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Faced with ongoing systemic barriers to progress, many question the value of traditional education. A review of the landscape shows why there is so much despair and lack of confidence in this traditional advice.
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"At every level of education, race impacts a person's chance of getting a job," researcher Tom Allison told ThinkProgress. The study attributes the employment gap mainly to hiring discrimination, high incarceration rates for black people, and African Americans' lack of inherited wealth from past generations due to a long history of discrimination. African-American students need to complete two more levels of education to have the same probability of getting a job as their white peers, a new study by Young Invincibles finds.
According to the study, even though unemployment is higher among African Americans at every level of education, the added gains in income and employment opportunities gained from getting an additional degree is much greater for African Americans than whites. For example, a professional degree gives a black male a 146 percent larger increase in employment opportunities than his white counterparts. A bachelor's degree raises the median wage of a black man by $10,000 per year, compared to a raise of $6,100 per year for a white man.
These headlines can be very discouraging for Black students thinking about the cost of obtaining a college education. So the big question remains, "Is education still the key to progress for African Americans?"
I think the answer is still YES.
The Black millennial generation has a dual challenge -- persistent racial discrimination, and the increasing complexity of the workplace, requiring more education and skills. Even though the challenges to progress are still great, the outcomes are better for those with more education.
Whether we are sending our children off to primary and secondary school, or off to post-high school institutions, we must still emphasize the value of a good education.
What do you think?
Roger Madison, CEO
iZania LLC
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