White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation

White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation
Title White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation PDF eBook
Author David J. Armor
Publisher
Pages 96
Release 1978
Genre Demographic transition
ISBN

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White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegration

White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegration
Title White Flight, Demographic Transition, and the Future of School Desegration PDF eBook
Author Rand Corporation
Publisher
Pages 75
Release 1970
Genre
ISBN

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White Flight, Democratic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation

White Flight, Democratic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation
Title White Flight, Democratic Transition, and the Future of School Desegregation PDF eBook
Author David J. Armor
Publisher
Pages 77
Release 1978
Genre Educational statistics
ISBN

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School Desegregation

School Desegregation
Title School Desegregation PDF eBook
Author Walter Stephan
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Pages 362
Release 2013-06-29
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1461591554

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The End of Desegregation?

The End of Desegregation?
Title The End of Desegregation? PDF eBook
Author Stephen J. Caldas
Publisher Nova Publishers
Pages 228
Release 2003
Genre Education
ISBN 9781590337288

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After over half a century of court-directed efforts to redress the historical educational chasm between blacks and whites in the United States, both the past achievements and the future direction of school desegregation are uncertain. Too often, the early gains made in racially desegregating America's schools seem to have been halted, and in many cases reversed. Urban school decay is once again on the rise, with predictable consequences. For the very poorest minority students, who have limited educational options apart from dangerous, deteriorating neighbourhood schools, drop-out rates are high, standardised test scores are abysmally low, and violence is an everyday fact of life. The gulf between the unskilled, marginalised students being warehoused in these predominantly poor, minority schools on the one hand, and the increasingly high tech society they cannot compete in on the other, is growing. This ground-breaking book presents the viewpoints and research of some of the most prominent scholars in the field of school desegregation. It covers virtually the entire spectrum of thinking and scholarship on school desegregation and its promise, success, necessity, pitfalls and failures.

New Evidence on School Desegregation

New Evidence on School Desegregation
Title New Evidence on School Desegregation PDF eBook
Author Finis Welch
Publisher
Pages 188
Release 1987
Genre African Americans
ISBN

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The Burden of Busing: The Politics of Desegregation in Nashville, Tennessee

The Burden of Busing: The Politics of Desegregation in Nashville, Tennessee
Title The Burden of Busing: The Politics of Desegregation in Nashville, Tennessee PDF eBook
Author Richard A. Pride
Publisher Univ. of Tennessee Press
Pages 324
Release 1995
Genre Education
ISBN 9781572332621

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What effect have twenty-five years of school desegregation had on Nashville? Richard A. Pride and J. David Woodard evaluate the city's efforts at integration and systematically examine the crucial issues involved. They argue that the controversy has little to do with costs, bus routes, or achievement test scores. Instead, they claim, it strikes at fundamental cultural issues. Nashville's white citizens, the authors observe, resisted busing from the beginning. After nine years' experience, blacks had become equally hostile to the notion, arguing that they, and they alone, bore the burden. Their schools had been closed, their offspring had had to travel farther for instruction, and their institutions and culture had been disrupted. Blacks rejected assimilation, demanding schools in their neighborhoods in which their children would predominate and would be supervised and taught by people of their own race. A federal judge heard the case. He agreed that the costs of the experiment had outweighed the benefits. In 1980, in the first such decision made in the nation, he ordered an end to busing. His opinion explained his concern that busing was creating two school systems - one private, white, and middle class, one public, black, and poor. The legal impact of the case was blunted when, on appeal, the Sixth Circuit Court ordered busing be re-established in Nashville.