SMRs and AMRs

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Transmitting inequity from one generation to the next

"The single most important step we could take has nothing to do with unions and everything to do with providing early-childhood education to at-risk kids."

Students Over Unions

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, NYT

The most important civil rights battleground today is education, and, likewise, the most crucial struggle against poverty is the one fought in schools.

Inner-city urban schools today echo the “separate but equal” system of the early 1950s. In the Chicago Public Schools where teachers are now on strike, 86 percent of children are black or Hispanic, and 87 percent come from low-income families.

Those students often don’t get a solid education, any more than blacks received in their separate schools before Brown v. Board of Education. Chicago’s high school graduation rates have been improving but are still about 60 percent. Just 3 percent of black boys in the ninth grade end up earning a degree from a four-year college, according to the Consortium on Chicago School Research.

America’s education system has become less a ladder of opportunity than a structure to transmit inequity from one generation to the next.

(More here.)

1 Comments:

Blogger Tom Koch said...

It seems to me that it would be, in the words of Rahm himslef, a shame to let a crisis go to waste. Where is Reagan when we need him?

12:56 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home