Education And Inequality
Whenever progressives complain about widening inequality, conservatives start talking about how we have equality of opportunity. No, we don’t. Claire Vaye Watkins wrote a great op-ed about how the idea of going to a top school is completely foreign to people in her native rural Nevada.
By the time they’re ready to apply to colleges, most kids from families like mine — poor, rural, no college grads in sight — know of and apply to only those few universities to which they’ve incidentally been exposed. Your J.V. basketball team goes to a clinic at University of Nevada, Las Vegas; you apply to U.N.L.V. Your Amtrak train rolls through San Luis Obispo, Calif.; you go to Cal Poly. I took a Greyhound bus to visit high school friends at the University of Nevada, Reno, and ended up at U.N.R. a year later, in 2003.
If top colleges are looking for a more comprehensive tutorial in recruiting the talented rural poor, they might take a cue from one institution doing a truly stellar job: the military.
I never saw a college rep at Pahrump Valley High, but the military made sure that a stream of alumni flooded back to our school in their uniforms and fresh flattops, urging their old chums to enlist.
Higher education is the key to opportunity in 21st Century America. Better schools lead to more opportunity. And if you are from rural Nevada or inner city Baltimore, or anywhere else, you don’t have the same opportunities that I did.
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