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METCO: One Day for Students in a Voluntary Desegregation Program

METCO: One Day for Students in a Voluntary Desegregation Program

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By Zach Ben-Amots

Video by Will Bryan, Danae Bucci and Sophia Fox-Sowell

Founded in 1966, the Metropolitan Council for Educational Opportunity, or METCO, is the longest-running voluntary desegregation program in the country. After its founding, METCO helped integrate some suburban schools. But most of Boston Public Schools remained heavily segregated. So in 1974, Boston schools faced a court-ordered mandate to fully desegregate, leading to the Boston Busing Crisis.

Mandated desegregation ended in 1988, when integration reached its peak. Since that year, however, American schools have steadily become more segregated. METCO has continued to this day, but students enrolled in the program still face challenges of long commutes, limited sleep and social isolation.

In order to understand the experiences of METCO students today, three Northeastern journalism students—Will Bryan, Danae Bucci and Sophia Fox-Sowell—followed a sophomore at Bedford High School for one full school day. With footage gathered during that day, they produced a short documentary for the reinventing local TV news project at the Northeastern University School of Journalism.

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