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Showing 196 to 210 of 513 results Save | Export
Glenn, Charles L. – Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Tracing the history of black schooling in North America, this book emphasizes factors in society at large--and sometimes within black communities--which led to black children being separate from the white majority. This separation was continued and reinforced as efforts by European immigrants to provide separate Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, African American Children, Parochial Schools
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Skiba, Russell J.; Simmons, Ada B.; Ritter, Shana; Gibb, Ashley C.; Rausch, M. Karega; Cuadrado, Jason; Chung, Choong-Geun – Exceptional Children, 2008
Among the most-longstanding and intransigent issues in the field, the disproportionate representation of minority students in special education programs has its roots in a long history of educational segregation and discrimination. Although national estimates of disproportionality have been consistent over time, state and local estimates may show…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Racial Segregation, Disproportionate Representation, Minority Groups
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Fataar, Aslam – International Journal of Educational Development, 2007
This article presents an account of the ways education reform has been mediated in one South African township. It suggests that the normative policy intentions of the reforming post-apartheid state have been reworked in light of the specific social configuration of the township and its schools. It employs social-spatial lenses to understand the…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
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Richardson, Eric M. – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2008
The author explains how the film "Get Real" enabled him to explore, with a group of South African student teachers, the complex ways in which queer adolescents negotiate their daily lives, the struggles they have with "coming out" to their friends and families, the problems with representation, and the connections between…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Racial Segregation, Nonprint Media, Homosexuality
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Grant, Terri; Nodoba, Gaontebale – Business Communication Quarterly, 2009
There are many factors that influence dress code decision making in formal and informal business arenas. In South Africa, with its colonial and apartheid history followed by an exuberant resurgence of Africanism, factors such as diversity of race, ethnicity, religion, and culture play a critical role in lifestyle and worldview. These many and…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Dress Codes, Global Approach, Foreign Countries
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Allsopp, Merle – Child & Youth Services, 2011
The title of this presentation speaks to the contradictory notion of the "global village" and the great benefits associated with the sharing of knowledge--a key advantage to our shared globalized context. This "Commentary" seeks to articulate some of the lessons being discovered in South Africa related to children, families and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Rearing, Global Approach, Telecommunications
McAndrews, Larry – Educational Foundations, 2009
In 1982 civil rights activist Rev. Jesse Jackson criticized President Ronald Reagan's attacks on busing to coerce school desegregation for targeting "not the bus, but us." Two decades later, the United States Supreme Court ended the thirty-two-year-old Charlotte, North Carolina, plan which had launched the era of court-ordered busing…
Descriptors: Busing, Public Schools, Civil Rights, School Desegregation
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Artiles, Alfredo J. – Multiple Voices for Ethnically Diverse Exceptional Learners, 2009
In this article, I propose a model to re-frame disproportionality research, which addresses key limitations in this literature. I present a brief overview of the problem and situate it in the historical context in which race and ability became intertwined. I then argue that a cultural-historical understanding of disproportionality requires…
Descriptors: Historical Interpretation, Race, Disproportionate Representation, Disabilities
Beckner, Gary, Ed. – Association of American Educators Foundation, 2010
"Education Matters" is the monthly newsletter of the Association of American Educators (AAE), an organization dedicated to advancing the American teaching profession through personal growth, professional development, teacher advocacy and protection. This issue of the newsletter includes: (1) The New Debate: Is "Separate but Equal" the Best We Can…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Attitudes, Newsletters, Equal Education
Cassuto, Leonard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Richard Wright's literary career begins with a lynching and ends with a serial murderer. "Big Boy Leaves Home," the 1936 story that leads off Wright's first book, "Uncle Tom's Children" (1938), renders the vicious mob-execution of a young black man falsely accused of rape. "A Father's Law," Wright's last novel, left unfinished at his unexpected…
Descriptors: United States History, United States Literature, Social Attitudes, Authors
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Volmink, John D. – European Journal of Education, 2008
In 1994, South Africa moved away from its cruel and divided past to a future where its citizens would learn together, work together and grow together. In short we had to learn what it meant to live together by unlearning the ideas introduced by apartheid that permeated every aspect of our society. This required a new Constitution, brave and…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Foreign Countries, Educational Philosophy, Role of Education
Powell, Tracie – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2009
Georgia, like many other states, is facing a budget shortfall of about $2.5 billion, according to the Georgia Budget & Policy Institute. To help cope with its money woes, the state's university system alone has to make at least $200 million in cuts, if not more. As the Georgia Senate chairman of the Higher Education Committee, Seth Harp…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Racial Segregation, Educational Finance, Governing Boards
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Jenkins, Elwyn R. – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
Visual aspects of 12 collections of children's writing that were published in South Africa between 1986 and 2003 are considered. The covers, illustrations, facsimiles of original writing and artwork, fonts, colours and author credits create images of childhood and youth and provide clues to the purposes for which the collections were made and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Color, Childrens Writing, Racial Segregation
Tegeler, Philip; Eaton, Susan; Miller, Westra – Poverty & Race Research Action Council (NJ1), 2009
This report grows out of a conference roundtable on public housing redevelopment, magnet schools, and Justice Reinvestment held on February 29, 2008, in Tampa, Florida. The roundtable was made possible through the financial support of the Open Society Institute (OSI). It was organized and hosted by the Poverty & Race Research Action Council…
Descriptors: Literature, African American Students, Civil Rights, School Policy
Lum, Lydia – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2008
With the eyes of the world focused on the Olympic Games in Beijing, Dr. Yosay Wangdi, who's of Tibetan ancestry, expects to hear from colleagues again. She also expects her students to continue discussing Tibet's longstanding conflict with China, just as they did when news reports surfaced of a crackdown that sometimes turned violent against…
Descriptors: Race, American Studies, Civil Rights, Athletics
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