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Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid

Decent Essays

The School System: a Joyless Experience?

In his essay “Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid,” Jonathan Kozol brings our attention to the apparent growing trend of racial segregation within America’s urban and inner-city schools (309-310). Kozol provides several supporting factors to his claim stemming from his research and observations of different school environments, its teachers and students, and personal conversations with those teachers and students. As we first take a look at the frightening statistics Kozol provides, this claim of segregation becomes so much more real. As evidenced in the text, the vast majority of enrollment in most of the public schools in our major cities is black or Hispanic: 79% …show more content…

Hence, as evidenced in Kozol’s essay, the drop-out rate of inner-city students compared to suburban schools that do not employ this tactic is substantially higher (322-324).
Due to the forgoing facts brought to light by Kozol in his essay, it is apparent that there is a growing trend of racial segregation within America’s urban and inner-city schools. Educators and politicians seem to have abolished any semblance of respect for learning for its own sake and have made the school system a joyless experience for the majority of the children, which in turn seems to be related to the high drop-out rate in the inner-city schools. For America to remain great, just and competitive in today’s world, these educational anomalies must be timely addressed and corrected adequately.

Works Cited
Kozol, Jonathan “Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid”
From Inquiry to Academic Writing
Eds. Stuart Greene, April Lidinsky.
Boston/New York/Bedford/St.Martin’s, 2008. 308-330.

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