Most of the Asian students who boycotted Southern after attacks at the school have returned following a meeting with district officials Tuesday.
About 30 Asian students were part of Southern's dismissal yesterday. Just last week, students supported those testifying before the School Reform Commission on violence at the school (Staff Photos by Greg Bezanis).
Two weeks ago, about 25 Asian students were attacked due to a lack of action by South Philadelphia High administrators -- and it was not the first time, according to students at the 2101 S. Broad St. school.
The result of the unrest between Asian students and their African-American classmates, who they say are the ones that have attacked them most recently, and the lack of protective, proactive measures by Southern officials, led to the Asian students boycotting classes for eight school days. The students ended their walk-out Tuesday evening after meeting with school officials at a continued session of the Human Relations Commission meeting that began Monday and are slowly returning to class.
In order to involve more students and start a dialogue with school organizations, about 30 still-boycotting pupils agreed to return to Southern yesterday after a "frank and occasionally pointed exchange" with Superintendent Arlene Ackerman, the students said in a statement.
"Through our trials and struggles, we pushed the school to hear us," the students said. "We have made change by standing together. We are proud of what we have done. If something happens again after all this, we know that we have strong wills and we will stand together again."
Ackerman, the students, Southern Student Ambassadors, parents and community leaders participated in the meeting where Mayor Michael Nutter dropped by, School District of Philadelphia Chief Communications Officer Evelyn Sample-Oates said, adding the students were greeted by Ackerman and their peers on their return to class.
"It was a very welcoming return with the students that were there," Sample-Oates said.

Students have slowly come back throughout this week with the remainder expected to attend classes for the first time yesterday, which was a half-day, but the issue has not gone away.
"The struggle will go on until all the demands are met," the students said in a statement. "We won't give up ... We hope that the school can change their attitude for the benefit of all students."
Friday, Cecilia Chen, an attorney for the New York-based Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, announced the latter would file a complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice against the district for violating the students' 14th Amendment that requires states to provide equal protection to all people within their jurisdictions.
Prior to district officials meeting Monday with the city's Human Relations Commission, Southern administrators announced measures Friday to make the student body into "one big family," Principal Lagreta Brown said, adding administrators also began contacting the injured students to schedule visits with their families. These measures include the installation of 63 security cameras, 21 which were put in over the weekend, and increasing Philadelphia, SEPTA and school police presence with a total of 16 on-site school officers for a total of five more. Five school officers were replaced last week, as was the school's sergeant, and multilingual school officer Sgt. Robert Samuels was brought in, Ackerman said. Samuels, who speaks fluent Cantonese, knows the culture, as well, as he lived in Hong Kong for seven years.
"We wanted to make sure that there was staff here able to address some of the issues that have been raised," Ackerman said. "Not only from the students and the families who have been boycotting, but from the students and staff who are here and have asked for some changes."
The school will add more counselors and translators, while retired Principal Ozzie Wright will help implement a new safety plan. The Home and School Association will be reinstated and the Rams Head Think Tank established to develop ways to address diversity.
Students will continue to converse through the Peer Mediation Program, faculty will teach diversity and counselors will guide discussions on preventing conflict and violence. Staff also will continue to meet to bolster expectations in terms of conduct towards others.
"We're trying to overcome this," senior Amina Velazquez, who is a Student Ambassador, said. "We even have students who are trying to learn other languages just so that we can make them feel safer."
The school held the Justice Department's Student Problem Identification and Resolution of Issues Together (SPIRIT) program, which has been in the works since September, Tuesday and Wednesday to identify and resolve racial conflict and the district has hired U.S. District Judge James T. Giles, of the Center City law firm Pepper Hamilton, to begin an independent investigation in the matter. The probe started Monday.
The cost of the additions were not yet known, Ackerman said.
"For me, cost is not the issue," she said. "If what we need to do is to provide more resources to South Philadelphia to stabilize the situation so that everyone feels safe, then that's what we are going to do."
Minutes after celebrating with her first-period English class Jan. 22 for scoring higher on a standardized test than the rest of their fellow students at Audenried High School, as well as the School District of Philadelphia’s average, teacher Brynn Keller felt powerless.
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