In America today, educational inequity persists along socioeconomic and racial lines.
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These educational disparities unfairly limit the life prospects of the 13 million children growing up in poverty today. And because African-American and Latino/Hispanic children are three times as likely to live in a low-income area2, these disparities also prevent many children of color from having truly equal opportunities in life.
Educational inequity exists because children in low-income communities face extra challenges and attend schools that don't have the capacity to meet their extra needs and put them on a level playing field with children in other communities. Added socioeconomic pressures can include inadequate health care and nutrition, lack of high-quality pre-school programs, and stressful home lives that don't make it easy to find adequate space, time, and support to focus on school. Communities haven't taken sufficient steps to mitigate these socioeconomic pressures — either by improving economies and public services or by investing extra resources and capacity in schools in low-income areas — because of our prevailing priorities, policies, and practices.
While the problem is daunting, we believe that all children have the potential to achieve, and we see evidence every day in classrooms across the country that when students in low-income communities are given the educational opportunities they deserve, they excel on an absolute scale.
Read about Teach For America's approach to solving this problem
Hear corps members and alumni talk about their personal views on this issue.
1 National Assessment of Educational Progress, 2005
2 National Center for Children in Poverty, 2006