This thread was inspired by two articles I read recently - one on a local news website, and one in an on-line education journal.
First, from 9News.com:
And from the CEC (Council for Exceptional Children) Newsbrief:
This issue, of course, reaches far beyond education - but the education system mirrors the inequities that occur throughout society. Are things truly better today? Or has the discrimination shifted from racial background to other issues, such as family income - which, in turn, are affected by education?
First, from 9News.com:
Little Rock 9 mark 50th anniversary
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - The Little Rock Nine, once barred from Central High School because they are black, arrived on its soggy campus Tuesday in limousines as the community marked 50 years since President Dwight D. Eisenhower directed soldiers to escort the students inside.
"They didn't ask to be a part of history, but they certainly are now," said U.S. Rep. Mike Ross of Arkansas.
<snip>
The U.S. Supreme Court declared segregated classrooms unconstitutional, ruling that many districts were operating education systems that were separate but not equal. By the fall of 1957, the Charleston and Fayetteville school districts had integrated peacefully, but agitators targeted Little Rock for trouble.
For three weeks, Little Rock became the focus of a showdown between Faubus and Eisenhower. Faubus pulled the Guard away, but a crowd gathered outside the school Sept. 23 to prevent it from complying with U.S. District Judge Ronald Davies' desegregation order.
Eisenhower that night authorized the use of federal troops to enforce Davies' order, and members of the 101st Airborne escorted the Little Rock Nine to classes on Sept. 25, 1957.
And from the CEC (Council for Exceptional Children) Newsbrief:
Education and Schools Area a Focus for Edwards
DES MOINES, Sept. 21 — The Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards laid out a proposal on Friday to overhaul the education system, saying that the current No Child Left Behind law was not working and that poor children were still being sent to schools that are “separate and unequal.”
Speaking at Brody Middle School here, Mr. Edwards outlined a plan that he said would evaluate students more effectively, reduce class sizes and reward teachers who work in high-poverty schools with up to $15,000 in incentive pay, initiatives similar to those championed by education officials in New York City and elsewhere.
<snip>
“More than a half-century after Brown v. Board of Education, we still have two school systems, separate and unequal,” Mr. Edwards said. “There are nearly 1,000 high schools where more than half of the students won’t graduate — they’re called ‘dropout factories.’ ”
This issue, of course, reaches far beyond education - but the education system mirrors the inequities that occur throughout society. Are things truly better today? Or has the discrimination shifted from racial background to other issues, such as family income - which, in turn, are affected by education?