![]() ![]() Critics will argue that these sad case histories are isolated or rare and are situated in communities whose economies have collapsed. ![]() Board of Education, many US schools are still separate but no longer even remotely equal. More horrifying stories follow-but it's Kozol's intention to horrify, in order to make the point that these vast disparities in quality of education are caused by racism. There, the population is overwhelmingly white and Asian. Yet it is only a few minutes north to a more affluent part of the Bronx and a public school surrounded by flowering trees, two playing fields, and a playground, with a planetarium and an 8,000-book library. The school population is 90-percent black and Hispanic. A school in the South Bronx is set up in a windowless skating rink next to a mortuary, with class sizes up to 35, lunch in three shifts, a library of 700 books, and no playground. ![]() School buildings turn into swamps when it rains or must be closed (or, worse yet, are kept open) when sewage backs up into kitchens and cafeterias. Reports of schools in black and Hispanic communities from New York to California- where not only books, crayons, and lab equipment but also toilet paper are rationed-are painful to read. Here, Kozol returns to the public schools where he began a career as spokesman for the powerless and conscience of the privileged 25 years ago (Death at an Early Age). Kozol again turns a floodlight on a dark corner of the nation's soul, the classrooms of the minority poor. ![]()
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