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Minority Kids Have Fewer Opportunities: University Of Michigan Poll

ILEANA MORALES   07/ 7/10 06:45 PM ET   AP

Minority Opportunities

WASHINGTON — Minority children have fewer opportunities than their white peers to gain access to high-quality health care, education, safe neighborhoods and adequate support from the communities where they live, according to a nationwide survey of professionals who work with young people.

Of the professionals surveyed, 59 percent said young white children in their communities have "lots of opportunity" to play in violence-free homes and neighborhoods, while only 36 percent said the same about Hispanic children, 37 percent about African-American children and 42 percent about Native American children.

The survey refers to young children as 8 and under.

Fifty-five percent of respondents viewed young white children as having good access to high-quality health care, while 41 percent said the same of Hispanic, Arab American and American Indian/Alaska Native children and 45 percent said the same for African-American and Asian-American/Pacific Islander children.

The survey shows that children of all ages from low-income families, regardless of race, are at a greater disadvantage, in the view of the professionals who work with them.

The Kellogg Foundation survey, conducted in April, was set for release on Thursday. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the findings, which Kellogg said is the first known national assessment of health, educational and economic opportunities for minority children by adults who work with them at the community level.

Researchers with C.S. Mott Children's Hospital at the University of Michigan conducted the poll of 2,028 adults from all 50 states and the District of Columbia who work as teachers, childcare providers, health care workers, social workers and law enforcement officials.

Whites made up 71 percent of the poll's respondents, African-Americans 12 percent, Hispanics 7 percent, Asian-American/Pacific Islanders 3 percent, and other racial or ethnic groups the rest. The poll had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.

Gail Christopher, a Kellogg Foundation vice president, said those in jobs engaging children can more easily see the disparities between whites and minorities and can offer a closer look into the results of racism: communities with unequal systems of income and services.

"So you have major, major pockets of poverty in this country, many of which are tied to race," Christopher said. "Not all, but many of them are."

The Kellogg Foundation, started by the breakfast cereal pioneer in 1930, has recently focused its resources on vulnerable children who face poverty and discrimination. The group announced in May a five-year, $75 million initiative aimed at undoing the effects of racial inequalities on children in poor communities.

Matthew Davis, associate professor of pediatrics and communicable diseases at the University of Michigan, was the director of the study.

It also found:

_Fifty-five percent of respondents viewed white children 8 and under as having good access to high-quality health care, while 41 percent said the same of Hispanic, Arab American and American Indian/Alaska Native children and 45 percent said the same for African-American and Asian-American/Pacific Islander children.

_Forty-six percent of respondents felt that white teenagers ages 13-18 have ample opportunity to receive high-quality mental health care. The percentages who said that opportunity existed for teens of other races and ethnicities were 31 percent for Hispanics, 32 percent for blacks, 35 percent for American Indians/Alaska Natives, 36 percent for Arab Americans and 37 percent for Asian-American/Pacific Islanders.

_Nearly one out of three respondents cited family struggles with money as a bigger barrier to finishing high school for minority teenagers than for whites. Two out of three said the barrier was about the same regardless of race.

_Twenty-five percent said "unfair or inappropriate" treatment by law enforcement presents a larger threat to minority teens than whites when it came to earning a high school degree. The majority, three out of four, said the barrier was about equal for nonwhites and whites.

___

Online:

W.K. Kellogg Foundation: http://www.wkkf.org/

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WASHINGTON — Minority children have fewer opportunities than their white peers to gain access to high-quality health care, education, safe neighborhoods and adequate support from the communities...
WASHINGTON — Minority children have fewer opportunities than their white peers to gain access to high-quality health care, education, safe neighborhoods and adequate support from the communities...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
salmonellae
09:53 AM on 07/29/2010
This is not totally true. Check out America's small, rural communities---NO difference than 'minority' neighborhoods in more urban areas. How about Asians???? If all the rest of the 'minority' populations put as much emphasis on family, honor, education and personal responsibility as the Asians did-----these articles would be past history.
11:13 AM on 07/11/2010
Let's file this under "DUH."
09:52 PM on 07/10/2010
This is news? Slow day at HP headquarters, no doubt.
01:55 PM on 07/10/2010
No way, really?

Still, at least it's nice to be able to back yourself up with evidence when the privileged majority pretend such a discrepancy is made-up or does not exist.
01:03 PM on 07/09/2010
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:24 AM on 07/09/2010
What A surprise! You must be kidding me! this cannot be true! Imagine that! Unbelievable! We treat all people the same! this is A fair country! We believe that everyone has the right to the pursuit of happiness! This country is Blessed By GOD! We are a righteous people! We are better than any country in the entire World! We are a Nation of Laws! This is the land of equal opportunity! This is the land of the FREE and the BRAVE! We are a christian country! We are civilized! We are a God Fearing people and country! We ARE A UNITED NATION! WE ARE EXCEPTIONAL!
You are just the USA nothing more or less.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
09:16 AM on 07/09/2010
No kidding? Imagine that.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jasel
Nurse
07:27 PM on 07/08/2010
In America? Wow. There's a big surprise.

And you'll still have !d!ots running around talking about how "I can't believe
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bruinlover09
06:09 PM on 07/08/2010
America needs a stronger infrastructure for stronger communities: better schools, public libraries, free clinics, daycare, after school programs, playgrounds, etc. We need to invest in the future by investing in our children
05:41 PM on 07/08/2010
Wait a minute, you're telling me that black people can't just pull themselves up by their bootstraps?

NO WAY!!!!!!
01:15 AM on 07/09/2010
I have an idea. let's accept them to professional schools with lower objective qualifications.We can claim something like"cultural bias' prevents them from doing better work .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
salmonellae
09:53 AM on 07/29/2010
Let's have the Asians move into black neighborhoods and teach them how to raise their kids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tacking it Easy
Baseball sucks.
04:20 PM on 07/08/2010
Next breaking news story: Lindsay Lohan goes buck wild...throws away career.
04:13 PM on 07/08/2010
This is obvious did they really have to do a poll to figure this out, I could told them this!
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
02:50 PM on 07/08/2010
America's fundamental problem is the way funds schools and distributes student, concentrating advantages and disadvantages based on race, class, or both. Keeps white supremacy going.

The entire system needs to be scrapped. Everyone put into the same system to force collective improvement. It's socialism, but it works. Otherwise, it will always be a mad scramble among the disadvantaged and their children to play catch-up.
HSC55
We will be known forever by the tracks we leave
08:51 AM on 07/09/2010
Sorry but we've been throwing money, headstart, boys and girls clubs, new parks etc at the disadvantaged city to our north for YEARS. I've even gone into the grade schools myself to help teach biology. IT DOESN'T WORK! Why? Because the parents don't care. The kids don't want to learn and no one is standing behind them at home to make them understand the importance of learning, to keep them out of gangs, to report crime, to clean up after themselves at the parks etc. If they even try to learn or 'pull themselves up' they are accused of acting 'white'. They are their own worst enemies.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eschenk718
12:38 PM on 07/11/2010
I grew up in a city right outside Detroit. I am 73 years old. When I was a child they burned down a house in my city because black people moved in. Detroit was at one time mostly white, as a black family moved in to a neighborhood the white people moved out. Over time it just became one big black ghetto. What would you think if you were a black child and people moved out when you moved in. Sure did a lot for your self image. First they were slaves, then they were trash. We took away their self respect. How do they get it back? My son teaches these kids. One day two black young men had an altercation outside of school. One of them went home and got a gun and killed the other young man. Why would someone knowingly ruin their life at 17 years old. You are right it has to do with the parents. Unfortunately these parents were raised as second class citizens also. How do you stop this. I don't know. How many times have you seen a white mother make bad choices with men or whatever and then see their daughters do the exact same thing. It is no different for the black people. The big differance is that the black people are still carrying too much baggage from the white population.
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02:49 PM on 07/08/2010
duh, Pollyanna

why do we need a darn study to prove the obvious
02:19 PM on 07/08/2010
This is news?! It must be an extremely slow news day. Yes, there are a few rare examples of black success (President Obama and Oprah, etc.) but everybody already knew that.