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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Thomas Chatterton Williams - Black Culture Beyond Hip-Hop - washingtonpost.com. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Thomas Chatterton Williams - Black Culture Beyond Hip-Hop - washingtonpost.com
by ubernoir at 10:44 am EDT, May 28, 2007

Over the past three decades black culture has grown so conflated with hip-hop culture that for most Americans under the age of 45, hip-hop culture is black culture. Except that it's not.
...
A 2005 study by Roland G. Fryer of Harvard University crystallizes the point: While there is scarce dissimilarity in popularity levels among low-achieving students, black or white, Fryer finds that "when a student achieves a 2.5 GPA, clear differences start to emerge." At 3.5 and above, black students "tend to have fewer and fewer friends," even as their high-achieving white peers "are at the top of the popularity pyramid." With such pressure to be real, to not "act white," is it any wonder that the African American high school graduation rate has stagnated at 70 percent for the past three decades?


 
RE: Thomas Chatterton Williams - Black Culture Beyond Hip-Hop - washingtonpost.com
by flynn23 at 11:30 am EDT, May 28, 2007

adam wrote:

Over the past three decades black culture has grown so conflated with hip-hop culture that for most Americans under the age of 45, hip-hop culture is black culture. Except that it's not.
...
A 2005 study by Roland G. Fryer of Harvard University crystallizes the point: While there is scarce dissimilarity in popularity levels among low-achieving students, black or white, Fryer finds that "when a student achieves a 2.5 GPA, clear differences start to emerge." At 3.5 and above, black students "tend to have fewer and fewer friends," even as their high-achieving white peers "are at the top of the popularity pyramid." With such pressure to be real, to not "act white," is it any wonder that the African American high school graduation rate has stagnated at 70 percent for the past three decades?

No doubt. I've seen this first hand, since I went to inner city schools my whole life. Which I think is why the Valedictorian of my senior class got busted for murder.


 
 
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