Professor Derrick Boone explains the importance of higher education

4.19.2010 Article, Faculty News, General

Higher Education
Originally Posted on Monday, April 19, 2010 | By Dr. Derrick Boone
Reposted from Courtney Owens Educational Foundation, Inc.

“Education is the great equalizer.” I heard that over and over and over from my parents as I was growing up. You see, they hadn’t had the opportunities I had been blessed with, and wanted to make sure I took advantage of them.

Both my mother and father grew up on farms in eastern North Carolina during the 1930’s and 1940’s. And for those who know little about farm life, especially for a black family in the south during the depression, the expression “you have a long row to hoe” takes on a whole new meaning when you’ve been in the field since dawn, it’s almost dusk, and you still have countless rows to go.

But my grandparents had the foresight to want a better life for their children, and my parents were enthusiastic participants in their dream, if for nothing more than to never have to chop cotton again. They realized education was the key, the great equalizer that could forever free their children from a hard scrabble farm life, and made sacrifices to make sure each of their children went to college. I often remember how proud my grandfather was in besting his brother, my Great Uncle Charlie, because three of his girls, to only two of Uncle Charlie’s, became teachers.

I’ll never forget what my parents taught me about the value of education. Because of my grandparents’ sacrifices, my parents were able to go to college. Because of my parents’ sacrifices, I was able to not only go to college but get a PhD. And because of my sacrifices, my oldest son, at only 23 years old, has not only received two degrees from MIT but is pursuing a graduate degree in physics from Johns Hopkins University. Without realizing it, I had passed to him what my parents had passed to me, what my grandparents had passed to them. Education is the great equalizer.

And it all started with a dream hatched in the dusty cotton fields of eastern North Carolina. And I, and my children, have been standing on the shoulders of giants ever since.