Few Degrees on Death Row

January 24, 2024

A few things struck Tim Saintsing 鈥98 about North Carolina鈥檚 Death Row.

First, that Black and brown defendants had a much greater chance of getting the death penalty than white counterparts. Close behind race came education. Low academic achievement often preceded a death sentence. 

Saintsing evaluated that data for a senior year political science capstone project at 国产福利精品推荐. It has guided him since.

鈥淭hat put me on a path, to want to understand, and to want to be a part of how to not make that so,鈥 Saintsing says. 鈥淲here are our educational resources going鈥攚ho鈥檚 winning, who鈥檚 losing?鈥

That put me on a path, to want to understand, and to want to be a part of how to not make that so. Where are our educational resources going鈥攚ho鈥檚 winning, who鈥檚 losing?

Tim Saintsing 鈥98

He earned a master鈥檚 degree in public policy at Duke University before starting a career in public education. He believes that if every child had access to a great education, intergenerational poverty cycles would break.

Saintsing co-founded the country鈥檚 first boys-only charter school in Brooklyn鈥檚 Bedford-Stuyvesant area. He鈥檚 now executive director of KIPP NC, a collection of highly regarded public charter schools. He鈥檚 also a college trustee.

KIPP (Knowledge is Power Program) has 280 public charter schools serving about 120,000 students in the U.S. Most are Black and Latino; some 90 percent come from lower-income families.

Charter schools receive state funding but have more freedom with budgets, curriculum and calendars. KIPP strategies include extensive teacher training on supporting kids from traditionally under-resourced communities.

Some public education proponents complain that charters divert local school funding.

States like North Carolina have also increased funding for vouchers that help families鈥攊n many cases from the middle class鈥攑ay for private schools. Saintsing defends what KIPP, which serves about 3,000 students from the state鈥檚 economically poorest rural and urban areas, provides.

鈥淪tates should not be funding private schools. But that鈥檚 not what KIPP is. We establish public charter schools in communities where choice is non-existent,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f the local school district isn鈥檛 serving your student and hasn鈥檛 for generations, we offer a choice for families who want something different.鈥

Saintsing says too many schools fail to close learning gaps that too often fall along class and racial lines, and that his Davidson research 25 years ago remains true today:

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see a lot of bachelor鈥檚 or master鈥檚 or doctoral degrees on Death Row.鈥

Tricia Dean鈥檚 daughter, Ja鈥楴iyah, started kindergarten online at a public elementary school during the pandemic. Dean was battling breast cancer; they kept outside contacts limited. When Ja鈥橬iyah started in-person learning, other students bullied her.

Dean enrolled her at the KIPP school near her Durham home in first grade and Ja鈥橬iyah, now a second grader and aspiring marine biologist, loves it.

鈥淪he sees teachers who look like her,鈥 Dean says. 鈥淚t feels like a family where everyone knows each child鈥檚 needs and supports each other. She鈥檚 thriving.

鈥淚n kindergarten, she used to always ask me if she could stay home. She dreaded recess. Now she can鈥檛 wait to go to school, and she absolutely loves recess.鈥

Return to And Education for All: These public-school educators teach, lead, counsel, nurture, care.


This article was originally published in the Fall/Winter 2023 print issue of the Davidson Journal Magazine; for more, please see the Davidson Journal section of our website.

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