Alison

28%
Flag icon
these low-income black students had spent their entire high school careers in that world, many of them at prestigious boarding schools on generous financial aid. And those four years had been long enough for them to make friends whose families had ski chalets and beach houses, long enough to take part in the subsidized study-abroad programs that many exclusive private schools offer their students, long enough to infiltrate the culture of the American elite.
The Inequality Machine: How College Divides Us
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview