New York City's Segregation School System

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Education was once considered a great equalizer in American society because it provided everyone with benefits and professional opportunities in order to prosper in life. However, with the highly segregated school system in New York City, in which is causing a decrease in the city’s general academic performance of students, minority families can no longer ensure that their child can achieve much academically. I’ve found that many schools in New York City with high concentrations of low-income and minority students receive fewer instructional resources than predominantly white schools. Furthermore, the segregation of low-income and minority students within schools, leave minority students with fewer and lower-quality books, fewer resources …show more content…

With the segregation of schools in New York City, how can we continue to believe that there is equality in education. It is important that the schools of New York City strive for diversity within classrooms and work to improve their systems, so that they may help these children experience more academic achievements, as well as equal opportunities in order to excel and become successful. Essentially, I intend to address the question, “Why is New York City’s school system segregated?” My thesis evolved into the following statement: With a segregated school system, students are not treated the same and are not given equal opportunities to achieve; therefore, if New York City truly wants to provide each student with opportunities to learn, grow, and excel academically, they must eliminate the causes of their segregated school system: gentrification of neighborhoods, failure of education policies, and social and economic disadvantages, such as …show more content…

2018. Noah Manskar, a journalist in New York City who writes stories pertaining to crime, politics, and the suburbs of New York City, reports on the thoughts of Benjamin Scafidi’s, a director of the Education Economics Center of Kennesaw State University; specifically, desegregation within the neighborhoods of New York City. Scafidi believes neighborhoods and communities in the United States have gotten less segregated. Furthermore, he claims that as neighborhoods and communities become less segregated, schools may soon follow. This article addresses the opposition of the claim that segregation continues to exist, and worsen, within neighborhoods and

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