Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Session Submission Type: Invited Session (90 minute)
American schools have long been central sites where racial inequality is both produced and contested. This panel brings together scholars whose work examines these histories to show how educational inequality has been forged, sustained, and resisted across time. Panelists will consider how foundational structures and policies have disproportionately shaped the experiences of Black students and other students of color—from segregation and underfunding to tracking, discipline, and reform agendas that promised equity but often delivered new forms of exclusion. At the same time, they highlight the ways families, youth, and communities have resisted marginalization and imagined liberatory alternatives. By tracing the long shadow of racial inequality, the panel illuminates how past battles over education reverberate in today’s debates and how sociological scholarship can contribute to charting more just futures.
Aaron Kupchik, University of Delaware
Eve L. Ewing, University of Chicago
Ranita Ray, University of New Mexico-Albuquerque