Friday, May 16, 2014

Sixty Years and We’re Still Fighting



This Saturday marks the 60th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, this landmark ruling struck down school segregation and marked a major turning point in the civil rights movement. For African-American’s this meant that we could be afforded the same educational opportunities as our Caucasian counterparts, right? Wrong. Although that’s what Brown v. Board of Education set out to do, in many situations and in many inner cities it did just the opposite. President Obama admits that we still have issues of segregation within our education system. President Obama was quoted as saying, "we must continue striving toward equal opportunities for all our children, from access to advanced classes to participation in the same extracurricular activities," Obama wrote. "Because when children learn and play together, they grow, build, and thrive together."

You can either agree or disagree, but the facts are on the table. In larger inner cities where there is a higher concentration of minorities many students are moved from one failing school to another. Then you have this aspect of gentrification, where a large influx of higher salaried and educated people move into these declining neighborhoods leading to property taxes being raised and the poor being forced out. So where are these people forced to go? It’s simple, to another declining neighborhood where they can afford to live that has an equally declining school system.  Many inner city schools lack the proper funding, and many extracurricular programs are forced to be dropped.  Many of these extracurricular programs such as art, music, and/or sports are the reason many inner city students flourish in schools. When we take this programs out of the schools we lose talents, what I mean by this is many students don’t find school appealing anymore they give up on their talent of playing piano, because without the music class at school they would not be able to afford the lessons.

On the surface many typically do not think about whether schools are segregated or whether every child is afforded the same education as a child living in a school district where all the houses are $500,000 plus, but this is something that we (by “we” I mean our minority population) need to step up and fight for equality within our school systems, especially in our inner cities. These kids do not deserve to get these inexperienced teachers, lack of funding which leads to the cutting of many programs. They deserve to have nice classrooms, with up to date textbooks, everyone issued a brand new Apple IPad to do their work on, and the opportunity to play lacrosse if their heart desires (amongst other things).

 In 2013, the NationalAssessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) took a selected group of 12th graders in order to see if they were at or above the “Proficient” level for Mathematics and Reading. In both subjects Blacks and Hispanics (minorities) had a drastically lower percentage and were not deemed at or above the “Proficient” level as their Asian and White counterparts. Could this be as a result of the minority groups not understanding the material (which goes back to the school system and its teachers)? Or maybe an issue of less minority parents completing the high school level, which would put them in a better position to help their children? Either way, the gap in the inequalities of education received among students within the United States is at an all-time high. It seems as if history is either repeating itself or this generation has never stood up to the rights which were granted to us in the Brown v. Board of Education decision. Change will only come if we continue to voice our opinion in numbers versus sitting back and allowing this landmark case to dwindle between the cracks.


So I have to ask, how far do you think we've come since the landmark decision?

Britt Daise
Urban Echelon Magazine & Blogspot

Twitter: thisisbee

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