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Joyce Olewski Inman – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2024
As part of NCHC's tribute to Dr. Ada Long (1945-2024), this response to "Honors as Neighborhood" (1995) encourages scholars and practitioners to (re)consider the problems with conceptualizing honors programs as neighborhoods given the systemic inequalities associated with both. Drawing from experience at an R1 regional institution in the…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Honors Curriculum, Racism, Social Problems
Margaret Beale Spencer; Nancy E. Dowd – Harvard Education Press, 2024
In "Radical Brown," renowned developmental scholar Margaret Beale Spencer and critical legal analyst Nancy E. Dowd offer a fresh perspective on the "Brown v. Board of Education" decision. Noting that decades of flawed implementation have subverted "Brown's" great promise of educational equality for K-12 public school…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Cultural Relevance, Inclusion
McClellan, Cara; Delmont, Matthew – History of Education Quarterly, 2023
America's schools are more segregated today than they were three decades ago. After initial progress in the wake of the Supreme Court's 1954 ruling in "Brown v. Board of Education"--further bolstered by the 1964 Civil Rights Act, as well as by several other rulings by the court--the nation's schools began a process of resegregation in…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation, Civil Rights Legislation
Gary Orfield; Ryan Pfleger – Civil Rights Project - Proyecto Derechos Civiles, 2024
"Brown v. Board of Education" held that the educational systems of seventeen states that mandated segregated schools violated the Constitutional guarantee of equal protection. The decision helped set off the civil rights revolution. However, after so many years of backlash, schools of the South are dramatically less segregated than what…
Descriptors: Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation, Civil Rights, Educational Change
Theodore Kaniuka – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2023
When unified status was granted to numerous school districts, school boards developed redistricting plans to implement neighborhood schools. Social justice advocates decried these plans as they reversed over 40 years of progress, as many of these efforts resulted in resegregating schools homogenously grouped by race and wealth. Using piecewise and…
Descriptors: School Districts, School District Reorganization, School Resegregation, Racial Segregation
Yell, Mitchell – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2022
May 2020 was the 66th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in "Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka." In this case, perhaps the most important ruling of the 20th century, the Supreme Court ruled that the racial segregation of Black children in public schools was unconstitutional. In addition, the ruling in "Brown v.…
Descriptors: Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation, Special Education, Educational History
Tiffany Puckett; Miltonette Olivia Craig – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education overturned the "separate but equal" principle promulgated in 1896 in Plessy v. Ferguson. Yet, almost 70 years after Brown, schools continue to be segregated, and the structure of the public education system has fostered inequities across the nation. Although…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Urban Education, Urban Schools, Desegregation Litigation
Mordechay, Kfir; Gándara, Patricia; Orfield, Gary – Educational Leadership, 2019
By the year 2045, demographers project that the United States will become a minority-majority nation--and in our elementary schools, this shift is already playing out. With these demographic changes also comes shifts and segregation in our neighborhoods--the compositions of public schools are strongly linked to individual housing choices, and…
Descriptors: Demography, Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation, Equal Education
Morris, Jerome E.; Parker, Benjamin D.; Negrón, Luimil M. – Educational Researcher, 2022
Whereas increased scholarly attention is focusing on contemporary school closings, noticeably absent is the placement of this scholarship within the historical context of Black people's social experiences. This paradigm shift would reveal a much longer history that has had devastating consequences for Black people. In this article, we identify…
Descriptors: Blacks, Schools, School Closing, Educational History
Charles T. Clotfelter; Steven W. Hemelt; Helen F. Ladd; Mavzuna Turaeva – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
The decades-long resistance to federally imposed school desegregation entered a new phase at the turn of the new century, when federal courts stopped pushing racial balance as a remedy for past segregation, adopting in its place a color-blind approach in judging local school districts' assignment plans. Using data that span 1998 to 2016 from North…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Economic Status, School Districts, Desegregation Effects
Walcott, John R. – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 2021
Research has made clear that there are persistent and glaring inequities in our educational system. While the evidence is clear, there is often disagreement about and misunderstanding of the reasons for this inequity. To respond effectively to current inequities, and to effectively prepare teachers for current realities, it is essential to have a…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Teacher Education Programs, Christianity, Religious Colleges
Separate Remains Unequal: Contemporary Segregation and Racial Disparities in School District Revenue
Weathers, Ericka S.; Sosina, Victoria E. – American Educational Research Journal, 2022
Resource exposure was a key mechanism linking patterns of racial segregation and student outcomes during the Brown v. Board of Education era. Decades later, past progress on school desegregation may have stalled, raising concerns about resource equity and associated student outcomes. Are recent trends in segregation associated with racial…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance, Racial Segregation, Socioeconomic Status
Shawn R. Coon – Urban Education, 2025
Many urban public schools are often perceived as inclusive due to the demographics of their diverse student populations. This myth of inclusivity reifies notions of equity in both education and broader society. However, upon closer inspection, this myth of inclusion crumbles once immersed within an urban high school. In this article, I present the…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Racial Segregation, Inclusion, Public Schools
Grinstein, Max – History Teacher, 2020
In the Bible, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are said to usher in the end of the world. That is why, in 1964, Judge Ben Cameron gave four of his fellow judges on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit the derisive nickname "the Fifth Circuit Four"--because they were ending the segregationist world of the Deep…
Descriptors: Judges, Court Litigation, United States History, Racial Segregation
Von Bergen, C. W.; Bressler, Martin S.; Whitlock, David W. – Research in Higher Education Journal, 2020
At many U.S. universities, the tendency to self-segregate has become a familiar and accepted occurrence, evident in a wide array of college settings including housing and social gatherings, classes and training events, protests, and grievance sessions, and even separate commencement events. In many ways, this trend represents a return to the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Universities, School Resegregation, Racial Segregation