Racial Equity Report Cards

RESOURCE TYPE: REPORT
FOCUS AREA: YOUTH JUSTICE PROJECT
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View the 2021-2022 Racial Equity Report Cards here. Prior year's Racial Equity Report Cards are available for 2020, 2019 and 2018.

View statewide maps of the racial equity disparities by clicking the links below:

What are the Racial Equity Report Cards (RERCs)?
The RERCs use public data to provide a snapshot of a community’s school-to-prison pipeline, including any racial disproportionalities that exist in the pipeline. There is a Report Card for each of the state’s 115 school districts and one for the state as a whole.

What is the school-to-prison pipeline (STPP)?
The STPP is the system of policies and practices that push students out of school and into the juvenile and adult criminal systems. The STPP has many entry points. Once students are caught in the STPP, it can be very difficult for them to reengage and be successful at school. In almost every North Carolina community, students of color are overrepresented at each entry point to the pipeline.

What is the purpose of the RERCs?
The RERCs are a starting point for community education, discussion, and advocacy. There are many causes of racial disproportionality including, but not limited to, implicit racial bias of decision-makers, institutional and structural racism, and explicit discrimination against people of color. Together, these forces perpetuate racial disproportionality in a community’s STPP. The RERCs are not meant as an attack on the critically important public institutions that serve our youth, but rather as a call-to-action for students, parents, advocates, policy-makers, and institutional stakeholders to collectively examine the causes of racial inequity in their community and to develop solutions that will help young people, especially youth of color, avoid and escape the STPP.

Why aren’t there RERCs for charter schools?
For the 2019-2020 school year, there were 196 charter schools operating in North Carolina, including two virtual charter schools. Although charter schools differ from traditional public schools in many ways, charters receive public funding and, as such, must follow the same state and federal anti-discrimination laws as traditional schools. They also have the same responsibility as traditional schools to address racial equity issues within their school and community. Unfortunately, however, because most charters have small student populations, it is difficult to access the underlying data needed to create accurate and reliable Racial Equity Report Cards for all charter schools in North Carolina. The lack of RERCs for charter schools does not mean that there is no need to analyze racial inequity among charters. The limited charter school data that is available shows the same alarming trends of racial disproportionality that exists in traditional public schools. In fact, there is likely a greater need for an equity analysis of charter schools in North Carolina since research has shown they are often more segregated than traditional public schools. Further, charter schools are not as accountable to local communities since charters are governed by unelected boards of directors rather than elected boards of education.

You can find more resources related to the RERCs below. Additionally, you can contact us directly with any questions, to get a copy of the data used in the Report Cards, or to request a presentation.

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Last Updated: Mar 23, 2023