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Vergon, Charles B. – 1981
This volume examines ten communities with histories of lengthy desegregation litigation in order to gain insight into the perceived legal adequacy and practical effectiveness of various desegregation strategies from the point of view of the Federal courts. A conceptual model of the judicial review of desegregation plans is given in diagram form…
Descriptors: Busing, Compliance (Legal), Court Role, Desegregation Methods
Cuddy, Dennis L. – American Education, 1983
Examines research demonstrating that forced busing does not guarantee equal education or raise minority achievement. Advocates a first choice, free transportation system to fulfill the intent of Brown v. Board of Education. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Busing, Desegregation Effects, Equal Education
Dentler, Robert A. – 1991
A magnet school has four essential ingredients: a distinctive curriculum; a unique district purpose for voluntary desegregation; an opportunity for school choice; and access to students beyond a district attendance zone. Most magnet schools have one of five types of curricular themes: the fine, applied, or performing arts; the sciences; social…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education, Magnet Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clague, Monique Weston – Education and Urban Society, 1989
Discusses the decline in judicial attempts to mandate racial integration in postsecondary education. Analyzes recent Supreme Court affirmative action rulings to determine the limits of voluntary race-conscious initiatives designed to increase minority access and success in higher education. (FMW)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Affirmative Action, Court Litigation, Desegregation Litigation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gruber, Fred – Journal of Intergroup Relations, 1986
This article outlines strategies of maintaining integration emphasizing: (1) housing offices and counseling; (2) community action to alter real estate policies; (3) school action including public relations and human relations thinking; (4) community organization of commercial and religious institutions; (5) financial incentives for pro-integrative…
Descriptors: Community Change, Desegregation Methods, Desegregation Plans, Neighborhood Improvement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rossell, Christine H. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1990
Compares the public-choice model for school desegregation, which involves parents choosing magnet schools, to the command-and-control model, which involves mandatory reassignment plans, in order to evaluate the desegregation effectiveness of each plan. The public-choice model works for school desegregation. Mandatory reassignment produces more…
Descriptors: Black Students, Desegregation Methods, Magnet Schools, Migration
Rossell, Christine H.; Clarke, Ruth C. – 1987
This report assesses the relative effectiveness of primarily voluntary and primarily mandatory desegregation plans in a sub-sample of 20 school districts, 9 of which are magnet-voluntary plans and 11 of which are magnet-mandatory plans. The major conclusions of this report are the following: (1) voluntary desegregation plans work; (2) dismantling…
Descriptors: Black Education, Desegregation Plans, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment Trends
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rossell, Christine H. – Urban Affairs Review, 1995
Examines whether controlled choice is a superior desegregation tool for urban schools. A study of 20 school districts with minority populations above 30% revealed controlled choice to be as unpopular as mandatory reassignments, to produce greater white flight than magnet-voluntary plans, and to offer less interracial exposure than do voluntary…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Enrollment, Ethnic Groups, Magnet Schools
Ross, J. Michael – 1983
A careful review of the literature and an examination of desegregation programs in Los Angeles, show that the claim that voluntary programs produce almost no desegregation, and certainly less than mandatory programs, is open to question. Most comparisons between voluntary and mandatory programs have been between cities and have not taken into…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Black Students, Desegregation Effects, Desegregation Methods
Van Patten, James J.; Shircliffe, Barbara – 2002
This paper discusses how trends in school racial desegregation suggest a move back toward segregation. Courts are more willing now to attribute these patterns of racial segregation to demographic changes in residential housing markets rather than to past vestiges of the segregated system as they had done in the past. School officials and community…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Court Litigation, Educational Vouchers, Elementary Secondary Education
Hazzard, Terry – 1989
This paper reviews research on: (1) the significance of black colleges; (2) characteristics of white students attending black colleges; (3) barriers to recruiting white students on black campuses; and (4) strategies for recruiting white students. Reasons why white students attend historically black institutions and their levels of motivation, the…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Civil Rights Legislation, College Admission, College Students
Orfield, Gary; And Others – 1993
This study shows where school segregation is concentrated and where schools remain highly integrated. It offers the first national comparison of segregation by community size and reveals that segregation remains high in big cities and serious in mid-size central cities. Many African-American and Latino students also attend segregated schools in…
Descriptors: Blacks, Comparative Analysis, Compensatory Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Ohio State General Assembly, Columbus. – 1978
This report focuses on six issues having a direct impact on school desegregation in Ohio: (1) State authority to eliminate segregation; (2) desegregation programs within school districts; (3) desegregation plans between school districts; (4) citizen participation; (5) transportation; and (6) housing. The Committee's findings in each of these areas…
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Bus Transportation, Busing, Citizen Participation
Broh, C. Anthony; Trent, William T. – 1981
This volume presents a review of the qualitative literature pertaining to desegregation strategies and outcomes, and school characteristics. The review was based on the following objectives of desegregation policy: elimination of racial isolation; improvement of racial relations and academic achievement; promotion of positive community attitudes;…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Administrator Attitudes, Attitude Measures, Community Involvement
Office of Educational Research and Improvement (ED), Washington, DC. – 1988
Magnet school programs require careful planning. Originally designed to achieve voluntary desegregation, magnet programs attract students of all races and backgrounds by offering special curricular themes and instructional approaches not offered in neighborhood schools. Outcomes of a successful program include the following: (1) desegregation; (2)…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Admission Criteria, Busing, Community Involvement