Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It is ignorant to narrowly define diversity as something you can see -different colored students. Often mixed race students are not very visably non-white. Further, most private school students who are brown or black come from very high SES households and have very privileged backgrounds. Diversity includes things that you can't see: children of any race on FA, people from different social, cultural, and economic backgrounds.
Yes, diversity can include plenty of things you cannot see, such as different economic backgrounds. But where some posters lose me is when they try to suggest that racial diversity is not "real diversity" if it's not also accompanied by economic diversity. If it's ignorant to limit yourself to just differences you can see, it's just as ignorant to pretend those visible differences don't count. That's especially true because so much of what we do as parents is teaching our children to appreciate and respect those who seem different from us. If the differences are invisible ones that no one even knows about, then children are not learning much about diversity, are they?