When it comes to sports, whether it's on the basketball court or on the ice, high school seniors Brit Schneiders and Raven Gary know what it's like to be the best.
Both girls star on Illinois state championship teams, but when it comes to the public schools they each attend, these two aren't even in the same league.
Raven's high school, John Marshall, is on Chicago's tough West Side. It's part of the third largest school district in the country, Chicago Public Schools, where students average a meager 17 out of 36 on the ACT - the all important college entrance exam.
But the average at Marshall is only 14. The graduation rate hovers around 50 percent. Less than 8 percent of Marshall students read at grade level and fewer than 3 percent are at grade level in math.
"I'm goin' to college," said Raven, who is an A-student. But she and her mom Sharon Williams say it's been a real struggle at a school that doesn't even have enough textbooks to send home with students.
"When look at other schools ... do you feel ripped off, and why do you think the country is letting that happen?" Bowers asked Raven.
"Maybe they don't see the big picture," she said. "We need the tools to learn."