News

As George Washington University’s Milken Institute School of Public Health explains, recognizing the difference between equality and equity is important in just about every sphere of life ...
Equality and equity, though often used interchangeably, are not exactly the same thing. Both have to do with fairness, but the difference between the two is actually quite significant. The famous ...
I wonder if Ms. Guider (Your Views from Oct. 1) understands the difference between equity and equality. She extols the virtues of DEI while that concept is shown to be divisive and racially ...
Sen. Bernie Sanders has drawn criticism for being unable to explain the difference between equity and equality. Sanders, I-Vt., was asked by comedian Bill Maher on HBO's "Real Time with Bill Maher ...
Standing in our way and most often the albatross around our necks is that we don’t have a fundamental understanding of the difference between the concepts equity and equality. We think we do.
Equality means treating everyone the same, while equity means giving everyone what they need to succeed, even if that means providing different resources to different people. Imagine you have two ...
There was a multipart series here a few years ago on the differences between “equity” and “equality” for schools, but I’m not sure there’s been much advancement in understanding since ...
Vice President Kamala Harris, now the Democratic nominee for president, has pushed an "equity" over "equality" message as part of the Biden administration's policies, something she also spoke ...
Those who have taken a humanities or social science course may be familiar with a specific image explaining the difference between equality and equity. The left half of the image, representing ...
This is the most commonly used graphic in the world of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) to explain the difference between equality and equity. So let’s dig into what it’s really saying.
It would have been easy for Harvard President Claudine Gay to cite Carol Swain’s scholarship in her own work (“Claudine Gay and My Scholarship,” op-ed, Dec. 18), but Ms. Gay decided not to.