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J H's avatar
1dEdited

As I listened to this essay, I was transported backward in time to my experience as an economically disadvantaged child in the North Carolina school system during the mid-2000s. My district fought placing me into accelerated courses with similarly spurious reasoning as the kid you described who ended up attending Yale. It was only after a professor of education from UNC, Dr. Mary Ruth Coleman, intervened on my behalf that I was allowed into my school’s G/T program. Years later, I graduated as valedictorian of my class, and I’m enrolled in a chemistry PhD program.

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Christine Andrews, Ph.D.'s avatar

I had to fight to have my high performing daughter placed in the advanced math class in middle school in MA. We’re not economically disadvantaged but my suspicion at the time was that the teacher was biased against introverted girls. I have a PhD in educational measurement so I was able to push back on the word salad. I eventually succeeded in getting her placed in advanced math. Her experience was mixed. On the one hand, she succeeded at the math, but she always commented that the teacher played favorites with the boys in the class. Regardless of the teacher bias, my daughter is a top economics student and is winning merit awards. Her calculus professor said she’s one of her most talented students. Thank you for exposing this!

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