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Falk, William W.; Cosby, Arthur G. – Integrated Education, 1975
Information obtained by combining data collected from a panel of high school sophomores (1966) and seniors (1968) with a recent post-high school follow-up (1972) is used to address the question: Do youth, both whites and blacks, who attend racially desegregated schools, have educational aspirations and expectations which are significantly…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Desegregation Effects, Educational Attitudes, High School Students
Houston Council on Human Relations, TX. – 1972
The Black/Mexican-American Project has two general goals congruent with the purpose of the Emergency School Assistance Program, under which it was funded: (1) to identify points of tension and cooperation between minority students in the Houston Independent School District; and (2) to suggest ways of improving relations between the minorities. So…
Descriptors: Black Students, Desegregation Effects, Ethnic Relations, Mexican Americans
Evans, Charles L. – 1973
School integration was accomplished by three major procedures: (1) Faculties at all schools were integrated; (2) Two all-black high schools and two all-black middle schools were closed. Students were provided with free transportation to predominantly white schools; and (3) 27 elementary schools were combined into six clusters, each cluster…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Bus Transportation, Desegregation Effects, Desegregation Methods
Kuvlesky, William P.; Cannon, Margaret – 1971
Based on a June 1970 survey of 259 black homemakers (women between 18 and 65 having children in the household) in 2 villages and 1 town of an East Texas county (75% rural, disproportionately high rate of low-income families relative to Texas as a whole, 25% black, and pervaded by traditional southern culture), this paper presents 4 general…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Mothers, Black Stereotypes, Comparative Analysis
Felice, Lawrence G. – 1975
This study evaluates the effects of busing on the subsequent achievement performance of bused black students. Differences in achievement gains or losses are hypothesized as being both a function of bused students attitudes toward busing and desegregation and of the interracial climate of acceptance in the receiving schools. Findings from data…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Black Attitudes, Bus Transportation