Descriptor
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Greenleaf, Walter J. | 7 |
Phillips, Frank M. | 4 |
Evans, Henry R. | 3 |
Blauch, L. E. | 2 |
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Caliver, Ambrose | 2 |
Farr, Maude | 2 |
Jessen, Carl A. | 2 |
Monahan, A. C. | 2 |
Wieder, Alan | 2 |
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Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1920
In April, 1919, at the request of the Board of Education of Memphis, Tennessee, the United States Commissioner of Education submitted the conditions on which the Bureau of Education would make a survey of the public school system of that city. This study of the Memphis schools is intended to be a study of policies and practices; not of persons.…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Music Education, White Students, African American Students

Andrews, Kenneth T. – Social Forces, 2002
Examines the foundation of private segregationist academies across Mississippi counties following court-ordered desegregation, 1969-71. Argues that the establishment of academies was a countermovement strategy emerging from the prior history of organized white resistance to the civil rights movement, and was a response to the social-movement…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment Influences, Private Schools, Racial Relations
Johnson, Philip G. – Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1950
This study reports enrollments in general science, biology, chemistry, and physics in public high schools, the additional science offerings, the number of teachers serving these pupils, class size, grade placement of science subjects, time allotments for recitation and laboratory, and troublesome problems related to the teaching of science. The…
Descriptors: Student Placement, Science Instruction, Class Size, Teacher Attitudes
Phillips, Frank M. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1928
This report contains statistics concerning schools and classes for blind pupils for the year 1926-27. Reports are included for 80 schools and institutions. Data concerning sight-saving classes are not included where it is possible to separate them from data concerning classes for the blind. For schools that failed to report, statistics for a…
Descriptors: Special Education, Student Characteristics, Institutional Characteristics, Special Schools

Sink, John D. – Journal of Negro Education, 1995
Discusses public policy controversies unique to West Virginia's only historically black land-grant institution, West Virginia State College, and describes the mission and history of the school in detail. Efforts to regain its historically black status in spite of the present majority-white student enrollment are outlined. (SLD)
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Educational History, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics

Carlson, Neva A. – Office of Education, US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1954
Under the provisions of the Morrill Act of 1862, the income from certain public lands, or the equivalent in script, was granted to the States for the advancement of instruction in agriculture and the mechanic arts in at least one college in each State. Subsequent acts expanded the scope and increased the Federal support of the colleges and…
Descriptors: African American Students, Land Grant Universities, Foreign Countries, Income

Evans, Henry R. – Office of Education, United States Department of the Interior, 1931
Contained herein is the biennial report on the Educational Boards and Foundations of the United States from 1928-1930. Reports of funding and grants invested are available from the following: (1) General Education Board; (2) Rockefeller Foundation; (3) Carnegie Corporation of New York; (4) Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching; (5)…
Descriptors: Philanthropic Foundations, Governing Boards, Financial Support, Grants
DuBoise, Florence; Bonner, H. R. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1922
The statistics presented herein were supplied by the various State offices of education for the school year 1919-20. Either a special report to the Bureau of Education was executed or the data used were taken from the printed State school report for that year. Unfortunately it was necessary to use figures for 1918-19 for Mississippi and Kentucky.…
Descriptors: Attendance, Statistical Data, Demography, School Districts
Brown, Charles I. – 1980
The presence of whites at traditionally black public colleges and universities (TBPCUs) is examined for six periods: the pre-Civil War period, 1837-1859; the period of the educational missionary, 1860-1885; the period of reaction to white control, 1886-1916; the decade of the great philanthropists, 1917-1927; the era of the Bureau of Education,…
Descriptors: Administrators, Black Colleges, Black Teachers, Church Role
Cook, Katherine M. – Office of Education, United States Department of the Interior, 1939
Americans are justly proud of the Panama Canal, the first and the most significant of our larger ventures as a Nation in commercial engineering. Two successful means of trans-Isthmian travel are now in operation--one by rail, established with the completion of the Panama Railroad, and one by water with the completion of the Canal. The community is…
Descriptors: Transportation, Public Education, Engineering, Educational History

Anderson, Howard R. – Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1949
Since the Office of Education in 1938 issued the bulletin "Offerings and Registrations in High-School Subjects, 1933-34," no comparable investigation has been undertaken. Because of the absence of current data since 1938 both schoolmen and the general public have only been able to speculate as to enrollment trends. Much of this speculation has…
Descriptors: United States History, Social Studies, High Schools, Enrollment Trends
Hoke, K. J. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1916
The progress of children through the grades of the public schools and the stage of advancement at which they quit school are matters of great educational and economic importance, and enlist the interest of both school officers and taxpayers. If many children fail to accomplish any part of the work of the school in the time prescribed, it may be…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Elementary Schools, Grade Repetition, Student Promotion
John, Walton C. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1920
The Report of Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges for 1917-18 exhibits certain deviations from the tendencies shown in previous reports. This is doubtless caused in some measure by the disturbed conditions of the country which have resulted from the war and the subsequent readjustments of peace. The teaching force in the land-grant colleges has…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, Income, White Students, Home Economics
Greenleaf, Walter J. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1926
There are 69 land-grant colleges at present: one in each State (except Massachusetts, where there are 2); 1 each in Porto Rico, Hawaii, and Alaska; and 17, exclusively for colored students, in as many Southern States. In all courses in the land-grant colleges for the year 1924-25 there has been a total increase of 25,797 students over the previous…
Descriptors: Audits (Verification), Land Grant Universities, Educational Facilities, Grants
Scott, Elva R. – 1982
The 80-year history of education at Eagle on the Yukon (Alaska) includes 40 years when a dual system (white-Indian) was in operation, times when only one school was open, and changes following statehood. Eagle City was founded in 1898; the first white school opened in 1901 with seven students. The Indians lived at Eagle Village, 3 miles upriver.…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Educational History