
An economist who found that integrating U.S. public schools in the 1970s and 1980s benefited students over time has won the 2022 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award in 成人直播.
Rucker Johnson, a University of California-Berkeley public policy professor specializing in education economics, received the prize for ideas set forth in 鈥淐hildren of the Dream: Why School Integration Works,鈥 his 2019 book written with Alexander Nazaryan and co-published by Basic Books and the Russell Sage Foundation.
studied the progress of more than 15,000 schoolchildren through adulthood. He found those who attended integrated schools experienced greater educational attainment, earned more income, faced less poverty, enjoyed better health and were not as likely to go to prison as adults than those who attended segregated schools.
鈥淢any people believe integration was a failure when in fact it was actually a success,鈥 Johnson said.
Although the United States is more racially diverse today than ever, school segregation has increased and educators are still witnessing significant student achievement gaps linked to socioeconomic status and race, he noted. The best way to fix the problem is to restore integration, boost funding for high-need schools and improve preschool education, he suggests.
鈥淥ur public schools can play a transformative role in creating opportunity, lowering poverty and encouraging upward mobility, or they can reinforce inequality. The choice is up to us.鈥
Johnson, who has studied topics ranging from federal spending on the Head Start program to the effects of school reform on education and the economy, has been invited to give policy briefings at the White House and Capitol Hill.
Despite a belief held by some Americans that the school integration of several decades ago did more harm than good, 聽Johnson found the opposite to be true, said Jeffrey Valentine, who directs the education award.
鈥淗is study offers compelling evidence of how integration and more equitable school funding can improve life outcomes for black students without harming other students,鈥 Valentine said. 鈥淗e also makes a strong case for improving our nation鈥檚 educational system through public policies that encourage integration, strengthen early education and create a fairer funding model for schools.鈥
Recipients of next year鈥檚 are being named this week pending formal approval by university trustees. The annual, $100,000 prizes also honor seminal ideas in music, world order, psychology and religion. Winners will visit Louisville in April to accept their awards and give free talks on their winning ideas.


























