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How The Systemic Segregation Of Schools Is Maintained By ‘Individual Choices’ | NPR

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How The Systemic Segregation Of Schools Is Maintained By ‘Individual Choices’ | NPR



[dropcap]Journalist[/dropcap] Nikole Hannah-Jones tells Fresh Air’s Terry Gross that when it comes to school segregation, separate is never truly equal. [mc4wp_form id=”6042″]

“There’s never been a moment in the history of this country where black people who have been isolated from white people have gotten the same resources,” Hannah-Jones says. “They often don’t have the same level of instruction. They often don’t have strong principals. They often don’t have the same technology.”

Still, when it was time for Hannah-Jones’ daughter, Najya, to attend kindergarten, the journalist chose the public school near their home in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, even though its students were almost all poor and black or Latino. Hannah-Jones later wrote about that decision in The New York Times Magazine.