Redlining in the Classroom: How Historical Housing Policies Still Shape Public Schools
Excerpt from the Essay
“Redlining may have started as a housing policy, but it metastasized into a broader architecture of exclusion. And nowhere is that clearer than in our public schools. Until we confront this legacy directly—until we fund all schools equitably, redraw districts fairly, and invest in communities previously redlined—we will continue to reproduce the very disparities we claim to abhor.”
The Impact of Removing the Department of Education on African Americans
The pursuit of educational equality has been an unyielding fight for the African American community—a battle for more than textbooks and desks, but for a promise that education can be a great equalizer.