It will likely be years before the full impact of the Supreme Court's latest school integration decision is clear. In the meantime, there's plenty of commentary to keep us busy.
Just have time to read one thing? My recommendation is NPR senior correspondent and biographer of Thurgood Marshall,
Juan Williams, who
takes the controversial position that "it is time to acknowledge that Brown's time has passed" in his New York Times OpEd "Don't Mourn Brown v. Board of Education."
Desegregation does not speak to dropout rates that hover near 50 percent for black and Hispanic high school students. It does not equip society to address the so-called achievement gap between black and white students that mocks Brown’s promise of equal educational opportunity.
And the fact is, during the last 20 years, with Brown in full force, America’s public schools have been growing more segregated — even as the nation has become more racially diverse. In 2001, the National Center for Education Statistics reported that the average white student attends a school that is 80 percent white, while 70 percent of black students attend schools where nearly two-thirds of students are black and Hispanic...
...Racial malice is no longer the primary motive in shaping inferior schools for minority children. Many failing big city schools today are operated by black superintendents and mostly black school boards.
And today the argument that school reform should provide equal opportunity for children, or prepare them to live in a pluralistic society, is spent. The winning argument is that better schools are needed for all children — black, white, brown and every other hue — in order to foster a competitive workforce in a global economy.
Want to hear Juan Williams instead of reading him? Try his
NPR conversation with Renee Montagne.
Looking for balanced television coverage of the decision? Try
NewsHour.
Have hours and hours?
Google News is your source for EVERY. ARTICLE. EVER. WRITTEN. It's overwhelming, but a great resource.
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