By Mary Arczynski, Colorado Vincentian Volunteer
In
school I discovered my passion for improving our societal structures, but by my
senior year, I felt dissatisfied with pure discussion and felt a pull to act,
to “do” something about all of the societal injustices that I was learning
about. Especially in my economics courses, many discussions on the right
policies for social safety nets, for Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, etc.
seemed so overwhelming in terms of my inability to help everyone. So many of
these programs feel like putting a Band-Aid on a deep wound that needs stitches,
stitches that no one is willing or able to pay for. Learning about injustice,
and not knowing how to help the marginalized, many times left me with a deep
feeling of despair. This study led me to my passion for education equality. The
more I studied economics, the more I realized the self-agency that improving
the education or “worker’s skill” of a person that knowledge and experience
provides.
There
are many factors that play into the education of a child outside of the public
institution of school—to include supportive parents or guardians, presence or
lack-thereof of traumatic events in childhood, safety, nutrition, the amount of
education received by a child’s parents, etc, and arguably those are factors
that society does not have to “pay for” in terms of education. But, when you
really think about it, education is everything when it comes to preventing a
deep wound from ever forming so that a Band-Aid never has to be used in the
first place, and school systems are not equal in terms of funding, nor are they
equitable. Education is supposed to give everyone a chance and in addition, when
done correctly, it gives people the awareness to advocate for themselves. A
beneficial education allows the marginalized to improve their situations and to
become contributing members of society who can interact with pride and mutual
self-respect.
Education
is what turns anger, violence and despair towards a situation into a burning
hope for something better. Truly, think of the first time you learned to read a
word, your first book and your first scholarly essay that opened a portal into
an entirely new perspective on life. An education allows an individual to do
that many times over during the course of ONE day. Imagine the impact of a
successful countrywide educational structure on our country. One in which each
student and school had adequate staffing, textbooks, technology and opportunity.
Anyone
working in a profession that directly advocates for the marginalized knows that
many social justice issues are intertwined. One cannot talk about education
injustice without talking about poverty, and one cannot talk about poverty
without talking about racial injustice. But, I truly believe that the first
pragmatic step to long-term positive improvement of the many social justice
issues in our country begins with providing equitable education to children.
Mary Arczynski is a graduate of James Madison University with a dual degree in English and Economics. She is currently volunteering with the Colorado Vincentian Volunteers.
This post is part of our new Justice Matters series, in which volunteers reflect on the social justice issues that have become an important part of their service experience.



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