Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 1 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 3 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 3 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 6 |
Descriptor
Educational History | 8 |
Oral History | 8 |
School Desegregation | 3 |
Activism | 2 |
Civil Rights | 2 |
Cultural Context | 2 |
Educational Experience | 2 |
Educational Research | 2 |
Females | 2 |
Foreign Countries | 2 |
Professional Associations | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
History of Education Quarterly | 8 |
Author
Eick, Caroline | 2 |
Anand, Bernadette | 1 |
Fine, Michelle | 1 |
Hilary Moss | 1 |
McCullum, Kristan L. | 1 |
Perkins, Tiffany | 1 |
Quantz, Richard A. | 1 |
Smaller, Harry | 1 |
Surrey, David | 1 |
Thomas, Auden D. | 1 |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 8 |
Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
Reports - Evaluative | 3 |
Historical Materials | 1 |
Reports - Research | 1 |
Education Level
High Schools | 2 |
Higher Education | 2 |
Postsecondary Education | 2 |
Grade 7 | 1 |
Middle Schools | 1 |
Audience
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Womens Educational Equity Act | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Smaller, Harry – History of Education Quarterly, 2022
Since the late nineteenth century, teachers have come together to found associations and unions in Europe and beyond. Drawing on oral histories, primary and secondary documents, and media reports, this paper delves into this rich historical background, leading to the founding of Education International in 1993. In particular it explores the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Unions, Professional Associations, Teachers
McCullum, Kristan L. – History of Education Quarterly, 2021
The Black Appalachian educational experience during the civil rights era has largely been obscured by mythologies of invisibility and regional racial innocence. The narrative in this article counters these myths through the stories of Black Appalachians who came of age during the 1950s and 1960s in Jenkins, a southeastern Kentucky coal town. It…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Educational History, African American Education, Educational Experience
Hilary Moss – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
This essay queries how ideas about school choice traversed the Pacific in the late twentieth century. Specifically, it reconstructs and deconstructs the visits of two African American proponents of parental school choice, Annette "Polly" Williams and Howard Fuller, from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Aotearoa New Zealand in the 1990s. Drawing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Parent Role, Parent Participation
Eick, Caroline – History of Education Quarterly, 2011
The essential nature of oral historical inquiry "naturally" and "relentlessly" brings an oral historian to theory. In this essay, the author argues for the relevance of theory in oral historical research that explores generational transformations in the relational experiences of youth attending desegregated schools in the…
Descriptors: Oral History, Historians, Educational History, School Desegregation
Eick, Caroline – History of Education Quarterly, 2010
This article contributes to one's historical understanding of student experience in general, and more particularly, to one's understanding of developing cross-group relationships within desegregated schools over the second half of the twentieth century. The article draws from a broader study that examines students' evolving relationships within a…
Descriptors: High Schools, Public Schools, Counties, Student Experience
Thomas, Auden D. – History of Education Quarterly, 2008
Women's colleges in the 1970s and 1980s faced highly uncertain futures. Soaring popularity of coeducation left them with serious enrollment downturns, and challenges from proposed equal rights legislation threatened to render illegal their single-sex admissions policies. These perilous external conditions drew together the presidents of U.S.…
Descriptors: Oral History, Higher Education, Females, Philanthropic Foundations

Quantz, Richard A. – History of Education Quarterly, 1985
The failure of unions to organize teachers during the Great Depression is examined. First, through oral history, the views that teachers living in a small midwestern town during the 1930s had of schools, teaching, and self are discussed. This reality is then compared with some assumptions historians made about unionization. (RM)
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Females, Oral History
Anand, Bernadette; Fine, Michelle; Perkins, Tiffany; Surrey, David – History of Education Quarterly, 2004
Each morning, 10 yellow school buses end their circuit through Montclair, New Jersey, to drop off 149 of Renaissance Middle School's 225 students. Community activists, almost forty years ago, had fought long and hard for school integration in this northern town. After court battles, parent meetings, community resistance, and ultimate victory, the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Middle Schools, Municipalities, Oral History