Students take a break between class at Locke High School, in Los Angeles, May 14, 2010. (Photo: Michal Czerwonka / The New York Times) |
by:
Staff, Rethinking Schools
| News Analysis
“Every man in my family has been locked up. Most days I feel like it doesn’t matter what I do, how hard I try - that’s my fate, too.”
-11th-grade African American student, Berkeley, California
This young man isn’t being cynical or melodramatic; he’s articulating a
terrifying reality for many of the children and youth sitting in our
classrooms—a reality that is often invisible or misunderstood. Some have
seen the growing numbers of security guards and police in our schools
as unfortunate but necessary responses to the behavior of children from
poor, crime-ridden neighborhoods. But what if something more ominous is
happening? What if many of our students—particularly our African
American, Latina/o, Native American, and Southeast Asian children—are
being channeled toward prison and a lifetime of second-class status? READ MORE
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