Analysis Of Jonathan Kool's Still Separate, Still Unequal

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Many people do not know about the inequalities that African Americans go through in the public education system or choose to ignore it. Such as receiving unequal education as the white kids in rich areas, having old textbooks ten to twenty year old or sometimes suffer from discrimination in public schools they attend. The fact is that public schools that African Americans attend aren’t slightly unequal they enormously unequal from public schools funding to segregation resurfacing in schools. While at least everyone (below 18 or 19) in U.S has a right to get an equal public education. Low test scores and graduation rates show that African American students are being left behind in education, public schools African Americans attend are being …show more content…

Jonathan Kool a former educator talks about in his article “Still separate, Still Unequal” talks about the inequalities he has seen in public schools he has taught and done research on. One of his main topics in his article is the fact of segregation resurfacing in public schools. Jonathan gives many examples of this is one of them Kozol states in his article “In a school a visited in the fall of 2004 in Kansas city, Missouri, for example, a document distributed to visitor’s reports that the school’s curriculum “address the needs of children from diverse backgrounds. But as I went from class to class, I did not encounter any children who were white or Asian- or Hispanic for that matter…. I later learned that 99.6 percent of students were African-Americans.” (Kozol 205). He gives many other examples of major cities having similar populations that are neither have Hispanic and African American populations as 90% or higher in the school enrolled records or just have basically an all-African American public school. It shocking to believe that this going on after Dr. King fought and supposedly won the Civil Rights not only for his community, but for other minorities like the Hispanic population as well. The fact is that African American segregation is playing a huge role in the inequality in the education that they are receiving today in public schools and the fact that students today are more likely to end up in segregated school that their parents were is

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