Monday, March 20, 2006

 
Why Does This All Matter?

In case you get so bogged down in your day-to-day tasks that you forget why education even interested you in the first place, read this morning's somber NY Times report on the state of the young black male.

Focusing more closely than ever on the life patterns of young black men, the new studies, by experts at Columbia, Princeton, Harvard and other institutions, show that the huge pool of poorly educated black men are becoming ever more disconnected from the mainstream society, and to a far greater degree than comparable white or Hispanic men.

Especially in the country's inner cities, the studies show, finishing high school is the exception, legal work is scarcer than ever and prison is almost routine, with incarceration rates climbing for blacks even as urban crime rates have declined.

Although the problems afflicting poor black men have been known for decades, the new data paint a more extensive and sobering picture of the challenges they face.

"There's something very different happening with young black men, and it's something we can no longer ignore," said Ronald B. Mincy, professor of social work at Columbia University and editor of "Black Males Left Behind" (Urban Institute Press, 2006).

Everyone comes at this stuff from different directions, but for my money, this problem is so much more severe than the "World Is Flat" problem that everyone seems to be talking about.
 

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