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Peer reviewedChristie, Pam; Gaganakis, Margaret – Comparative Education Review, 1989
Describes South African farm schools for Black children in the context of apartheid's peculiar racial capitalist relations. Discusses provision of schooling as a quasi-feudal act of benevolence by the White farm owner, and problems of limited access, overcrowding, broken attendance, and inadequate resources. Contains 36 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Apartheid, Black Education, Educational Discrimination, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedHenig, Jeffrey R. – Teachers College Record, 1995
Research on requests to transfer to magnet schools in Montgomery County, Maryland, suggests that racial factors play a strong role in school choice. The paper argues that unfettered choice still has the potential to exacerbate racial separation, even in relatively liberal and progressive settings like Montgomery County. (SM)
Descriptors: Educational Discrimination, Elementary Education, Equal Education, Magnet Schools
Jaschik, Scott – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1992
This article examines the impact on institutions of higher education, particularly in 19 southern and border states, from the U.S. Supreme Court's decision on how the states must show they have removed vestiges of past segregation. Its impact on affirmative action, admissions criteria, and redistricting are examined. (GLR)
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, Affirmative Action, College Desegregation, Compliance (Legal)
Bernstein, Marc F. – School Administrator, 1999
Charter-school proponents overlook three overarching concerns. Funding must come from existing school budgets; charter-school populations are more homogeneous than in most public schools; and the constitutional separation between school and religion will be compromised. Studies in California, Arizona, and other states reveal accountability and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Accountability, Admission Criteria, Charter Schools
Peer reviewedJudd, Dennis R. – Journal of Negro Education, 1997
Explains how local, state, and federal governments have exacerbated or failed to take steps to reduce residential segregation in the St. Louis (Missouri) metropolitan area since the 1981 Liddell v. Board of Education decision that decided that school board and governmental housing policies had contributed to segregation in the city's schools. (SLD)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Government, Government Role, Housing
Peer reviewedClotfelter, Charles T. – Urban Review, 2002
Used high school yearbook data to examine interracial contact within school teams and other organizations. While white students were rarely outnumbered in groups, nonwhites were frequently outnumbered. Degree of interracial exposure was less than what would occur if all organizations had been racially balanced and much less than what would have…
Descriptors: Diversity (Student), Extracurricular Activities, High School Students, High Schools
Peer reviewedBredhoff, Stacey; Schamel, Wynell; Potter, Lee Ann – Social Education, 1999
Provides background information on the arrest of Rosa Parks and the effects this event had on the Civil Rights Movement. Offers a collection of teaching activities in which the students examine the arrest records of Rosa Parks and explains that these activities are designed to accompany a unit on racial segregation. (CMK)
Descriptors: Black History, Bus Transportation, Civil Rights, Primary Sources
Moran, Peter William – Teachers College Record, 2005
This article explores the twisting and complicated history of school desegregation in Kansas City, Missouri, as an example of how illusive meaningful racial integration was and still is in urban America. The goal of desegregation was difficult to achieve from the beginning, when the school district adopted its initial desegregation plan based on…
Descriptors: Educational Change, School Desegregation, School Districts, Racial Integration
Badroodien, Azeem – Journal of Education and Work, 2005
Against the backdrop of training provision in the apartheid era and a description of the promulgation of a new skills development regime post-1994, this article considers the status and distribution of enterprise training in contemporary South Africa. It is found that reasonable progress is being made with training in large and medium-sized firms…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Minicourses, Racial Segregation, Industrial Training
Taylor, Philip J. – McGill Journal of Education, 2004
This article is based on a doctoral study of educational change in the School of Education (SOE) of the University of Cape Town (UCT) in South Africa. It is an exploration of "a moment in time" that bore witness to institutional and human transformation in South African higher education. This transformation involved a development from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Experience, Educational Change, Racial Segregation
Cottle, Thomas J. – Journal of Education, 2004
In this article, the author discusses how the matter of civil rights, and in particular the treatment of black people at the hands of white people, was conveyed to him most powerfully by three men of Harvard. The first was his high school headmaster, Herbert W. Smith, who introduced their class to the horrors of apartheid through the writings of…
Descriptors: Administrators, Males, Civil Rights, Racial Segregation
Moore, James – Equity and Excellence in Education, 2004
Fifty years after the "Brown v. Board of Education" decision outlawed de jure segregation in American schools, many school districts remain segregated. Despite numerous efforts aimed at desegregation, residential segregation--the primary barrier to significant school desegregation--remains entrenched throughout the United States. The Miami-Dade…
Descriptors: School Desegregation, Desegregation Litigation, Federal Legislation, Hispanic American Students
Siddle Walker, Vanessa – Teachers College Record, 2005
Historical accounts of advocacy for equality in educational facilities and resources for Blacks during de jure segregation in the South have generally minimized, or ignored, the role of Black educators. This article challenges the omission of Black educators in the historical portrait by providing a historical analysis of four periods of teacher…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities, Bus Transportation, Racial Segregation, African American Teachers
Peer reviewedChism, Kahlil; Potter, Lee Ann – Social Education, 2004
The Supreme Court's opinion in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education case legally ended decades of racial segregation in America's public schools. Originally named after Oliver Brown, the first of many plaintiffs listed in the lower court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS, the landmark decision actually resolved five separate…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, African American Students, School Segregation, Racial Segregation
Nieto, Sonia – Multicultural Perspectives, 2004
May 17, 1954, the day that the "Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas" decision was handed down, was a watershed event not only in educational history but in U.S. history as well. It also helped to seal the Black-White paradigm into the popular consciousness, a paradigm that even today remains fixed in the minds of Americans. In most…
Descriptors: Equal Education, School Desegregation, Court Litigation, Educational History

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