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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines how African Americans are
still segregated in our society. The paper focuses on education as the source for
segregation in society today. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAsegexs.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the subtle ways in which African Americans are denied particular rights, kept from particular institutions, and generally oppressed to the point where they are segregated by society, not by law.
They find themselves in a position where they experience "low income, high unemployment, and poor education" (Foster African.html). In the following paper we focus on the conditions concerning education
as it relates to the African American. This is the largest area in which African Americans find themselves segregated by society, and the area which serves to keep many of
them segregated in the rest of society. Education African Americans, throughout much of history in the United States, have lost out in one respect or another. Beginning from
the time when they were dragged over here as slaves, to the present day where, whether we like it or not, a large majority of the poverty ridden individuals in
large cities continue to be of African American descent, America has not always been kind to the African American people. In addition, America has not necessarily gone out of their
way to honesty incorporate that particular ethnic group into society as a whole. Prejudices still exist and discrimination is still a reality. This is perhaps, incredibly evident within the
field of education as it relates to the African American citizen. Granted, there are many other educational issues which abound today in the United States which illustrate that many people
are not receiving an adequate education, but the fact is that African Americans have been miseducated, diseducated, and generally seen as different, in terms of education, throughout the history of
the United States. Many of us would imagine that the conditions today are not anything like the times of slavery, and that is, for the most part, very true.
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