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by prudence l. carter
EDUCATION’S
LIMITATIONS
AND ITS
RADICAL
POSSIBILITIES
http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1177%2F1536504218776956&domain=pdf&date_stamp=2018-06-07
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In U.S. society, racial and class inequality are twin social
phenomena—more fraternal than identical, distinctive yet
deeply interconnected. One can barely make inferences about
the former without consideration of the latter. Yet, many of us
frequently pit race and class and their related brethren—racism,
bias, prejudice, poverty, unemployment, and discrimination—
against each other as if they are locked in a winner-take-all
competition. Noticeably, the spectrum of the color line (to invoke
W.E.B. Du Bois’ metaphor) corresponds to certain gradations
of the class line. Particular racial-ethnic groups are represented
disproportionately and overwhelmingly in the lowest household
income strata of our society; and other groups in the highest.
For example, data from the National Center for Poverty based
at Columbia University reveal that among children ages 18 or
younger who live in either low-income or poor households, nearly
two out of three African American, Native American, and Latinx
youth live at or below 200% of the poverty line, compared to less
than one out of three of their Asian and White peers. That is to
say, the descendants of those who faced slavery, settler colonial-
ism, genocide, and conquest, respectively, fare worse centuries
later than the descendants of White colonialists and the progeny
of many post-1965 East and South Asian immigrants. This radical
disproportionality is what some sociologists have referred to as
the “colors of poverty” or even the “racialization of poverty.”
Contexts, Vol. 17, Issue 2, pp. 22-27. ISSN 1536-5042, electronic ISSN 1537-6052. ©2018 American Sociological Association. http://contexts.sagepub.com. DOI 10.1177/1536504218776956
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Even in so-called good schools and neighborhoods, the achievement and mobility outcomes for Black and Brown youth are lower than for their White peers.
https://doi.org/10.1177/1536504218776956
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The spectrum and colors of affluence are different. In 2015,
Forbes magazine reported that the top 400 wealthiest Whites in
the United States possess a cumulative worth of $ 2.34 trillion.
Those 400 White Americans’ wealth is nearly 1.5 times that of
all 16 million African American households ($1.56 trillion) and
1.3 times that of all 15 million Latinx households ($1.82 trillion).
Naturally, some might counter that differences in either human
capital or education can explain these expansive and jarring dif-
ferences in wealth and income. But, even when we control for
education, we find that the wealth of college-educated Whites
is more than 13 times greater than college-educated Blacks
and Latinx. In fact, Whites without a high school degree have
significantly more wealth, on average, than Black and Latinx
college graduates.
American history, its racial origins, and its political and eco-
nomic systems created and currently sustain startling racialized
economic and educational disparities. As historian Ira Katznelson
laid out compellingly in his book, When Affirmation Action Was
White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Cen-
tury America, our society missed an opportune time to redress
some of its grossest distortions of citizenship, rights, and access
from prior historic eras. For the most part, contemporary middle
and high school textbooks depict the most myopic views of our
collective history of slavery, settler colonialism, conquest, and
Jim Crow, raising little awareness of how government and civil
society worked cohesively to maintain de jure forms of inequal-
ity for centuries, let alone how the impact of this profound
inequality has spread well into the current era. Meanwhile, the
historical accumulation of disadvantages impacts the educational
well-being of the youth who now populate the nation’s public
schools. Many of these young people will lack college-readiness;
others barely will obtain a high school diploma.
In Excellence: Can We Be Equal and Excellent, Too?, John W.
Gardner, former secretary of the Department of Health, Educa-
tion, and Welfare under President Lyndon B. Johnson, predicted
that equal education and opportunity will continue to be favored
by most Americans. Yet, to really achieve this, “it requires the
removal of every removable obstacle” including prejudice and
status and wealth inequality. Gardner’s words are just as relevant
30 years after they were written. Many of us purport to believe
in “equality of opportunity,” but have we really thought deeply
about what it takes to enact the practices necessary to realize it?
Economist Raj Chetty and his fellow researchers have found
that the chances for intergenerational mobility—as measured by
children and parents’ relative positions in the income distribu-
tion—remain roughly constant. Children born today have the
same prospects for rising from the bottom to the top quintile of
household incomes as those born in the 1970s. Those born into
poor and working poor families have less than a 10% chance, on
average, of reaching the upper quintile of earnings—although,
according to Chetty and colleagues, their chances vary by region.
If you were born into the bottom quintile of household incomes in
San Jose, California, for instance, then you have a higher chance of
making it up to the top than if you were born in Charlotte, North
Carolina. The economists also find that the chances for mobility
are higher in communities with less residential segregation, less
income inequality, better primary schools, greater social capital,
and greater family stability. For brevity’s sake, let’s refer to these
as the “opportunity-rich neighborhoods”.
In March 2018, the New York Times covered some of
Chetty and company’s latest findings. Along with economist
Nathaniel Hendren and Census Bureau researchers Maggie
Jones and Sonya Porter, Chetty analyzed the tax and census
records of over 20 million individuals born between 1978-
1983 in the U.S. They found that living in “opportunity-rich
neighborhoods,” though impactful, is
insufficient to fully close the intergen-
erational mobility gap between Blacks
and Whites—especially among males. In
fact, the intergenerational mobility gap
between Black and White youth born
into the highest quintile households is
greater than that between their coun-
terparts born in the lowest quintile. As
adults, Black males born at the top and liv-
ing in “opportunity-rich neighborhoods”
are equally as likely to fall into the bot-
tom income quintile as they are to remain in the top quintile.
Meanwhile, White males born into the top household income
quintiles are five times as likely as Black males to remain there
as adults. Strikingly, Black women earn slightly more in the next
generation (at a 1 percentile difference) than White women,
conditional on parental income.
The intergenerational mobility gap between Native Ameri-
cans and Whites is akin to that of African Americans to Whites,
averaging about an 18 percentile point difference at each income
level, conditional on parent incomes. This pattern does not hold
for any other comparisons of racial-ethnic groups. Between
Asians and Whites, the intergenerational mobility gaps are tiny,
and analyses reveal that Asians obtain similar and even higher
incomes than Whites in the next generation at nearly every par-
ent income level. And Latinx persons are not far behind with
A fundamental and philosophical purpose of public education is to grow generations of literate, critically thinking, creative, civically engaged students who work to edify and build a cohesive nation and democracy. Somewhere in the social system, this purpose has faltered.
25S P R I N G 2 0 1 8 c o n t e x t s
small intergenerational gaps of 2 percentiles at
the 25th percentile and 6 percentiles at the 75th
percentile.
One of the most dramatic findings from
Chetty et al. is the magnitude of the gap between
Black and White males living in “opportunity-
rich” neighborhood contexts. Like any good
social scientists, Chetty and his coauthors tested
the conventional explanations offered by sociolo-
gists and economists, including the influence of
educational attainment, neighborhood effects,
family structure (specifically the presence of mar-
ried, heterosexual parents), and even wealth (as
measured by home ownership). Such analyses
showed that the intergenerational gap would fall
by 25%, at most, if Black and White boys were
to grow up in the same neighborhoods. Even
after accounting for all of these possible explana-
tions—education, neighborhood, parents’ marital
status, and wealth—the intergenerational mobil-
ity gap between Black and White males persists.
Notably, the incarceration rates for Black
men on a single given day at 10.6% ranged any-
where from twice as likely as Native American
men (the group with the next highest rate of
incarceration) to about 10,000 times more likely
than Asian American women (the group with
incarceration rates of less than .001 percent). All
other groups fell somewhere in between, including
Black women at 0.6% and White men at 1.6%
Class matters, too: Black men from the lowest
income backgrounds were incarcerated at the
highest levels with 21% locked either in jail or
prison at the time of the 2010 Census—a rate ten times greater
than those of Black men from the highest income percentile.
Incarceration patterns by race and gender mirror the patterns
of disproportionality in suspensions and expulsions in schools.
Recently released data from the General Accounting Office and
the Office of Civil Rights reveal that Black males experience signifi-
cantly higher rates of suspensions and expulsions than any other
group—a precursor to what is now commonly referred to as the
“school-to-prison pipeline.” In general, Black youth—males and
females—as well as LGBTQ youth and students with disabilities are
suspended at disproportionately high rates. Furthermore, studies
show that young Black children are suspended more often from
pre-school and kindergarten, and thus criminalized as early as
young as age 4 or 5. Apparently, many Black preschool children
are not granted the developmental benefit of the doubt that
mischief and naughtiness bestow. Their bodies and behaviors are
read differently in schools, and, in the long run, they may suffer
from it academically, materially, spiritually, and physically.
What does social science research tell us already about the
social status and experiences of Black males that would engender
such disparate findings in mobility and well-being? Addressing
this question requires intersectional analyses that recognize
how gendered forces operate in society. For myriad reasons,
high school drop-out rates and college attendance rates are
significantly lower and greater, respectively, for females across
all racial-ethnic groups. Thus, the interactions of race, class, and
gender most likely influence the differences between Black men
and women in both academic and economic outcomes.
In my first book, Keepin’ It Real, I shared that adolescent
Black and Latinx boys explained to me why they perceived that
it was more difficult for them to obtain service jobs than for
their sisters and female peers. Even then in the mid-1990s,
economist Harry Holzer had found that among Blacks, the hir-
ing of females instead of males increased with the number of
tasks performed and credentials required, although both groups’
hiring percentages were significantly and strikingly lower than
their White counterparts’. In addition, the probability to be hired
was greater for Black females than males when the job required
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customer contact. Some of these differences may owe to the
actual feminization of certain job sectors; there are more females
than males in clerical and sales jobs. These patterns might also
occur because of the differences in occupational choices by
gender. Black males—as the research of scholars such as Elijah
Anderson and Khalil Gibran Muhammad inform us—are read
as threatening with a propensity for criminality; and the media
remind us far too frequently how that plays out on the streets
with police. Some—Philando Castile, Stephon Clark, Terence
Crutcher, Eric Garner, and Alton Sterling, to name a few—are
surveilled, disproportionately suspected of engagement in illicit
behaviors by police, and killed for no other apparent reason other
than they are perceived as dangerous Black men.
The descriptive incarceration statistics from the Chetty et
al. study hint at something pervasive in the ethos of our society.
Yet, the limitations of the available data did not allow them to
prove it. Although we learn that low racial bias among Whites
reduces the mobility gap to some extent, Chetty and colleagues’
measure of racial bias is, by their own admission, not necessarily
the best or most reliable. Thus, we can only infer that racism
accounts for some intergenerational mobility gaps. The Chetty
study leaves us begging for more as it invokes the question of
how researchers can more fully capture how disparate racial
forces (also disproportionately and intimately entangled with
poverty and low levels of employment) afflict the daily lived
experiences of Black people in the U.S.
Certainly, not all racially marginalized and economically
disadvantaged youth fail to reach the higher rungs of academic
success and mobility. In fact, a critical number will sail the winds
of upward mobility by entering the doors of higher education.
Many will enter a stratified higher education system via com-
munity colleges, and as Tressie McMillan Cottom’s best-selling
book, Lower Ed, documents, via for-profit colleges, which enroll
Latinx and first-generation college students disproportionately
and dominate in the production of Black bachelor’s degree hold-
ers. In contrast, U.S. flagship public universities, especially some
elite ones, underserve many of its most marginalized students.
In California, Proposition 209 prohibits state institutions from
considering race, ethnicity, or sex, specifically in the areas of
public employment, contracting, and education; the driving
principle behind political support for Prop. 209 is the equivalence
of access and fairness, based on test-score measures.
Surely, there is absolutely nothing wrong with fairness. But
let’s face the facts: our society asks students with widely disparate
ecological contexts of life—in terms of exposure to poverty, racism,
and other forms of disadvantage—to compete similarly. Those
contexts are associated with test score outcomes. Sociologist Sean
Reardon and colleagues have examined every school district in the
U.S. and found that the correlation between the median wealth
of a district and its test score median is roughly .85. Test scores
increasingly reflect socioeconomic status and material wealth.
Achievement gaps in school districts reflect opportunity gaps.
Even when African American, Latinx, and Native American
students are on the upward mobility track and attend “good”
schools or, in the case of Blacks, live in opportunity-rich neigh-
borhoods, as the big-data studies of Chetty, Reardon, and
colleagues indicate, something malevolent still impedes their
chances for true equal opportunity within those resource-rich
contexts. These studies and others (including mine) find that
even in so-called good schools and neighborhoods, the achieve-
ment and mobility outcomes for Black and Brown youth are
lower than their White peers, even if they perform and fare
relatively better than their co-ethnic peers in poorer contexts.
Additionally, as MacArthur award winner and social psychologist
Jennifer Richeson and her colleagues reveal, when racial and
ethnic diversity increases in education or elsewhere, often the
sense of group threat and entitlement increases.
The most visible, contemporary examples of this are the
highly ethnocentric, populist campaign and election of Donald
Trump as President of the United States and the controversial
(and costly) free speech events held on various university cam-
puses in the year since his inauguration. Last fall, the nation’s
attention was roused by the tragic events in Charlottesville.
Some of us could not believe our eyes as neo-Nazis and White
supremacists—many men dressed in business casual khakis
and buttoned-down shirts—marched across the University of
Virginia campus, shouting “blood and soil” and “Jews will not
replace us,” among other exclusive utterances. Many of us were
heartbroken by the attack on a crowd of anti-racist protestors,
including Heather Heyer, who was murdered when one White
supremacist plowed his car into the crowd.
Not that racial resentment and hatred ever fully disap-
peared, but today’s conspicuous display of them by groups of
Whites, all with their free speech guaranteed, is disturbing.
Marching boldly and loudly, they decry the significant social,
economic, and political gains fought for and earned since the
Civil Rights era. The cost of liberty, freedom, and rights for those
previously denied all three is to bear witness to and counter-
protest against marchers who spew hateful language and wield
To shift the tides of both economic and racial inequalities substantially, we must find dynamic ways to reimagine and enact education’s equitable promises.
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historical artifacts of violence. On public university campuses,
people of color, LGBTQ, Jewish, Muslim, and immigrant people
bear the disproportionate psychological burden. They are asked
to pay the communal tax for the liberty of ultra-conservative,
(mainly) heterosexual, Protestant White men to foment psycho-
logical terror… all in the name of free speech. Hate speech defies
democratic, American ideals of equality, liberty, and justice for
all. Throughout history, our nation has experienced repeatedly
the consequences of exclusive, intolerant, unbridled views. Social
progress necessarily demands some moral and legal constraints
on different types of expression. Paradoxically, tolerance in the
United States of America—by way of unfettered, offensive,
hateful free speech—divides our nation deeply.
Segregation, both racial and economic, is arguably the
stickiest thorn in the side of American society with regard to
the reduction of racial and economic inequality and the heal-
ing of our nation’s divides. The above-mentioned studies have
convinced me—a sociologist of inequality and education—that
policies and practices primarily targeting improved educational
attainment and opportunity for historically disadvantaged racial-
ethnic groups, though vital, are not enough. I infer this based on
studies like one by Reardon, Lindsay Fox, and Joseph Townsend,
which reveals the fact that even when individual incomes and
educational outcomes are well-above average, stubborn racial
differences persist. The average Black and Latinx worker with an
annual salary of $100,000 lives in a neighborhood significantly
poorer than the ones in which their White and Asian counterparts
with similar incomes live; the median neighborhood income for
this group of upper-income individuals was $54,393 for Blacks;
$59,371 for Latinos; $65,653 for Whites; and $75,043 for Asians.
Couple these findings with recent research about the
exchange of information and ideas: In a network analysis of 10
million Facebook users published in the March 2015 issue of
Science, researchers found that “friends” in networks are quite
homogeneous along partisan and ideological lines—Democrats
versus Republicans. Only about one in five of any given Facebook
user’s friends are ideologically opposites from the user. The implica-
tions here are great. Notably, race and political party affiliation are
correlated to some extent. African Americans are overwhelmingly
registered Democrats, for example. Critically, the limited ability of
both educators and students to engage effectively across social,
cultural, and ideological differences—because of their neighbor-
hood compositions and friendship networks—challenge our
schools and universities. Growing up in homogeneous economic
and racial communities and schools inadequately prepares us for
the differences that await us beyond the fold.
Social scientists and decision makers who focus on macro-
level and structural conditions can direct our attention to
much-needed economic and social policy changes that meet
targeted thresholds for higher standards of living and improved
mobility in a wealthy, liberal democracy. At the same time, we
cannot afford to ignore the macro-meso-micro connections.
On the other end of the spectrum, civil society must engage to
advance our personal mindsets and social choices. Many of us
maintain racial and economic inequality (of opportunity) through
our daily behaviors and our consumption of education as primar-
ily a personal or private good. We have strong and well-founded
desires for the “best” schools and neighborhoods—based on
tests and neighborhoods—for our own children. In the process,
we keep the “others” out.
While subject to debate, presumably, a fundamental and
philosophical purpose of education—from pre-kindergarten to
higher education—is to grow generations of literate, critically
thinking, creative, civically engaged students who work to edify
and build a cohesive nation and democracy. Somewhere in the
social system, this purpose has faltered. Some will argue it was
never realized in our schools. Others will express a lost faith in
the power of education due to racism’s and poverty’s unyielding
persistence. Many of our school-communities—including afflu-
ent ones—are in desperate need of radical makeovers both inside
and outside of the schools’ walls. To be sure, education alone—in
particular, schooling—is not the sole intervention for our society’s
problems. Still, I continue to believe in the fundamental power of
education. It is one of the most dominant socializing institutions in
our lives. To shift the tides of both economic and racial inequali-
ties substantially, we must, nevertheless, find dynamic ways to
reimagine and enact education’s equitable promises.
recommended readings Darrick Hamilton and William A. Darity, Jr. 2017. “The Political Econ- omy of Education, Financial Literacy, and the Racial Wealth Gap,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review First Quarter: 59-76. A review by two of the foremost experts on racial differences in U.S. wealth and the intergenerational transmission of advantages.
Nikole Hannah-Jones. 2015. “Segregation Now,” Propublica. A highly acclaimed article by an investigative journalist, this piece delves into the relationships between housing and school seg- regation across generations through profiles of several families.
Amanda Lewis and John Diamond. 2015. Despite the Best Inten- tions: How Racial Inequality Thrives in Good Schools. New York: Oxford University Press. Uses years of observations within a diverse, suburban public school, to reveal how even the “high- est quality” public school may engender educational inequality across different racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups.
Daniel Losen, ed. 2015. Closing the School Discipline Gap: Equi- table Remedies for Excessive Exclusion. New York: Teachers Col- lege Press. An edited volume that comprises research-based chapters from multiple social science disciplines, highlighting how disproportionality in school suspensions and expulsions by race, class, gender, sexual orientation, and disability compounds already existent achievement disparities; it also offers some con- crete policy and practice recommendations.
Prudence L. Carter is in the Graduate School of Education at the University of
California–Berkeley where she is also the dean. A sociologist, she is the author of
Stubborn Roots: Race, Class and Inequality in U.S. and South African Schools.