Category: Education / Topics: Demographics • Education • Social Movements • Trends
by Stu Johnson
Posted: June 165, 2020
A glimmer of hope during a dark hour…
Demonstrations over George Floyd's death began to turn this week into action aimed at addressing the problems of police brutality and social inequity. Will these produce real change with positive consequences for blacks in partiuclar and all of America as a result, or will there be a rush to do something that may introduce its own set of unintended consequences? Or, will all the emotion and earnest intentions fade away, as it has so often in the past, until the next incident?
By focusing on one tragic, despeciable event, there is a danger that focus on larger social ills may be lost: systemic racism which impacts the way we see each other, largely because of skin color; and inequity, which affects the way we treat each other, regardless of skin color, creed or national origin.
As George Floyd was laid to rest in Houston this past week and our screens are still filled with images of demonstration, protest, and response, an email from the U.S. Census Bureau had an interesting note of encouragement: "Black High School Attainment Nearly on Par with National Average." As the story pointed out, 88% of blacks have a high school diploma, 26% a Bachelor's degree.
No big deal, you say? Nothing to do with the events of the past two weeks? Take a moment to reflect.
While there may be so much yet to do that it seems nothing has been accomplished, those of us old enough can relate to the changes since World War II, when only 7% of Blacks had a high school education. At the same time, the level was only 24% for the nation as a whole. As the Census report states:
About 90% of the U.S. population has graduated high school, a dramatic improvement in educational attainment that began when compulsory education was adopted by every state a century ago.
But the most striking social shift is the shrinking of the high school attainment gap between Blacks and the national average.
College attainment has also increased, though not as dramatically, and the progress of the Black population has been considerable in the context of rising college education overall.
Yes, improvement in raw numbers does not mean equal quality, outcomes or opportunities, but it does show impressive progress. Progress to build upon—made more likely if we see and treat each other as brothers and sisters of the human race.
Read the full report at census.gov
This article was also posted on SeniorLifestyle, which Stu edits.
Search all articles by Stu Johnson
Stu Johnson is owner of Stuart Johnson & Associates, a communications consultancy in Wheaton, Illinois focused on "making information make sense."
• E-mail the author (moc.setaicossajs@uts*)* For web-based email, you may need to copy and paste the address yourself.
Posted: June 165, 2020 Accessed 1,649 times
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Category: Education / Topics: Demographics • Education • Social Movements • Trends
by Stu Johnson
Posted: June 165, 2020
A glimmer of hope during a dark hour…
Demonstrations over George Floyd's death began to turn this week into action aimed at addressing the problems of police brutality and social inequity. Will these produce real change with positive consequences for blacks in partiuclar and all of America as a result, or will there be a rush to do something that may introduce its own set of unintended consequences? Or, will all the emotion and earnest intentions fade away, as it has so often in the past, until the next incident?
By focusing on one tragic, despeciable event, there is a danger that focus on larger social ills may be lost: systemic racism which impacts the way we see each other, largely because of skin color; and inequity, which affects the way we treat each other, regardless of skin color, creed or national origin.
As George Floyd was laid to rest in Houston this past week and our screens are still filled with images of demonstration, protest, and response, an email from the U.S. Census Bureau had an interesting note of encouragement: "Black High School Attainment Nearly on Par with National Average." As the story pointed out, 88% of blacks have a high school diploma, 26% a Bachelor's degree.
No big deal, you say? Nothing to do with the events of the past two weeks? Take a moment to reflect.
While there may be so much yet to do that it seems nothing has been accomplished, those of us old enough can relate to the changes since World War II, when only 7% of Blacks had a high school education. At the same time, the level was only 24% for the nation as a whole. As the Census report states:
About 90% of the U.S. population has graduated high school, a dramatic improvement in educational attainment that began when compulsory education was adopted by every state a century ago.
But the most striking social shift is the shrinking of the high school attainment gap between Blacks and the national average.
College attainment has also increased, though not as dramatically, and the progress of the Black population has been considerable in the context of rising college education overall.
Yes, improvement in raw numbers does not mean equal quality, outcomes or opportunities, but it does show impressive progress. Progress to build upon—made more likely if we see and treat each other as brothers and sisters of the human race.
Read the full report at census.gov
This article was also posted on SeniorLifestyle, which Stu edits.
Search all articles by Stu Johnson
Stu Johnson is owner of Stuart Johnson & Associates, a communications consultancy in Wheaton, Illinois focused on "making information make sense."
• E-mail the author (moc.setaicossajs@uts*)* For web-based email, you may need to copy and paste the address yourself.
Posted: June 165, 2020 Accessed 1,650 times
Go to the list of most recent InfoMatters Blogs
Search InfoMatters (You can expand the search to the entire site)
Category: Education / Topics: Demographics • Education • Social Movements • Trends
by Stu Johnson
Posted: June 165, 2020
A glimmer of hope during a dark hour…
Demonstrations over George Floyd's death began to turn this week into action aimed at addressing the problems of police brutality and social inequity. Will these produce real change with positive consequences for blacks in partiuclar and all of America as a result, or will there be a rush to do something that may introduce its own set of unintended consequences? Or, will all the emotion and earnest intentions fade away, as it has so often in the past, until the next incident?
By focusing on one tragic, despeciable event, there is a danger that focus on larger social ills may be lost: systemic racism which impacts the way we see each other, largely because of skin color; and inequity, which affects the way we treat each other, regardless of skin color, creed or national origin.
As George Floyd was laid to rest in Houston this past week and our screens are still filled with images of demonstration, protest, and response, an email from the U.S. Census Bureau had an interesting note of encouragement: "Black High School Attainment Nearly on Par with National Average." As the story pointed out, 88% of blacks have a high school diploma, 26% a Bachelor's degree.
No big deal, you say? Nothing to do with the events of the past two weeks? Take a moment to reflect.
While there may be so much yet to do that it seems nothing has been accomplished, those of us old enough can relate to the changes since World War II, when only 7% of Blacks had a high school education. At the same time, the level was only 24% for the nation as a whole. As the Census report states:
About 90% of the U.S. population has graduated high school, a dramatic improvement in educational attainment that began when compulsory education was adopted by every state a century ago.
But the most striking social shift is the shrinking of the high school attainment gap between Blacks and the national average.
College attainment has also increased, though not as dramatically, and the progress of the Black population has been considerable in the context of rising college education overall.
Yes, improvement in raw numbers does not mean equal quality, outcomes or opportunities, but it does show impressive progress. Progress to build upon—made more likely if we see and treat each other as brothers and sisters of the human race.
Read the full report at census.gov
This article was also posted on SeniorLifestyle, which Stu edits.
Search all articles by Stu Johnson
Stu Johnson is owner of Stuart Johnson & Associates, a communications consultancy in Wheaton, Illinois focused on "making information make sense."
• E-mail the author (moc.setaicossajs@uts*)* For web-based email, you may need to copy and paste the address yourself.
Posted: June 165, 2020 Accessed 1,651 times
Go to the list of most recent InfoMatters Blogs
Search InfoMatters (You can expand the search to the entire site)