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myassholealt t1_j1spejk wrote

Anecdote here, but based on my life experience and thinking back on my experience in college, I was a working class first generation college student. Being in the college environment was so different from the world I knew through the 12th grade. My new classmates were so different. I remember overhearing a conversation between classmates where a guy was complaining about being too poor, but then talking about how he can't wait for spring break cause he just wants to go somewhere with a beach to lie down and tan the whole time. Meanwhile I was planning to pick up extra hours at my minimum wage part time job.

Or the dorm experience. I couldn't afford dorming. I commuted 90 minutes each way to class, and would go him, try to take a 40 minute nap before heading out to my 6-10 shift at my job. I had no time for clubs or events, and didn't have a lot of social interactions outside of classes and class work. Hell, I didn't even know my supervisor advisor till my senior year. As a first generation student I had no clue about that stuff. This and so many other experiences all tied together to make college very hard at times. And yes, I am a minority. But it's not my being a minority that triggered this. It was my socioeconomic status, my family history, and the access to experiences I had or didn't have before getting to college.

So when someone sees the correlation as black = high drop out rate. The immediate reaction may be to be offended or object, but while on the data side that correlation is the easiest identifier, it doesn't actually identify what may be the real issues. And let's face it, with the history of this country, lots of black people have gone through life with obstacles intentionally erected to make sure this is their reality and the reality of their children. For example, while white wwii veterans were coming back home to buy homes with their GI bill and pay for education to build a foundation that roots their family and future generations solidly in the middle class, black veterans where not allowed those same privileges in many areas, rooting them and their future generations in the working class.

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