Brown V. Board Of Education Case

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The United States has a long history of racism. Whether it be slavery, Jim Crow, or the issues of violence and police brutality, African Americans have been targeting and oppressed for centuries. While it seems that the issues of school segregation were solved with the Brown v. Board of Education case, present day economic problems have caused a new divide in public schools. Black students are taking lower level classes than white students because their low income neighborhoods don't allow them to go to schools with the same quality education as the white children. This problem sets the scene for the rest of the child's life as citizen of a lower social class. On that note, continuing the Cold war struggle for racial equality would best prepare …show more content…

She and her sister made a great daily commute to their “colored” school. Linda was denied admission to a summer school that was closer to her home because of her race. This was legal due to the Plessy v. Ferguson case of 1896 which allowed for segregation of public facilities. The Browns felt that depriving their daughters of a better education was unconstitutional and it did not provide them with equal protection under the law. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously in favor of the Browns and the Court found segregation in public schooling should not be included in the decision of Plessy v. Ferguson. This ruling established the civil rights idea that “separate-but-equal” was not equal at all. As a result, it was mandated that desegregation in schools would commence with “all deliberate speed” (insert landmark cases). However, Many schools, especially in the south, defied this ruling. In Little Rock, Arkansas, at Central High School, a group of nine high school students were set to attend the previously all white school. Governor Orval Faubus of Arkansas called the state national guard to prevent these students from entering the school. President Eisenhower angrily deployed federal troops the walk the teens into school under armed guard. The public display of racism and inequality fueled the sprouting civil rights movement. Nevertheless, The debate continues more than sixty years later over how to fight racial …show more content…

In this day and age, it is almost impossible to be a middle or upper class citizen without a college degree, so without the ability to finish high school or have enough educational merit to get a college scholarship, these kids will always be in the lower class. Fixing this issue would prepare the United States for a future with more black people in the middle and upper class. A solution to this problem is to have more government funding to high schools in poor neighborhoods. This can provide better school supplies, more qualified teachers, and improved school facilities. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, A twenty percent increase in per-student spending a year for impoverished children can lead to an additional year of completed education, twenty five percent higher earnings, and a twenty-percentage point reduction in the chances of poverty in adulthood (Samuels, Alana). Overall, a change like this, a more complete education, can greatly impact the future a student’s life and the lives of an entire population of

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