Despite the rhetoric of American equality, the school experiences of
African American and other “minority” students in the
United States continue to be substantially separate and unequal.
Dramatically different learning opportunities—especially
disparities in access to well-qualified teachers, high quality
curriculum, and small schools and classes—are strongly related to
differences in student achievement. Standards-based reforms have been
launched throughout the United States with promises of greater equity,
but, while students are held to common standards—and increasingly
experience serious sanctions if they fail to achieve them—few
states have equalized funding and access to the key educational
resources needed for learning. The result of this collision of new
standards with old inequities is less access to education for many
students of color, rather than more. This article outlines current
disparities in educational access, illustrates the relationships among
race, educational resources, and student achievement, and proposes
reforms needed to equalize opportunities to learn.