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OAH Magazine of History, 2001
Provides reproductions of primary documents pertaining to Mary Tape, a Chinese immigrant in San Francisco who fought to have her children admitted to public school, including a letter from Mary Tape to the Board of Education and an article about Mary Tape that appeared in the "Morning Call" (23 November 1892). (CMK)
Descriptors: Chinese Americans, Immigrants, Letters (Correspondence), News Media
Edwards, Anthony – 1999
Some memories are presented of black principals at Booker T. Washington High School, Columbia, the first public high school for blacks in South Carolina. Former students recall some of the quotations and sayings these principals used to inspire students. Booker T. Washington High School, which operated from 1916 to 1970 as a segregated public…
Descriptors: Black Students, Black Teachers, High School Students, High Schools
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Shuster, Donald R. – Educational Perspectives, 1979
This review of Japanese educational policy in Micronesia from 1920-36 describes the separate school systems established for natives and for Japanese immigrants. Native schools offered a shorter, less rigorous program whose main intent was socialization to Japanese language and culture. (SJL)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Colonialism, Educational Development, Educational History
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Sturm, Johan; Groenendijk, Leendert; Kruithof, Bernard; Rens, Julialet – Comparative Education, 1998
A system of completely equal treatment of state and religious denominational elementary schools has existed in the Netherlands since 1920 and is firmly rooted in previous centuries of Dutch history. Development of this "pillarized" educational system is traced and discussed in relation to situations in South Africa and in countries with…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Educational History, Elementary Education, Equal Education
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Dangerfield, Celnisha L. – Journal of Rural Community Psychology, 2001
Court-ordered desegregation never happened in Woodville, Mississippi, and Black and White students continue to attend separate (public versus private) schools today. Analysis of local newspaper stories, 1959-70, suggests that the racial identities of residents remained relatively unchanged and that the local media played a major role in…
Descriptors: Black Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Mass Media Effects, Resistance to Change
Homel, Michael W. – 1984
The creation of a separate and unequal system of education for blacks and whites in Chicago in the 1920s and 1930s, and black responses to the situation are described and analyzed in this book. Drawing upon material from black newspapers and journals, Chicago Board of Education documents, census data, private manuscript collections, and personal…
Descriptors: Activism, Black Community, Black Education, Black Organizations
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Barnes, Annie S. – Integrated Education, 1983
Examines the role of Black real estate brokers and financiers in shaping Black residential patterns in the Atlanta area. Argues that Black expansion into formerly White neighborhoods has not contributed significantly to racial school mixing and that the development of an integrated busing system is needed. (KH)
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Elementary Secondary Education, Housing Discrimination, Neighborhood Integration
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Diner, Steven J. – Urban Education, 1990
Discusses the history of the Washington public school system from pre-1945 to the present to show how its problems have evolved. Discusses why the system's bad image developed and why it has been so slow to change. Student achievement and segregation are discussed extensively. (JS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Desegregation Effects, Educational Change, Educational Quality
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Litwack, Leon F. – Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1998
Reviews the historic white fear of the educated black man in the Jim Crow period and earlier, when education of the African American was seen as a threat to the stable workforce African Americans represented. Curtailing educational opportunity was an important means of racial control. (SLD)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Blacks, Educational Attainment, Educational History
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Andrews, Kenneth T. – Social Forces, 2002
Examines the foundation of private segregationist academies across Mississippi counties following court-ordered desegregation, 1969-71. Argues that the establishment of academies was a countermovement strategy emerging from the prior history of organized white resistance to the civil rights movement, and was a response to the social-movement…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment Influences, Private Schools, Racial Relations
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Beezer, Bruce – Journal of Negro Education, 1983
The North Carolina Supreme Court considered the Federal separate-but-equal mandate as manifesting the law of nature. Separation of Black and White children was justified on grounds that their differences were so great that any attempt to educate them together would be dangerous to the State's welfare. (CMG)
Descriptors: Black Education, Black Youth, Civil Rights, Court Litigation
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Valencia, Richard R. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2000
Contests the State of Texas argument in the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) case that historical discrimination against African Americans and Mexican Americans is unrelated to their TAAS outcomes. Examines contemporary de facto school segregation, distribution of substandard teachers, and the relationship of these factors to student…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Education, Court Litigation, Educational Discrimination
Goldberg, Mark F. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2001
Formerly National Education Association president, Mary Futrell got NEA to support the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and helped shift NEA's focus to professional development and human-rights issues. She believes teachers must help state and district entities set academic and professional-development standards. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Activism, Biographies, Blacks
Sparks, Mary Kahl – 1995
If ever there ever was an unsung heroine in journalism, it was LaBerta Miller Phillips, who taught journalism and advised student publications at Fort Worth's segregated I.M. Terrell High School from 1922 to 1966. When asked how she was farsighted enough to be teaching journalism all those years when there were few jobs open to blacks in the…
Descriptors: Black Teachers, Blacks, High Schools, Journalism Education
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Walker, Vanessa Siddle; Archung, Kim Nesta – Comparative Education Review, 2003
Education of African Americans in the U.S. South and Black South Africans during the periods of segregation and apartheid, respectively, were similar in both the nature of school oppression and the ways that oppressed communities sought to use education to promote racial advancement. Survey, interview, and focus-group data reveal similarities in…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Black Education, Comparative Education, Educational History
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