who resides in another city, town, or regional school district in which racial imbalance...exists in a public school [in order to] eliminate such racial imbalance.” It makes the Commonwealth of Massachusetts financially responsible for any town that wishes to enroll students from outside the district for the purpose of racial integration, subject to legislative budget decisions.
• 1973
Jean McGuire becomes the fourth executive director of METCO. She leads the organization for the next 43 years.
• 1975
METCO Directors in participating districts form the METCO Directors' Association (MDA) to provide support and resource-sharing across towns. It has evolved to be a leading convener of trainings and knowledge on multicultural education, parent empowerment, and advocacy for sustaining and improving the METCO program.
• 1976
Ten years after its start, a total of 37 receiving districts had signed on to host METCO students.
• 1986
A drop in state funding prompts heated debate and organizing among METCO staff and supporters. In an effort to set standards for what districts are obliged to provide in exchange for receiving part of the grant, METCO Directors form a Needs Assessment Task Force to assess disparities and define expectations.
• 1993
METCO Directors from seven suburban districts create a training program called Empowering Multicultural Initiatives (EMI) to help teachers and administrators grow their anti-racism practices, advocate for multicultural curricula, and foster truly inclusive equitable classroom environments.
• 1996
Demographic changes prompt the Massachusetts Department of Education to order METCO to accept Asian and Hispanic students proportionately to their populations in the city. The percentage of African-American METCO families begins to decline as the full range of communities of color are invited to participate.
• 2011
The Pioneer Institute and Harvard Law School released a comprehensive research paper on METCO, called “METCO Merits More,” concluding that “it is important to preserve METCO and put energy and resources into improving it because it effectively provides thousands of students access to well-functioning, opportunity-rich schools and creates racial and ethnic diversity, which is linked to numerous educational benefits for students of all racial backgrounds.”
• 2016
METCO celebrates its 50th anniversary, serving over 3,300 students in over 190 public schools across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It has become a Boston-area institution, helping thousands of students learn and grow up with diverse classmates and excellent educational opportunities, and go on to be civic leaders and accomplished community members. If you're one of them, join the METCO Alumni Network!
• 2018
The Board of Directors appoints community activist and METCO parent Milly Arbaje-Thomas to be the first CEO of METCO.