Which statement best explains why the public school system created during Reconstruction was both a success and a failure?

(1 point)
Responses

It allowed all southern children to get an education, but since the schools were integrated, many white children did not attend.
It allowed all southern children to get an education, but since the schools were integrated, many white children did not attend.

It allowed all southern children to get an education, but segregation made it expensive.
It allowed all southern children to get an education, but segregation made it expensive.

It encouraged racial understanding, but widespread corruption made it too expensive.
It encouraged racial understanding, but widespread corruption made it too expensive.

It encouraged racial understanding, but girls were not allowed to attend the schools.

1 answer

The statement that best explains why the public school system created during Reconstruction was both a success and a failure is:

It allowed all southern children to get an education, but since the schools were integrated, many white children did not attend.

This captures the dual nature of the Reconstruction-era public school system, highlighting its success in providing education to a broader segment of the population while also pointing out the failure to fully embrace that opportunity due to racial tensions and resistance from white families.