David Campos – School Boundary Segregation Map


On a large white canvas, there is a faded out elementary school boundary map from Fresno Unified. The text is directly from the URL shared as the alternate title of the poem: “fresnounified.org/enroll/”. The text is as follows. 

To register ​students online for the current or upcoming school year please read and follow the steps below.

Registration Steps

Using the address in which you reside please review the school boundary maps​ or use the school locator tool​ to determine which school your child will attend.

Use the Online Registration Tool to enroll new Preschool-12th students, or students coming from an outside school district. 

​Students already enrolled in Fresno Unified school district are already registered, and do not need to register again.​

Information/Requirements for Preschool Enrollment
If you are unable to utilize the Online Registration Tool and need assistance, please contact the school site via email or phone.

Once the school of enrollment has been determined, parent/guardian/caregiver or another responsible designated adult will contact that school by phone or email to provide required information necessary for registration.

Please note: A provisional enrollment will be in place until required documents are received.Student registration is not complete until all documents are received, and the student has been assigned a schedule.

Please provide the following documents, electronically, to the school office in your attendance area. If you are unable to do so, the site will contact you to schedule an opportunity for documents to be provided to them.

Then there are lines to certain words and phrases through that signal that these words or phrases really stand for the following: School Boundary Segregation Map, This segregation tool, Segregation, segregated, and segregator.

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Artist’s Statement: In the article “The Resegregation of Jefferson County,” Nikole Hannah-Jones writes that “since 2000, at least 71 communities across the country, most of them white and wealthy, have sought to break away from their public-school districts to form smaller, more exclusive ones.” This led to research into my state’s segregation and integration efforts. The rhetoric, the maps, and the data were all there—coded language, school boundaries, and even diversity statements covered the stagnant “struggle” toward integration. As an educator, this project provided context for my experience and those of the students in the classroom. Notes and citations will appear at the end of the project. 

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