The Christian Science Monitor

Experts on their own experience, teens take action on integration

Recent high school graduate Sufyan Hameed (r.) facilitates an ice breaker exercise during an ERASE Racism session at the conference 'Reimagining Education: Teaching and Learning in Racially Diverse Schools' at Teacher's College, Columbia University, on July 19, 2018, in New York.

No one is standing at the school door telling students they aren’t allowed in because of the color of their skin. But teenagers in the Big Apple and beyond see all kinds of racial and economic sorting of students, and they’re declaring, “Separate is still not equal.” 

Recent graduate Muhammad Deen says his Brooklyn high school, where just 1 percent of students are white, didn’t have a college counselor on staff. His Advanced Placement biology class went without a permanent teacher for months after a stray bullet flew through the school and the original teacher quit.

“Educational disparities are basically stealing the future of some of these children away,” says Mr. Deen, a member of the student-led group Teens Take Charge. “We want a seat at the table now. We’re the ones being directly affected.”

While less visible than the Parkland, Fla., teens

Marches, lawsuits, conversationsAdults on the sidelines

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