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Boggs, Olivia M. – Online Submission, 2011
At the close of the Civil War the United States was forced to grapple with the tremendous challenge of what to do with the millions of newly freed men, women, and children who, for more than three centuries, had been denied basic human rights, including learning how to read and write. During Reconstruction, several educational institutions were…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Black Colleges, African American Leadership, Educational History
Hankerson, Pamela S. – Online Submission, 2011
The following is a discussion on student level of academic achievement, specifically that of African American learners. The misdiagnosis of Black students having learning disabilities and other disabilities will be examined, and the factors as to why this misdiagnosis occurs so often. Research will be provided as evidence to support this claim, as…
Descriptors: African American Students, Learning Disabilities, Educational Diagnosis, Socioeconomic Background
Bell, Edward E. – Online Submission, 2010
Background: Schools across America spend money, invest in programs, and sponsor workshops, offer teacher incentives, raise accountability standards, and even evoke the name of Obama in efforts to raise the academic achievement of African American males. Incarceration and college retention rates point to a dismal plight for many African American…
Descriptors: African American Students, Interviews, Educational Environment, Males
Green-Powell, Patricia A.; Hilton, Adriel A.; Joseph, Crystal L. – Online Submission, 2011
Since their founding, the Black churches have strived to implement and fulfill their missions. These institutions acknowledge the importance to become actively involved in the community as well as engaged in the lives of young people. Black churches are faced with unique challenges every day, however, they provide significant number of resources…
Descriptors: Social Support Groups, Elementary Secondary Education, Churches, Partnerships in Education
Gentry, Ruben – Online Submission, 2008
The path to quality education for African Americans has been rough and fraught with resistance from the time that they were denied any education to "separate" education to even "no child left behind" education. Any significant achievement for them in the American educational system required blood, sweat and tears on the part of…
Descriptors: African American Education, College Faculty, Women Faculty, Educational Opportunities
Osborne, Joan – Online Submission, 2008
In this qualitative study, the researcher explored the career development of aspiring Black female nurse executives in healthcare organizations. The researcher described the study, population, research design, interview guide, data collection procedures, and methods of data analysis. The results focused on an analysis of the interviews and…
Descriptors: Nurses, Career Development, Occupational Aspiration, Vocational Interests
Noel, Jana – Online Submission, 2004
Jeremiah B. Sanderson, a free, New Bedford-educated Black man who was active within the abolitionist movement in the Northeast, moved to California during the Gold Rush era and became one of the most influential spokesman and educators in the state. He successfully petitioned to get public funding for "colored schools" in the 1850s-1870s…
Descriptors: Biographies, African Americans, Males, African American Education
Gill, Wanda Eileen; Kosub, Mariann – Online Submission, 2006
The history of the Bowie State University School of Education is traced from very humble beginnings in 1865 with its formation to provide teachers for Freedmen following the Civil War to a School of Education in a comprehensive university. Maryland Archives, student publications, college catalogues, legislative and other records were searched to…
Descriptors: Schools of Education, Black Colleges, Educational History, African American Education
Noel, Jana – Online Submission, 2004
This paper presents an historical study of the creation of the first publicly funded "colored school" in Marysville, California, in 1857, focusing on the community's efforts to open the school. The colored school was part of a dynamic Black community full of economic and social vitality, yet was in a time period in which Blacks still…
Descriptors: African American Community, African American Students, Educational History, African American Education
Jackson, Clarence H.; Wilson, Carolyn H. – Online Submission, 2006
Opportunities to interact with their school-aged peers gives young people an avenue for learning the social skills necessary to build healthy relationships, to interact at an acceptable level in a group structure and respect for the individual differences of others around them. These skills take on a greater importance after high school due to …
Descriptors: Regular and Special Education Relationship, Special Education, Literature Reviews, Disproportionate Representation