Desegregation of social and public spaces was the most visible result of the Civil Rights Movement. After 1960, the integration of schools in Mississippi became a source of conflict. The social change of Civil Rights attacked the social order of White Resistance that supported the state superstructure. The public schools were a place for the discovery of identity for Blacks. The integration of the schools caused many Whites to leave rather than be integrated with Blacks. Desegregation of schools was also a slow process because the local and state government could not enforce the decisions of the US Courts, leading Blacks to realize their place in American society could only be secured through individual action. This work explains the role o...
A Breath of Freedom: The Role of Freedom Schools in Politicizing Mississippi’s Black Youths The focu...
One of the greatest tasks before the United States at the end of the Civil War was to educate the fr...
McCulley discusses opposition to school integration by African American educators in St. Louis at th...
Desegregation of social and public spaces was the most visible result of the Civil Rights Movement. ...
Desegregation of social and public spaces was the most visible result of the Civil Rights Movement. ...
Between 1950 and the end of the 1970s, schools in Mississippi went through the formal process of leg...
The civil rights movement in the United States reached beyond the federal legislation that eradicate...
The purpose of this work is to identify the particular changes in the movement for social justice fo...
This ethnohistorical study returns to a historical site of Black education, The Mississippi Freedom ...
Throughout the history of the United States individuals and groups have used education as a means to...
Humanities: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)The goal of...
The Bordentown Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in New Jersey allows us to co...
This ethnography of Belvedere, Mississippi black students integrating the high school during Freedom...
On 30 December 1963, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee's (SNCC) executive committee appr...
My purpose for this study is to shed light on how the African-American community in a small Southern...
A Breath of Freedom: The Role of Freedom Schools in Politicizing Mississippi’s Black Youths The focu...
One of the greatest tasks before the United States at the end of the Civil War was to educate the fr...
McCulley discusses opposition to school integration by African American educators in St. Louis at th...
Desegregation of social and public spaces was the most visible result of the Civil Rights Movement. ...
Desegregation of social and public spaces was the most visible result of the Civil Rights Movement. ...
Between 1950 and the end of the 1970s, schools in Mississippi went through the formal process of leg...
The civil rights movement in the United States reached beyond the federal legislation that eradicate...
The purpose of this work is to identify the particular changes in the movement for social justice fo...
This ethnohistorical study returns to a historical site of Black education, The Mississippi Freedom ...
Throughout the history of the United States individuals and groups have used education as a means to...
Humanities: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)The goal of...
The Bordentown Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in New Jersey allows us to co...
This ethnography of Belvedere, Mississippi black students integrating the high school during Freedom...
On 30 December 1963, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee's (SNCC) executive committee appr...
My purpose for this study is to shed light on how the African-American community in a small Southern...
A Breath of Freedom: The Role of Freedom Schools in Politicizing Mississippi’s Black Youths The focu...
One of the greatest tasks before the United States at the end of the Civil War was to educate the fr...
McCulley discusses opposition to school integration by African American educators in St. Louis at th...