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Price, Daniel O. – 1969
This is the first volume of a three-volume study that examined the types of people who are better off by moving from a rural to an urban area and considered possible intervention in the rural-urban migration process. The population for the study was composed of Mexican-Americans who migrated from South Texas to San Antonio and Chicago, Negroes who…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Economic Factors, Interviews
Stuart, Nina G.; Dunkelberger, J. E. – 1974
Comprised of 20 tables of data, this paper presents the statistical data on the historical changes in occupational status projections of Northeast Alabama youth in 1966 and 1972. The data pertain to: (1) frequency distributions of occupational orientations by race and sex; and (2) changes in occupational aspirations, expectations, anticipatory…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Career Choice, Expectation
Price, Daniel O. – 1969
This is the third and last volume of a study that analyzed rural migration patterns of Mexican Americans, Negroes, and Anglo-Americans who moved from the Southern States to urban areas. Six of the 14 chapters are included in this report. The study examines differences in family characteristics between migrants and nonmigrants, migrants'…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anglo Americans, Blacks, Family Characteristics
Keefe, Susan Emley – 1977
Mexican American extended family structure in the California towns of Santa Barbara, Santa Paula, and Oxnard was examined to assess the extent to which it fitted the "traditional" Mexican American family, and to compare Mexican American family structure with that of Anglo Americans. The effects of urbanization, acculturation, and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Anglo Americans, Comparative Analysis, Extended Family

Shannon, Lyle W. – Human Organization, 1979
A series of "world view" questions was utilized in generating scale scores that sharply differentiated representative samples of Chicanos (280), Blacks (280), and Anglos (413) in a longitudinal study with a 1960 baseline. Seventy-five percent of the original respondents were reinterviewed in 1971, indicating both Chicano and Blacks held…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Global Approach, Longitudinal Studies
Mindiola, Tatcho – 1974
Population changes which have occurred within the black, Anglo, and Spanish surnamed populations in Texas from 1950 to 1970 were analyzed. This 20-year time span was selected because of the availability of the comparable census information for these groups. Three aspects of population dynamics examined were: growth, components of growth, and…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Birth Rate, Black Population Trends, Demography
Price, Daniel O. – 1969
This is the second volume of a study that evaluated rural migration patterns of Mexican Americans, Negroes, and Anglo-Americans who moved from the Southern States to urban areas. Six of the 14 chapters in the report are included in this volume, covering analysis of occupational distribution among white collar, blue collar and semiskilled,…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Attitudes, Blacks, Economic Factors
Keefe, Susan Emley – Urban Anthropology, 1980
Survey found that: (1) immigrant Mexican networks are the smallest, are kin and friend based, and include almost exclusively Mexicans; (2) American born Mexican American networks are the largest, are kin based, and are somewhat ethnically mixed; and (3) Anglo American networks are relatively small, are friend based, and are almost exclusively…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Anglo Americans, Comparative Analysis, Cultural Differences

Thomas, Erik R. – Language Variation and Change, 1997
Texas migration patterns have split the Anglo population into rural and metropolitan dialects. Evidence from a random-sample survey of Texas and state survey of high schools show young rural Anglos preserve two stereotypical features not found in urban Anglo speech. The difference, absent among adults, suggests in-migration from other parts of the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anglo Americans, English, High Schools
Henderson, George, Ed. – 1971
Geared particularly for students who will never teach in an urban community, as well as for those who will teach in the urban schools affected by the influx of migrants from rural areas, the document describes the effects of urbanization on rural communities and their institutions, especially the family and the school. Among the rural minorities…
Descriptors: American Indians, Anglo Americans, Blacks, Curriculum
Billiard, Charles; And Others – 1969
The purposes of this study were to determine which dialect features associated with particular classes and ethnic groups are unacceptable by the dominant culture in an urban community (Fort Wayne, Indiana) and to suggest implications of the findings for teaching of English language arts and skills. Phonological and inflectional features in the…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Black Community, Dialect Studies, Disadvantaged