The college-going gap between Black and white Americans was always bad. It's getting worse.


From the time that Patrick Ben III decided he would go to college, there seemed to be an obstacle at every turn.

The high school he attended on Chicago’s South Side, for example, offered few of the advantages that wealthier kids got. There were no Advanced Placement courses, and little help was available with college and financial aid applications.

“I understood that a lot of the things I did to prepare for college I would have to do myself,” said Ben, who is Black.

When he finally made it to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the shortcomings of his high school were laid bare. Other students from more affluent places “were sitting there in class talking about how they’ve already done this stuff, where I’m thinking, all of this is new to me.”

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