Far from the dream of educational equality.
Rooks eloquently begins: “I believe a morning will come when we as a nation will collectively toast our wrestled defeat of inequitable education….Before that future can find us, we who believe that educational equality is a requirement for healthy democracy will need to fully acknowledge the failure of the dream of shared access to resources and institution governance that was to have been complete integration.” The book charts the history of that failure, from the founding of the republic to the present day. It offers individual stories of segregation and—after the Brown v. Board of Education decision outlawing segregation in public schools—resistance to integration. These historical narratives intertwine with personal accounts of the author’s own family during these times. Taken together, they create a vivid account of the emotional and economic damage done to generations of children of color. They sustain the position that systemic racism, rather than individually focused discrimination, often motivates institutional inequality. But, in the end, this is a book of people rather than laws and institutions. It shows that Black families were not, in fact, unanimous in their support of the Brown decision; there was dissent and disagreement about how best to serve communities and allocate resources. While the author does not support a pre-Brown world, she does celebrate the older, Black structures of belonging—the church, the school, and the community. The goal of this book is, as the author concludes, to “find another way” beyond our present systems to make education available with equal resources and equal impact to children of all socioeconomic and ethnic groups in America. Rich with statistics and historical narrative, the book comes fully alive when the author writes about her son’s struggles as a Black child in an exclusive white school system and about her challenges as a Black professor in the Ivy League.
A powerful and uncompromising indictment of the public school system.