鈥榊ou can find yourself'
Because they are independent, Texas school districts often cut across municipal and county lines. Aldine, which covers 110 square miles, serves nine communities that are part of the city of Houston and unincorporated Harris County. Some of the communities are urban. Some are rural. Almost all are low income.
According to the most recent statistics available, 72.7 percent of Aldine鈥檚 students are Hispanic, 22.7 percent are African American, and 2.4 percent are white. More than a third (34.6 percent) are classified as English Learners.
Acres Homes, which was annexed by Houston in the mid-1960s, once was considered the largest unincorporated African American community in the South. The western part of Acres Homes is in Aldine, one of 20 school districts that serve the fourth largest city in the U.S.
Kaleb Womack, a 2021 Carver graduate who also grew up in Acres Homes, started doing theater as an after-school activity in second grade. At Carver, he performed in five musicals and three University Interscholastic League one-act plays, earning a series of district and regional awards for acting.
鈥淭he more I鈥檝e gotten into it, the more I started realizing a lot of school districts don鈥檛 have programs like ours,鈥 says Womack, who will major in musical theater at Sam Houston State University this fall. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really, really sad because this is such a safe space for kids like me who need it. It鈥檚 been a safe space for me for over 10 years. It鈥檚 given me another avenue to let things go that you didn鈥檛 know you have bottled up. You can find yourself through the characters you play.鈥
At the showcase, Williams and Womack performed a scene from 鈥淭he Diviners,鈥 a play that told the story of a disturbed young man and his friendship with a preacher during the Great Depression. As the two actors ran the scene, Carver High School Theater Director Roshunda Jones watched and then gave additional pointers.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter if they never do this show again. They can always learn something new every time they do it,鈥 says Jones, who has been at Carver for 17 years. 鈥淚 always tell my students, 鈥榊ou never stop learning.鈥欌
The care and attention Jones shows her students were evident during and after the showcase. She and her technical director, Jabari Collins, routinely check students鈥 progress reports and report cards. They do regular 鈥渢emperature checks鈥 and make sure the students understand 鈥渋f they鈥檙e not being held accountable at home, they鈥檙e being held accountable by us.鈥
鈥淥ur students come here from a range of personal experiences. Some come from great loving homes. Some come from places where they need a little more love at school,鈥 Jones says. 鈥淲e try to create a family environment so that parents know when their children are here, they are safe. They are not getting in trouble.鈥
Advocate for the arts
Down the hallway from the theater, members of the Carver/Aldine Dance Company were working on a contemporary ballet number. The company, which is open to students in grades K-12, trains throughout the summer months. Doors open at 7:30 a.m., with the formal program running from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. During the fall and spring, Carver student dancers participate in classes during the school day. Guest teachers work with the students鈥攎any of whom come from other schools鈥攆rom 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.
鈥淲e run a school and then we run it like a studio,鈥 company director Sarita Salinas says. 鈥淎 lot of our kids grow with the program. We鈥檝e had students who have been with us since first grade.鈥
On this morning, Salinas had the students run through the complex number several times. She circled the mirrored room, which once housed Carver鈥檚 entire fine arts department, and talked to individual students about technique. A guest instructor worked separately with another group of students.
Two decades ago, Salinas created the company to provide advanced training to students who were interested in dance but did not necessarily have the financial means to take private classes. Today, Salinas estimates that the Carver dance department works with 120 high school students and up to 40 company members each year. For 10 hours a week of training after school hours, parents never pay more than $150 a month. Costumes for performances are provided by the district.
Students, who audition to be part of the company, now take classes in ballet, modern, contemporary, jazz, hip-hop, tap, aerial silks, and stilt walking. The company has performed at several special events involving Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, who was raised in the Acres Homes community.
鈥淭he most important thing with kids in inner-city schools is giving them the opportunities to perform and providing them with the technique and skills they need, not just to perform but also to be advocates for the arts,鈥 Salinas says. 鈥淚 want our kids to be able to compete with dance studios and dance companies across the state and city, but I also want them to be prepared to talk to the superintendent or the board about why this is so important in their lives.鈥
The first time Goffney saw Aldine鈥檚 students perform was at a Texas Association of School Boards convention more than a decade ago. She had just become superintendent in Coldspring-Oakhurst CISD, a small district about 55 miles north of Houston, and she was 鈥渨owed鈥 by the quality of the performance.
鈥淭his was 2008 or 2009,鈥 says Goffney, who later became superintendent in Lufkin ISD before moving to Aldine. 鈥淚t was just amazing. There were about 10,000 people in attendance, and it was just so great that it stuck in my mind.鈥
When Goffney arrived in Aldine in the summer of 2018, one of the first places she visited was Carver. 鈥淭hose students were working all summer,鈥 she says. 鈥淵es, working. I鈥檝e never seen anything quite like it.鈥
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