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Brantlinger, Ellen Anderson – American Journal of Education, 1985
Interviews with low-income parents revealed that they were aware of the class character of local schools and believed that high-income schools were superior. Ninety-four percent favored social class school desegregation, believing that their children would thereby obtain a better education and better preparation for social interaction in adult…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education, Interviews
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Bomotti, Sally – Educational Leadership, 1996
In a Fort Collins, Colorado, school district, parents whose children attend alternative schools choose schools for all the right reasons. Unfortunately, only a limited segment of parents exercises a choice. Teachers say alternative schools skim off the most motivated parents and students, leaving the problem children behind. These survey results…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education, Middle Class Parents, Parent Attitudes
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Waldrip, Donald – 1977
The admission that no one best method exists for educating all children was the beginning of the alternative school movement. Alternative education, in whatever form it assumes, must allow for real parent/student choice through the creation of a number of educational options. These optional public schools take many forms and may be classified…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Boards of Education, Change Strategies, Classification
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1996
John Lee's little-known 1984 study "Tomorrow's Teachers" shows that potential teachers' grade-point averages during 1974-83 did not decline or differ from other majors' GPAs. A 1996 UCLA study documents resistance to outcomes-based education at 10 schools. Well-educated parents of former high-track students pressured administrators to resegregate…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, College Admission, De Facto Segregation, Education Majors
Kohn, Alfie – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Asserts that many privileged parents are sacrificing other children to their own and mortgaging their own children's lives. Affluent high-achievers often back ultraconservatives' efforts to derail detracking reforms, believing education is competitive and their children deserve more consideration than have-nots. Principals must appeal to parents'…
Descriptors: Competition, Conservatism, De Facto Segregation, Democratic Values