EFTA00688284.pdf
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Subject: The New York Times Magazine: The Legacy of Racism in American Education
Date: Fri, 08 Sep 2017 21:03:13 +0000
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pl iThe New York Times
2T, he New York
Times
Friday, September 8, 2017
In 2008, U.W. Clemon — the first black federal judge in the history of Alabama —
stepped down from his post, turning in his resignation precisely two hours after
the inauguration of the nation's first black president. Last year, nearly half a
century since Clemon first worked, as a young lawyer, to secure the constitutional
rights of thousands of black children in Jefferson County, he found himself sitting
in front of the same white judge as before, arguing in the continuation of the very
first school-desegregation case he worked on. "If there is a benefit to having to
fight for civil rights over so many decades," writes Nikole Hannah-Jones, "it's that
it makes you presciently aware of the way that racism does not so much go away
but adapts to the times."
In this week's special issue, we track the persistent legacy of racism in American
education. Mosi Secret reports on the first black boys to integrate the South's elite
boarding schools in the 1960s. Mark Binelli writes about Michigan's gamble on
charter schools — and how its children lost. AlMa Tugend reports on the millions
of dollars spent each year to expand Advanced Placement classes in majority black
and Latino high schools. And Alice Yin shows how, in the more than 60 years
since the heady and hopeful days following the Supreme Court's ruling in Brown
v. Board of Education, much has changed, and much has not.
Happy reading,
Jake Silverstein
Editor in Chief
EFTA00688284
RA classroom at Gardendale High School in Alabama.
A classroom at Gardendale High School in Alabama. Devin Yalkin for The New Yoz k .1
The Resegregation of Jefferson
County
By NIKOLE II.1' I JONES
What one Alabama town's attempt to secede from its school district tells us about the fragile
progress of racial integration in America.
(Marvin Barnard (left) and Bill Alexander ,from top: Laura Fuchs with a student; a
during their freshman year at V.E.S. student taldng a practice test.
Front Virginia Episcopal School Glenna Gordon for The New York limes
`The Way to Survive It Was Who Benefits From the
to Make A's' Expansion of A.P. Classes?
1::. ALIN.% 1«,:NI)
They were the first black boys to integrate the Millions of federal and state dollars are spent each
South's elite prep schools. They drove themselves year on increasing the number of Advanced
to excel in an unfamiliar environment. But at what Placement classes in low-income majority black
cost? and Latino high schools. Is this a benefit to the
students or a payday for the testing company?
The DACA `Fix' That Immigration
Activists Fear
By upending Obama's executive order, Trump is likely to reopen
fault lines in a beleaguered movement.
EFTA00688285
Is Sex With a Brain-Damaged Man
Assault?
AN1E ANTI ION AI' PIA II
The magazine's Ethicist columnist on sexual consent among the
cognitively disabled and the use of robo texts.
ADVERTISEMENT
a
(,The Academy of Warren in Warren, Mich., and Timbuktu Academy in Detroit.
The Academy of Warren in Warren, Mich., and Timbuktu Academy in Detroit. Jonno Rottman for The New York
Times
Michigan Gambled on Charter
Schools. Its Children Lost.
. \ I
Free-market boosters, including Betsy DeVos, promised that a radical expansion of charter
schools would fix the stark inequalities in the state's education system. The results in the
classrooms are far more complicated.
EFTA00688286
Doin Yalkin for The New York Times Illustration by Derek Brahney
Education by the Numbers Americans Are
By ALICE YIN
Confronting an Alarming
Statistics show just how profound the inequalities
in America's education system have become. Question: Are Many of Our
Fellow Citizens `Nazis?'
By SASI IA CI IAPIN
For decades, we talked about Nazis mostly in
analogies, jokes and caricatures. Now we're
debating whether it's a fair word for describing a
good number of our neighbors.
Still Lives That Won't Hold Still
By TEA) COLE
Maria Cosindas's dreamlike photographs have a magic all their
own.
Billy Eichner Wants You to Know
He's Mainstream
Interview by ANA MARIE COX
The actor and comedian on how journalists mess up interviews and
the similarities between his "Billy on the Street" character and
Donald Trump.
ADVERTISEMENT
EFTA00688287
GJ
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