For generations, we’ve been told that education in the United States is a meritocracy—that if you work hard, study diligently, and play by the rules, you can rise as far as your talent will take you. It’s the story of the “American Dream” translated into classrooms and campuses. But for anyone paying close attention, this story is less truth than myth. Meritocracy suggests that educational outcomes are solely about individual effort. Yet persistent disparities by race, class, gender, and language tell a different story.
Some students start the race miles behind, while others inherit head starts in the form of privilege, networks, and resources. To cling to meritocracy is to ignore history, power, and systemic inequality. If we are serious about democracy, we must stop pretending that meritocracy delivers justice and instead imagine what a truly liberatory education could be.
Rather than treating education as a contest where a few winners emerge, we reimagine success as the ability of all children to thrive. Education must be about collective flourishing, not exclusion. True equity requires more than the promise of opportunity; it demands addressing deeply unequal starting points and ensuring that outcomes are not predetermined by race, class, or zip code. Equity-driven pedagogies already point the way.
Culturally sustaining pedagogy argues that schools should nurture rather than erase students’ home languages and cultures (Paris & Alim, 2017). Yosso’s (2005) framework of community cultural wealth highlights the rich forms of capital—aspirational, familial, social, linguistic, navigational, and resistant—that marginalized students carry into classrooms. And Freire’s (1970/1998) critical pedagogy insists that education should prepare students not simply to adapt to unjust structures but to question and transform them.
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Meritocracy is upheld not just through ideas but through the machinery of schooling. Practices like tracking and high-stakes testing place students on narrow paths early, often based on biased measures.
Standardized tests and admissions practices reward wealth and cultural privilege more than effort, while school funding tied to property taxes guarantees uneven opportunity from the start. To move beyond meritocracy, these structures must be dismantled, and resources redistributed so that a child’s future is not dictated by neighborhood, language background, or family income.
Perhaps nowhere is the myth of meritocracy more visible than in our obsession with testing. These exams, presented as “objective,” disproportionately punish students of color, bilingual learners, and those from low-income families (Au, 2009; Valenzuela, 2005). Because scores track most closely with family income, they measure privilege more than potential. Worse, they narrow the curriculum, pushing out art, history, and critical thinking in favor of endless drills (Au, 2009).
Students are reduced to data points and teachers to test-prep technicians. Low scores are framed as individual failures rather than reflections of systemic inequality, perpetuating deficit narratives that work to reinscribe Eurocentric cultural dominance. Far from advancing equity, high-stakes testing suppresses the very cultural wealth and talents that students bring to school.
Moving beyond this obsession requires recovering cultural frameworks that define education differently. In Latina/o culture, being bien educado/a—well-educated—refers not to grades, degrees, or credentials but to respect, reciprocity, and responsibility to community. This ethic challenges the individualism of meritocracy and reframes education as a public good essential to democracy. It calls on schools to replace competition with cooperation, to cultivate belonging, and to ground learning in dignity and care.
Policy, too, must confront legacies of exclusion head-on. Affirmative action and targeted supports remain necessary correctives to centuries of systemic inequality. Community-university-school partnerships can bring resources into underserved neighborhoods while honoring families as co-educators and decision-makers. Democratic accountability must mean more than bureaucratic checkboxes; parents, students, and communities deserve a real voice in shaping curriculum, discipline, and funding priorities.
Perhaps the boldest step is to abandon meritocracy as the ultimate measure altogether. Drawing inspiration from Sen’s (1999) Development as Freedom and Nussbaum’s (2011) Creating Capabilities, the capabilities approach shifts the focus from test scores and credentials to what people are actually able to do and be.
While neither Sen nor Nussbaum cite Paulo Freire directly, their visions align with his insistence that education must be a practice of freedom. Freire (1970/1998) argued in Pedagogy of the Oppressed that true learning cultivates critical consciousness—the ability to question, imagine, and act upon the world in transformative ways.
In Pedagogy of Freedom (1996/1998), he further emphasized that teaching should nurture autonomy, responsibility, and ethical engagement. Similarly, Sen (1999) and Nussbaum (2011) contend that development and education should be measured not by narrow economic or meritocratic outcomes—like GDP or test scores—but by the expansion of people’s real freedoms and capabilities.
Read together, Freire’s pedagogy of liberation and the capabilities approach point toward a shared horizon: an education that resists domination, affirms human dignity, and equips learners to participate fully in democracy and in shaping more just futures. Education, then, is not a scarce privilege but a human right, to be measured by how well it reduces inequality and advances collective well-being.
Critiquing meritocracy is not about dismissing effort or perseverance. It is about dismantling the lie that effort alone determines who succeeds and who struggles. It is about exposing how privilege tilts the field for some and not others.
The challenge before us is to imagine—and fight for—an education system that lifts everyone, not just a select few. One that affirms students as cultural beings, equips them as agents of justice, and measures its worth not by how many are excluded but by the communities it strengthens. Education must be redefined as a shared project of democracy, care, and liberation. Only then will we move beyond the myth of meritocracy and realize what education has always promised at its best: not a sorting mechanism for the few, but a foundation for freedom.
References
Au, W. (2009). Unequal by design: High-stakes testing and the standardization of inequality. New York: Routledge.
Freire, P. (1970/1998). Pedagogy of the oppressed. New York: Continuum.
Freire, P. (1996/1998). Pedagogy of freedom: Ethics, democracy, and civic courage. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Nussbaum, M. C. (2011). Creating capabilities: The human development approach. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Paris, D., & Alim, H. S. (2017). Culturally sustaining pedagogies: Teaching and learning for justice in a changing world.New York: Teachers College Press.
Sen, A. (1999). Development as freedom. Alfred A. Knopf.
Valenzuela, A. (2005). Accountability and the privatization agenda. Educational Policy Analysis Archives, 13(41), 1–24.
Yosso, T. J. (2005). Whose culture has capital? A critical race theory discussion of community cultural wealth. Race Ethnicity and Education, 8(1), 69–91.
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