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Teens views: Is racism still prevalent in schools among students?

Results so far:

Yes
78% 46 votes Total: 59 votes
No
22% 13 votes
Yes

Is racism still prevalent, meaning commonly and frequently found, in schools today?

Racism has been reduced, but by no means has it been removed completely. You can find it anywhere in the hallways, in people's verbal chats or by email, in classrooms- wherever. The biggest reason for racism or racial terms is ignorance.

There is the "politically incorrect" racism, which could be the pulling of an African American's hair, or the staring at a poor child with Asian ancestry as a class talks about the Chinese Revolution. On no account should a child be thought to know EVERYTHING about their ancestors' history, nor are they accountable. What their family's history is does not define a student's academic success, personality, character, or any aspect of the person. This is commonly misunderstood.

There is also the upfront ignorance, where people just don't know the full implications of racial terms or other. So, naturally, they causally toss one out once in a while- maybe calling a black kid the n-word, or a Latino the w-word, or an Asian the c-word. Evidently, those are censored for sensitive eyes, but the cause for the use of the word(s) is the same. Today, hardly will you find students with outright anger towards people of certain descent, but may simply think it's cool to use such words, or to rough up someone that isn't their race. Ignorance plays a large role in today's school world of racism.

That's not to say gangs aren't formed. That's not to say social cliques don't develop, and exclude people of different races.
That's not to say violence doesn't occur in schools weekly because of a student's race.

Admittedly, we do not have people segregated into "white" and "black" buses, and don't have "white" and "black" fountains. We also don't have the K.K.K on the march, threatening to mass-murder anyone of African American descent.

But what we do still have are the remnants of centuries of discrimination and hatred now embedded in schools across the world. In England, over a 100,000 incidents have now been documented. In the United States, public school incidents have grown to nearly 1 in 4 students being harassed because of their race.
These figures, however, seem to be on the rise, and are not necessarily declining.

So what causes it?
Not many know, apart from brief recap history from the slave trade to the 1960s Civil Rights. But that's mostly the war between blacks and whites.
What about Asian immigrants, Latinos, Islanders, and so many others?

Those stories crop up too; a few months ago, a Latino was roughed up by a group of white high school kids in the U.S. and one black. He was just walking home, and got "jumped," so to speak.

But as for schools, minorities vs. the majority continually wage war. Students fight, cuss, spray-paint graffiti, and physically injure each other in the classrooms. Racism is still evident; whether you're going to public school or private school, it's still in the classrooms, and is still something that needs to be toned down.

Learn more about this author, Chris Leahy.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No

Lets go back several years, to the time of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King. Coloured children couldn't interact with white kids and had to attend a separate school altogether. How about we revisit World War II? Jewish people, including children, were tortured and brutally murdered just because of their race. Humans have been maltreated by other humans due to race and religion all throughout our world's history. But it wasn't just the adults who were racists. Sadly, it was found among children too. Children discriminated against other children, just because they did not act or look like them, and were of a different race.We should never forget our history, even the horrendous parts of it, but we should definitely be proud to say that in this area we are now changing.

Today, you can walk into a regular high school in North America, and you would see a scene so different from what you would have seen had you been present a few years back. You would see children of all races talking and hanging out with each other. You stride into a classroom, and you would find that over half of those children were not born in the country that they live in. But yet, nobody is seen as lower and unworthy due to their race and culture. All students feel that it is not embarrassing to be from a different country, have a different religion or speak a different language. Instead, it is something that is a part of you, and makes you proud. Everyone values their classmates as individuals and respects whichever race they are. People are friends regardless of race. Teachers, have their own cultures and stories as well.

A high school, or any other school for that matter, functions differently now than in racist times. Children are taught to value others and treat every race with respect. Equality, and the simple yet true concept of "racism is wrong" is drilled into our minds starting as soon as we enter school, at a very young age. So, yes, by the time we get to high school, teens know what is right and what is wrong. It comes natural to us to respect other races. We understand the full meaning of equality and know, even subconsciously, that everyone should be treated the same regardless of what their race is. When we see someone in the hall, we think not of skin colour, language or traditions, but of that person as a student at our school; a part of our community.

I think that it is correct to say that overall we, as people, have managed to lower the rates of racism. Of course, racism can never be conquered completely. There are far too many prejudiced people to be able to confidently say that we have put an end to racism, but we can for sure say that we have grown since the racist times of our ancestors, and if not stopped, racism has at least been drastically decreased. And that is enough for now.

Learn more about this author, J.K Citrus.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

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