investigation

Civil Rights Investigation Slapped On Top NC High School For Race-Based Program

The Department of Education has opened a civil rights investigation into a top-ranked North Carolina high school over alleged racial discrimination.

In a letter obtained exclusively by the Washington Examiner, the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights confirmed an investigation had been opened into the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics.

Education advocacy organization Parents Defending Education filed a complaint with the OCR in May, alleging the school’s “Step Up to STEM” summer program discriminates on the basis of race by only seeking applications from black, Hispanic, and Native American students.

“Another day, another investigation into one of the nation’s most celebrated high schools,” PDE Vice President Caroline Moore told the Washington Examiner. “While we are grateful the Department of Education is taking our OCR complaint about North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics seriously, it remains troubling that one of the best high schools in the country unabashedly discriminates on the basis of race.”

The program is aimed at honing the math, science, technology, and communication skills of rising ninth and 10th graders, but the program was “open by application to eighth grade African American, Hispanic American, and Native American students who live in North Carolina.”

NCSSM, which is consistently ranked one of the top high schools in the country, takes federal funding and could lose it if the Education Department finds its practices racially discriminatory.

“It is unconscionable that students must navigate issues such as discrimination based on the color of their skin in their academic lives, as opposed to prioritizing their rigorous course load,” Moore said.

The OCR investigation does not mean the office has made a determination on the merits of the allegations.

“During the investigation, OCR is a neutral fact-finder, collecting and analyzing relevant evidence from you, the School, and other sources, as appropriate,” the OCR letter states.

“On Friday (June 23), North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics received a data request from the Office for Civil Rights and will fully cooperate with the request,” NCSSM spokesman Bryan Gilmer told the Washington Examiner. “The mission of the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, an intellectually stimulating, diverse, inclusive, and collaborative community, is to educate and nurture academically talented students to become state, national, and global leaders; increase access to high-quality public education in North Carolina, and cultivate engaged citizens who will work for the betterment of the world, through challenging programs with an emphasis on STEM, driven by the pursuit of excellence and innovation.”

This article first appeared in the Washington Examiner