Monday, June 05, 2006

Supreme Court to Hear Affirmative Action Cases

Just like my 2nd period class, the U.S. Supreme Court will be hearing new cases involving affirmative action and public schools. One case involves students picking high schools, the other desegregation.

I was pretty surprised to see this news today about an hour after we did our Supreme Court Simulation on the 2003 University of Michigan Cases to read the following news report:

Nearly three years after its landmark ruling upholding a race-based admissions plan at the University of Michigan Law School, the US Supreme Court has agreed to consider to what extent race may be used to balance white and nonwhite enrollment in public schools.

On Monday, the high court agreed to examine cases involving two school districts attempting to maintain racially integrated schools.

One involves a school board plan in Seattle that seeks to achieve a rough balance of 40 percent white and 60 percent nonwhite enrollment at each of the city's 10 public high schools.

The second is a school district in Louisville, Ky., that set broad guidelines that the black student population of any particular school should range between 15 percent and 50 percent.

Read more about this in the Christian Science Monitor, N.Y.Times or MSNBC.

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