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The African American struggle for secondary schooling, 1940-1980: closing the graduation gapThe African American struggle for secondary schooling, 1940-1980: closing the graduation gap

The African American struggle for secondary schooling, 1940-1980: closing the graduation gap

John L. Rury

About this book

This is the first comprehensive account of African American secondary education in the postwar era. Drawing on quantitative datasets, as well as oral history, this compelling narrative examines how African Americans narrowed the racial gap in high school completion. The authors explore regional variations in high school attendance across the United States and how intraracial factors affected attendance within racial groups. They also examine the larger social historical context, such as the national high school revolution, the civil rights movement, campaigns to expand schooling and urging youth to stay in school, and Black migration northward. Closing chapters focus on desegregation and the urban crisis of the 1960s and 1970s that accelerated white flight and funding problems for urban school systems. The conclusion summarizes these developments and briefly looks at the period since 1980, when secondary attainment levels stopped advancing for Blacks and Whites alike. From publisher description.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16014661W

Subjects

Academic achievementEducation (Secondary)School integrationSegregation in educationEducationAfrican AmericansAfrican americans, education

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.