Primary sources are at the heart of historical research, and in this age of digitized collections, accessing heretofore hard-to-find sources is easier than ever…except, as our panelists discovered, when one is researching institutional responses to racism. In the first part of the session, each of the presenters will share their experiences researching histories of school desegregation in the South. In the last part of the session, we will demonstrate, using one example (i.e., primary sources related to Autherine Lucy Foster, the first African American woman to attend the University of Alabama in 1956), how archival research can be used in the classroom to address current critical social justice issues
From the conference program: This presentation reviews the progress and objectives of a federally-f...
Paper on the challenges the author faced while researching the experiences of black working-class wo...
In United States v. Fordice (1992), the Supreme Court declared that racially nondiscriminatory admis...
Primary sources are at the heart of historical research, and in this age of digitized collections, a...
America’s convoluted history has produced an intricately woven ideology of justice. History has prov...
From the conference program: This presentation reviews the progress of a federally-funded, 3-year h...
America’s convoluted history has produced an intricately woven ideology of justice. History has prov...
The authors – a high school student, undergraduate and graduate students, and Anthropology Departmen...
The achievement gap between African-American and European-American students in U.S. public schools i...
The presenter discusses his experience with researching African and African American students\u27 ex...
This paper has been revised from its original version presented at the 2004 International Oral Histo...
Despite calls for diversity and minority participation in library and information science (LIS) and ...
Valdosta State University Graduate Symposium 2013 Presentation "Portraits of the Past-Perspectives f...
Wilson Special Collections Library’s Southern Historical Collection holds hundreds of archival colle...
This study explores how undergraduates, as historical thinkers, learn to interact with history and c...
From the conference program: This presentation reviews the progress and objectives of a federally-f...
Paper on the challenges the author faced while researching the experiences of black working-class wo...
In United States v. Fordice (1992), the Supreme Court declared that racially nondiscriminatory admis...
Primary sources are at the heart of historical research, and in this age of digitized collections, a...
America’s convoluted history has produced an intricately woven ideology of justice. History has prov...
From the conference program: This presentation reviews the progress of a federally-funded, 3-year h...
America’s convoluted history has produced an intricately woven ideology of justice. History has prov...
The authors – a high school student, undergraduate and graduate students, and Anthropology Departmen...
The achievement gap between African-American and European-American students in U.S. public schools i...
The presenter discusses his experience with researching African and African American students\u27 ex...
This paper has been revised from its original version presented at the 2004 International Oral Histo...
Despite calls for diversity and minority participation in library and information science (LIS) and ...
Valdosta State University Graduate Symposium 2013 Presentation "Portraits of the Past-Perspectives f...
Wilson Special Collections Library’s Southern Historical Collection holds hundreds of archival colle...
This study explores how undergraduates, as historical thinkers, learn to interact with history and c...
From the conference program: This presentation reviews the progress and objectives of a federally-f...
Paper on the challenges the author faced while researching the experiences of black working-class wo...
In United States v. Fordice (1992), the Supreme Court declared that racially nondiscriminatory admis...