{"id":561209,"date":"2020-09-14T17:01:00","date_gmt":"2020-09-14T21:01:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.the74million.org\/?post_type=article&p=561209"},"modified":"2020-09-15T12:11:43","modified_gmt":"2020-09-15T16:11:43","slug":"why-reading-is-fundamental-to-racial-equity","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/www.the74million.org\/article\/why-reading-is-fundamental-to-racial-equity\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Reading Is Fundamental to Racial Equity"},"content":{"rendered":"

A<\/span>merica is finally waking up to the full scope and severity of its oldest illness: racism. We cannot afford to hit snooze. And yet this awakening comes at a time when coronavirus-related school closures are exacerbating racial inequalities in our education system, even as the virus and the recession disproportionately hurt communities of color.<\/p>\n

Our schools are the very place where racism does perhaps its deepest and most lasting damage to the body politic. As schools begin to announce their fall semester plans, we must do all we can to make sure that remote learning and part-time schooling do not continue to leave Black and brown children behind.<\/p>\n

It has been 66 years since Brown v. Board<\/em>, and public schools are still not the equalizing institutions they should be. Even before the inequities of this pandemic hit, children of color, particularly those from under-resourced communities, faced serious barriers to education. In 2016, the national graduation rate was 84.1 percent, an all-time high. Yet the graduation rates for Black and Hispanic students were 76.4 and 79.3 percent, respectively. Educator Gloria Ladson-Billings refers to such unequal outcomes as the \u201ceducation debt\u201d that results from our society\u2019s systemic and historic racism.<\/p>\n