Many educators and researchers approach the relationship between education and health as a linear one, where greater academic attainment leads to better student health (mental, physical and emotional well-being) and wellness (living a healthy lifestyle) over time. Get good grades and, the thinking goes, you’ll be happier and healthier. This thinking fuels an emphasis on addressing “learning loss” as a result of the pandemic. Others take the opposite view with health as the predicate, arguing that poorer health constrains educational attainment. But it’s not that simple. Serving Black students well means educators must realize that schools are sources of both opportunity and inequity and influencers of health and wellness. Educators must place Black students’ health and wellness at the top of their list of educational priorities.
American history, and the country’s treatment of Black people in particular, must inform how we think about and serve Black students. As a system of advantage and oppression based on race, racism shapes patterns of access to employment, housing, health care, and education going back hundreds of years, despite good intentions. That’s why research demonstrates that the education-health link is more pronounced for Black students than for white students.
How is this history present today? Here are three examples of how racism influences Black students’ school experiences and health outcomes right now.
- First, the pandemic exacerbated racism’s toll on Black students. Today, as a result of racist structures and policies in the labor market and health care system, Black Americans are nearly twice as likely to die from COVID-19 and more than 2.5 times more likely to be hospitalized than white Americans. As a result, Black youth are disproportionately affected, representing just 14% of U.S. children but 20% of those who lost a parent to COVID-19. This level of loss leads to mental health concerns, such as the development of post-traumatic stress symptoms in some youth, that impact a student’s ability to learn and perform well academically in school.
- Second, Black students in low-income communities are more likely to be exposed to poor school building conditions such as improper ventilation and mold growth due to longstanding and widespread funding inequities. These environmental concerns impact short- and long-term health outcomes like asthma and respiratory infections. Nationally, youth in Black households are 1.7 times more likely to be diagnosed with asthma as white youth and more than 3 times as likely to have an asthma-related emergency room visit, though higher income and educational attainment do reduce these disparities. Given the airborne transmissibility of COVID-19, poor building conditions like those mentioned above put Black students at further risk.
- Third, racial disparities in school discipline endanger the health and wellness of Black youth. Greater use of exclusionary (out-of-classroom) discipline policies is associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms. Increased cases of disproportionately punitive discipline against Black students often leads to greater police exposure, which leads to adverse mental health outcomes and risk behaviors. Racial inequities in school funding and enforcement of discipline policies go back generations, and Black students are more likely to attend schools with more police officers than mental health staff. This lack of access to mental health services further contributes to racial disparities in mental health among Black student populations.
That’s why doubling down on a well-intentioned, yet oversimplified, formula of focusing overwhelmingly on learning and achievement outcomes in response to the pandemic among Black student populations is the wrong approach.
Instead, educators must acknowledge the full humanity of Black students by redirecting resources to improve the educational conditions that impact Black student health and wellness, first and foremost.