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Students still suffer school segregation

The Civil Rights Project at UCLA has issued research underscoring the grievous segregation of Black students and calling on the administration of President Joe Biden to fulfill the promise of the landmark Brown v. Board of education ruling as pledged in the Democratic campaign.

Providing an update on the current status of the nation’s Black students, the report, Black Segregation Matters: School Resegregation and Black Educational Opportunity, makes clear that the segregation of students has increased in almost every region of the nation and that Black students in many of nation’s largest school districts have little access to or interaction with White, Asian or middle-class students.

It shows substantial Black enrollment in suburban schools, but high levels of segregation. Several of the nation’s largest states, including California, New York and Texas, are among the nation’s most segregated in terms of exposure of Black students to their white counterparts.

“Segregation is intense in the education of Black students in 2020 and segregated schools are on average unequal in many of the critical dimensions that create great barriers to equal education,” said Gary Orfield, co-director of the Civil Rights Project and co-author of the report.  “Our hope is that the Biden administration will move with urgency to implement his campaign’s promise to provide incentives for voluntary efforts fostering success in interracial schooling.

The new report details how the national student population is changing and examines the basic patterns of enrollment, segregation and integration across the U.S.

The analysis includes enrollment and segregation trends for the past several decades, nationally, by region, community type, and poverty level, and showing the most and least segregated states along multiple measures.  Some of the key findings include:

The report summarizes recent public opinion research showing that a substantial majority of Blacks believe that White schools provide stronger educational opportunities and favor integration efforts. 

A Gallup poll published during the presidential primaries in 2019 showed that 68% of Blacks, 65% of Latinos and 52% of Whites saw “racial concentration or segregation” as a serious problem.

Seventy-five percent of Democrats saw segregation as a serious problem, compared to 35% of Republicans. Fifty-three percent of the public favored governmental action to reduce segregation, but 78% of Blacks favored the same.

When asked about methods to desegregate, 86% of Blacks, 88% of Latinos and 76% of Whites favored magnet schools as a method and there was substantial support for others.

“This new research documents the segregation that black students face, making clear that in 2020 Black students are locked into schools that perpetuate inequality,” said Danielle Jarvie, the senior policy Research analyst at the Civil Rights Project and the report’s co-author. ”It is time for real and significant work to remedy it.”

The report’s authors urge the Biden administration to build on that public interest and support to address the segregation of Black students.  One place to start would be with expansion of the federal Magnet Schools Assistance Grant Program.

The report notes that there has been no significant federal program to foster school integration for four decades, in spite of accumulating research on its lifelong benefits.

Last year, the House of Representatives passed by a substantial bipartisan majority the Strength in Diversity Act of 2020, offering planning and implementation grants for integration efforts. The measure has been reintroduced with 140 co-sponsors and it was reported out of committee in November.

If enacted, it could be a framework encouraging local efforts, such as regional magnet and transfer programs. The report offers additional suggestions for meaningful efforts to reduce the segregation of Black students.

“Inequality is deeply structured in our schools and in households and communities where many Black families are segregated,” concludes Orfield.  “In the wake of this summer’s Black Lives Matter protests and rising concern about racial injustice, we hope the Biden administration will act a long last to confront pervasive racial segregation and address the needs of Black students.”

The Civil Rights Project at UCLA has been closely monitoring educational segregation for the last quarter-century. This special report on the segregation of Black students and possible solutions is published in honor of the Black Lives Matter movement. The full report is available here.

Despite the rhetoric of change and racial transcendence the schools that our children attend are deeply segregated. In fact, schools are more racially segregated now than they were in the Jim Crow South.

However, today’s segregation is so pernicious because it is overlooked and we, as a country, continue to fail to address school segregation’s root in housing segregation.

If we are to address the issue of quality schooling and segregation we must move beyond believing that segregation is not a problem.

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