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{{Short description|racial segregation; aspect of history}}
{{Short description|Racial separation in schools}}
[[File:Ruby Bridges Being Escorted.jpg|thumb|Ruby Bridges' escort from one of the workshops at the 2019 Martin Luther King Jr. Youth March and Celebration, hosted by Seattle Parks and Recreation.]]
[[File:US Marshals with Young Ruby Bridges on School Steps.jpg|thumb|In 1960, U.S. marshals were needed to escort [[Ruby Bridges]] to and from school in New Orleans, Louisiana, as she broke the [[State of Louisiana]]'s segregation rules]]
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Use American English|date = April 2019}}
{{Use American English|date = April 2019}}
{{Segregation}}
'''School segregation in the United States''' is the separation of students based on their race to the extent that an institution can be labeled to be for black students or white students.<ref>{{Cite book|last=A.|first=Raffel, Jeffrey|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/754017266|title=Historical dictionary of school segregation and desegregation the American experience|date=1998|publisher=Greenwood Press|oclc=754017266}}</ref> This discrimination has a long history that leads up to modern times. In 1832, [[Prudence Crandall]] admitted an African American girl to her all-white [[Canterbury Female Boarding School]] in [[Canterbury, Connecticut]], which was the subject of public backlash and protests. She converted the boarding school to one for only African American girls, but Crandall was jailed for her efforts for violating a [[Black Codes (United States)|Black Law]]. In 1835, an anti-abolitionist mob attacked and destroyed [[Noyes Academy]], an integrated school in [[Canaan, New Hampshire]] founded by [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionists]] in [[New England]]. In 1849, the [[Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court|Massachusetts Supreme Court]] ruled that segregated schools were allowed under the [[Constitution of Massachusetts]] ([[Roberts v. City of Boston]]).<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.tolerance.org/magazine/spring-2004/brown-v-board-timeline-of-school-integration-in-the-us | title=BROWN V. BOARD: Timeline of School Integration in the U.S| date=April 2004}}</ref>


'''School segregation in the United States''' was the segregation of students in educational facilities based on their race and ethnicity. While not prohibited from having or attending schools, various minorities were barred from most schools that admitted white students. Segregation was enforced legally in the [[U.S. state]]s, primarily in the [[Southern United States]], although segregation could occur in informal settings or through social expectations and norms. Segregation laws were met with resistance by Civil Rights activists and began to be challenged in 1954 by cases brought before the [[U.S. Supreme Court]]. Segregation continued longstanding exclusionary policies in much of the [[Southern United States]] (where most African Americans lived) after the Civil War. [[Jim Crow laws]] codified segregation. These laws were influenced by the history of slavery and discrimination in the US. Secondary schools for African Americans in the South were called [[training school (United States)|training school]]s instead of high schools in order to appease racist whites and focused on vocational education.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://resource.rockarch.org/story/black-education-and-rockefeller-philanthropy-from-the-jim-crow-south-to-the-civil-rights-era/ | title=Black Education and Rockefeller Philanthropy from the Jim Crow South to the Civil Rights Era }}</ref> [[School integration in the United States]] took place at different times in different areas and often met resistance. After the ruling of ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'', which banned segregated school laws, school segregation took ''de facto'' form. School segregation declined rapidly during the late 1960s and early 1970s as the government became strict on schools' plans to combat segregation more effectively as a result of ''[[Green v. County School Board of New Kent County]]''.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Reardon|first1=Sean F.|last2=Owens|first2=Ann|date=2014|title=60 Years After Brown: Trends and Consequences of School Segregation|url=https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|journal=Annual Review of Sociology|language=en|volume=40|issue=1|pages=199–218|doi=10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|issn=0360-0572}}</ref> Voluntary segregation by income appears to have increased since 1990.<ref name=":0" /> Racial segregation has either increased or stayed constant since 1990, depending on which definition of segregation is used.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":11">{{Cite web|last=Richmond|first=Emily|date=2012-06-11|title=Schools Are More Segregated Today Than During the Late 1960s|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/06/schools-are-more-segregated-today-than-during-the-late-1960s/258348/|access-date=2022-01-04|website=The Atlantic|language=en}}</ref> In general, definitions based on the amount of interaction between black and white students (exposure definitions) show increased racial segregation, while definitions based on the proportion of black and white students in different schools (unevenness definitions) show racial segregation remaining approximately constant.<ref name=":0" />
Segregation took ''[[de jure]] form'' with the passage of [[Jim Crow laws]] in the 19th century, then de facto form after the ruling of [[Brown v. Board of Education]] which banned segregated schools on the basis of legality. Such laws were influenced by discrimination throughout the United States, as well as the history of [[slavery]] in the southern states. Patterns of [[Residential segregation in the United States|residential segregation]] and [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] rulings regarding previous [[School integration in the United States|school desegregation]] efforts also have a role.

[[Residential segregation in the United States]] and [[school choice]], both historically and currently, have had a considerable effect on school segregation.<ref name="Frankenberg20092">{{cite journal|last=Frankenberg|first=Erica|author2=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley|date=November 2009|title=Equity Overlooked: Charter Schools and Civil Rights Policy|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/equity-overlooked-charter-schools-and-civil-rights-policy/frankenberg-equity-overlooked-report-2009.pdf|journal=The Civil Rights Project|access-date=November 4, 2013}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Rothstein|first=Richard|date=2019|title=The myth of de facto segregation|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26614879|journal=The Phi Delta Kappan|volume=100|issue=5|pages=35–38|doi=10.1177/0031721719827543|jstor=26614879|s2cid=151100046|issn=0031-7217}}</ref> Not only does the current segregation of neighborhoods and schools in the US affect social issues and practices, but it is considered by some to be a factor in the achievement gap between black and white students.<ref name=":4" /> Some authors such as Jerry Roziek and Ta-Nehisi Coates highlight the importance of tackling the root concept of racism instead of [[Desegregation in the United States|desegregation]] efforts that arise as a result of the end of [[De jure segregation|de jure]] segregation.<ref name=":09">{{Cite journal|last=Rosiek|first=Jerry|date=2019|title=School segregation: A realist's view|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26614874|journal=The Phi Delta Kappan|volume=100|issue=5|pages=8–13|doi=10.1177/0031721719827536|jstor=26614874|s2cid=150138749|issn=0031-7217}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite book|last=Coates|first=Ta-Nehisi|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/912045191|title=Between the world and me|date=2015|isbn=978-0-8129-9354-7|location=New York|oclc=912045191}}</ref> Along with educational and social outcomes, the average income and occupational aspirations of minority households that are products of segregated schooling have worse outcomes than the products of desegregated schooling.<ref name="Wells&Crain" /><ref name=":6" />

More than half of students in the United States attend school districts with high concentrations of people (over 75%) of their own ethnicity and about 40% of black students attend schools where 90%-100% of students are non-white.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Mervosh|first=Sarah|date=2019-02-27|title=How Much Wealthier Are White School Districts Than Nonwhite Ones? $23 Billion, Report Says|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/27/education/school-districts-funding-white-minorities.html|access-date=2022-01-04|issn=0362-4331}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Stancil|first=Will|date=2018-03-14|title=School Segregation Is Not a Myth|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2018/03/school-segregation-is-not-a-myth/555614/|access-date=2022-01-04|website=The Atlantic|language=en}}</ref>

Blacks, "Mongolians" (Chinese), Japanese, Latino, and Native American students were segregated in California.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.crf-usa.org/bill-of-rights-in-action/bria-23-2-c-mendez-v-westminster-paving-the-way-to-school-desegregation | title=Constitutional Rights Foundation }}</ref> Native American children faced separation from their families and forced assimilation programs at boarding schools. But there were also cases where Native Americans successfully challenged school segregation and won access to public schools.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://savingplaces.org/stories/how-native-american-families-challenged-school-desegregation | title=How Native American Families Challenged School Desegregation &#124; National Trust for Historic Preservation }}</ref>


School segregation declined rapidly during the late 1960s and early 1970s as the government became strict on schools' plans to combat segregation more effectively as a result of [[Green v. County School Board of New Kent County]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Reardon|first1=Sean F.|last2=Owens|first2=Ann|date=2014|title=60 Years AfterBrown: Trends and Consequences of School Segregation|url=https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|journal=Annual Review of Sociology|language=en|volume=40|issue=1|pages=199–218|doi=10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|issn=0360-0572}}</ref> However, segregation appears to have increased since 1990 based on decreases in the black-white exposure index and the resegregation of blacks into public schools.<ref name=":0" /> More recently, [[residential segregation in the United States]] and [[school choice]] determine the outcomes and effects of school segregation.<ref name="Frankenberg20092">{{cite journal|last=Frankenberg|first=Erica|author2=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley|date=November 2009|title=Equity Overlooked: Charter Schools and Civil Rights Policy|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/equity-overlooked-charter-schools-and-civil-rights-policy/frankenberg-equity-overlooked-report-2009.pdf|journal=The Civil Rights Project|access-date=November 4, 2013}}</ref> The disparity in the average poverty rate in the schools White students attend and Black students attend is the single most important factor in the educational achievement gap between White and Black students.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean F.|date=2016|title=School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps|url=https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/2/5/34|journal=RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences|language=en|volume=2|issue=5|pages=34–57|doi=10.7758/RSF.2016.2.5.03|issn=2377-8253|doi-access=free}}</ref>
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== Historical segregation ==
== Historical segregation ==
{{Segregation}}
{{Education in the U.S.}}


=== Reconstruction era ===
=== Antebellum era ===
[[African Free School]] was in New York City in the 18th century. [[Education during the slave period in the United States]] was limited. [[Richard Humphreys (philanthropist)|Richard Humphreys]], [[Samuel Powers Emlen Jr]], and [[Prudence Crandall]] established schools for African Americans in the decades preceding the Civil War.
[[File:Educational separation in the US prior to Brown Map.svg|thumb|300px|[[Jim Crow laws]] in the [[Southern United States]] required school segregation, 1877–1954.]]


In 1832, [[Prudence Crandall]] admitted an African American girl to her all-white [[Canterbury Female Boarding School]] in [[Canterbury, Connecticut]], which was the subject of public backlash and protests. She converted the boarding school to one for only African American girls, but Crandall was jailed for her efforts for violating a [[Black Codes (United States)|Black Law]]. In 1835, an anti-abolitionist mob attacked and destroyed [[Noyes Academy]], an integrated school in [[Canaan, New Hampshire]] founded by [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionists]] in [[New England]]. In 1849, the [[Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court|Massachusetts Supreme Court]] ruled that segregated schools were allowed under the [[Constitution of Massachusetts]] ([[Roberts v. City of Boston]]).<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.tolerance.org/magazine/spring-2004/brown-v-board-timeline-of-school-integration-in-the-us | title=Brown v. Board: Timeline of School Integration in the U.S| date=April 2004}}</ref> [[Emlen Institution]] was a boarding school for African American and Native American orphans in Ohio and then Pennsylvania.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://soleburyhistory.org/on-line-exhibits/interactive-maps/underground-railroad-stops/emlen-institute/ | title=Emlen Institute &#124; Solebury Township Historical Society | date=August 7, 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://archives.tricolib.brynmawr.edu/resources/hcmc-999 | title=Collection: Emlen Institution for the Benefit of Children of African and Indian Descent records &#124; Archives & Manuscripts }}</ref> [[Richard Humphreys (philanthropist)]] bequeathed money to establish the [[Institute for Colored Youth]] in Philadelphia.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://archives.tricolib.brynmawr.edu/resources/hcmc-1256 | title=Collection: William Morris Maier papers &#124; Archives & Manuscripts }}</ref> Yale Law School co-founder, judge, and mayor of New Haven [[David Daggett]] was a leader in the fight against schools for African Americans and helped block plans for a college for African Americans in New Haven, Connecticut.
[[File:Charles County, Maryland. Upper-grade pupils in the Waldorf Negro elementary school are ready to ans . . . - NARA - 521562.jpg|thumb|300px|Students in a one-room school in [[Waldorf, Maryland]] (1941)]]


[[Black schools]] were established by some religious groups and philanthropists to educate African Americans. [[Oberlin Academy]] was one of the early schools to integrate. [[Lowell High School (Massachusetts)|Lowell High School]] also accepted African American students.
The formal segregation of Black and White people in the United States began long before the passage of Jim Crow laws following the end of the [[Reconstruction Era]] in 1877.<ref name="Rudd">[http://find.galegroup.com/gic/infomark.do?&source=gale&idigest=fb720fd31d9036c1ed2d1f3a0500fcc2&prodId=GIC&userGroupName=itsbtrial&tabID=T001&docId=CX2831400031&type=retrieve&contentSet=EBKS&version=1.0 "Racial Segregation in the American South: Jim Crow Laws."] ''Prejudice in the Modern World Reference Library''. Ed. Kelly Rudd, Richard Hanes, and Sarah Hermsen. Vol. 2. Detroit: UXL, 2007. 333-357. ''Global Issues In Context''. Web. October 19, 2013.</ref> The [[Supreme Court of the United States|United States Supreme Court]]'s [[Dred Scott v. Sandford]] decision upheld the denial of citizenship to African Americans and found that descendants of slaves are "so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."

=== Reconstruction era ===
[[File:Educational separation in the US prior to Brown Map.svg|thumb|[[Jim Crow laws]] in the [[Southern United States]] (shaded red) required school segregation, 1877–1954. Other states outside the south prohibited school segregation (green) or allowed local choice (blue)]]


The formal segregation of black and [[white people]] began following the end of the [[Reconstruction Era]] in 1877.<ref name="Rudd">[http://find.galegroup.com/gic/infomark.do?&source=gale&idigest=fb720fd31d9036c1ed2d1f3a0500fcc2&prodId=GIC&userGroupName=itsbtrial&tabID=T001&docId=CX2831400031&type=retrieve&contentSet=EBKS&version=1.0 "Racial Segregation in the American South: Jim Crow Laws."] ''Prejudice in the Modern World Reference Library''. Ed. Kelly Rudd, Richard Hanes, and Sarah Hermsen. Vol. 2. Detroit: UXL, 2007. 333-357. ''Global Issues In Context''. Web. October 19, 2013.</ref> The [[Supreme Court of the United States|United States Supreme Court]]'s [[Dred Scott v. Sandford]] decision upheld the denial of citizenship to African Americans and found that descendants of slaves are "so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."
Following the [[American Civil War]] and the ratification of the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Amendment]] which ended slavery throughout the entire United States, the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], guaranteeing "equal protection under the law", was ratified in 1868, and citizenship was extended to African Americans. Congress also passed the [[Civil Rights Act of 1875]], banning racial discrimination in public accommodations. But in 1883, the Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, finding that [[discrimination]] by individuals or private businesses is [[constitution]]al.


[[File:Charles County, Maryland. Upper-grade pupils in the Waldorf Negro elementary school are ready to ans . . . - NARA - 521562.jpg|thumb|Students in a one-room school in [[Waldorf, Maryland]] (1941)]]
=== Jim Crow Era ===
Following the [[American Civil War]], the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Amendment]] was ratified and ended slavery nationwide. The [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], guaranteeing equal protection under the law, was ratified in 1868, and citizenship was extended to African Americans.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Fourteenth Amendment {{!}} Definition, Summary, Rights, Significance, & Facts|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Fourteenth-Amendment|access-date=2021-10-17|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en}}</ref> Congress also passed the [[Civil Rights Act of 1875]], banning racial discrimination in public accommodations. But in 1883, the Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, finding that [[discrimination]] by individuals or private businesses was [[constitution]]al.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Civil Rights Cases {{!}} law cases [1883]|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Civil-Rights-Cases|access-date=2021-10-17|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en}}</ref>
The Reconstruction Era saw efforts at integration in the South, but Jim Crow laws followed and were also passed by state legislatures in the South and parts of the lower Midwest and Southwest, segregating Black and White people in all aspects of public life, including attendance of public schools.<ref name="National Park Service">{{cite web|title=Jim Crow Laws|url=http://www.nps.gov/malu/forteachers/jim_crow_laws.htm|publisher=National Park Service|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref>


=== Jim Crow era ===
The constitutionality of Jim Crow laws was upheld in the Supreme Court's decision in ''[[Plessy v. Ferguson]]'' (1896), which ruled that separate facilities for Black and White people were permissible provided that the facilities were of equal quality.<ref name="Rudd" /> The fact that separate facilities for Black people and other minorities were chronically underfunded and of lesser quality was not successfully challenged in court for decades.
The [[Dunning School]] at Columbia University, provided the intellectual underpinning for Jim Crow era discrimination. Segregation continued in ''[[de jure]]'' form with the passage of [[Jim Crow laws]] in the 19th century. The Reconstruction era saw efforts at integration in the South, but [https://www.eeoc.gov/prohibited-employment-policiespractices#:~:text=Under%20the%20laws%20enforced%20by,)%2C%20disability%20or%20genetic%20information. discriminatory laws] were also passed by state legislatures in the South and parts of the lower Midwest and Southwest, segregating public schools.<ref name="National Park Service">{{cite web|title=Jim Crow Laws|url=http://www.nps.gov/malu/forteachers/jim_crow_laws.htm|publisher=National Park Service|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref> These stated that schools should be separated by race and offer equal amenities, but conditions were far from equal.<ref>{{Cite web|last1=Houston|first1=Charles H.|last2=Fund|first2=NAACP Legal Defense|last3=White|first3=Walter|last4=Hastie|first4=William|last5=Spingarn|first5=Joel|last6=Spingarn|first6=Arthur|last7=Margold|first7=Nathan R.|last8=Garland|first8=Charles|last9=University|first9=Howard|date=2004-11-13|title=A Century of Racial Segregation 1849–1950 – Brown v. Board at Fifty: "With an Even Hand" {{!}} Exhibitions – Library of Congress|url=https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/brown/brown-segregation.html|access-date=2021-10-18|website=www.loc.gov}}</ref>[[File:Jim Crow.jpg|thumb|Segregated drinking fountain in the American south under the [[Jim Crow laws|Jim Crow Laws]]. ]]The constitutionality of Jim Crow laws was upheld in the Supreme Court's decision in ''[[Plessy v. Ferguson]]'' (1896), which ruled that separate facilities for black and white people were permissible provided that the facilities were of equal quality.<ref name="Rudd" />


=== New Deal era ===
=== New Deal era ===
Throughout the [[New Deal]] era, [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] enacted certain housing reforms that focused their benefits on home buying aid to only white Americans. <ref name=":03">{{Cite web|last=Little|first=Becky|title=What Is 'Redlining'?|url=https://www.history.com/news/housing-segregation-new-deal-program|access-date=2021-10-15|website=HISTORY|language=en}}</ref> These restrictions in loans introduce the effects that residential segregation projects on schooling by separating black and white neighborhoods. These housing projects were intentionally drawn so that black neighborhoods had less access to education and jobs which contributes to average poverty rates that Reardon relates to academic achievement gaps.<ref name=":03" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean F.|date=2016-09-01|title=School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps|url=https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/2/5/34|journal=RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences|language=en|volume=2|issue=5|pages=34–57|doi=10.7758/RSF.2016.2.5.03|issn=2377-8253}}</ref>
[[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] enacted housing reforms that focused their benefits on home buying aid to only white Americans.<ref name=":03">{{Cite web|last=Little|first=Becky|title=What Is 'Redlining'?|url=https://www.history.com/news/housing-segregation-new-deal-program|access-date=2021-10-15|website=HISTORY|language=en}}</ref> These restrictions in loans further separated black and white neighborhoods, which introduced the long term effects of residential segregation projects on schooling. The boundaries housing projects were intentionally drawn so that black neighborhoods had less access to education and jobs.<ref name=":7" /> This depletion of resources led to an increase in poverty rates which broadened academic achievement gaps.<ref name=":03" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean F.|date=2016-09-01|title=School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps|url=https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/2/5/34|journal=RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences|language=en|volume=2|issue=5|pages=34–57|doi=10.7758/RSF.2016.2.5.03|s2cid=4671848|issn=2377-8253|doi-access=free}}</ref>


The establishment of the [[NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund]] in 1939 serves as the foundation of the efforts and funding to challenge school segregation. Initially ran by [[Charles Hamilton Houston]], who started his work by suing universities in the south for allowing blacks to apply to their graduate programs, the LDF shifted its leadership when Houston eventually hired [[Thurgood Marshall]], the first director of the LDF and leader in court battles.
The establishment of the [[NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund]] (LDF) in 1939 serves as the foundation of the efforts and funding to challenge school segregation. [[Charles Hamilton Houston]] initially ran the LDF, and focused heavily on proving that black schools were severely unequal to white schools<ref name=":42">{{Cite journal|last=Blight|first=David W.|date=2002|title=Charles Hamilton Houston: The Legal Scholar Who Laid the Foundation for Integrated Higher Education in the United States|journal=The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education|volume=34|pages=107}}</ref> Eventually, the LDF shifted its leadership to Thurgood Marshall, who became the first director of the LDF and was a leader in significant court battles including ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]''.<ref name=":52">{{Cite web|title=Who Was Thurgood Marshall?|url=https://www.naacpldf.org/about-us/history/thurgood-marshall/|access-date=2021-10-19|website=NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund|language=en-US}}</ref>


=== Civil Rights era ===
=== Civil Rights era ===
[[File:Quote on Segregation from Supreme Court Decision - Brown v. Board of Education Historic Site - Topeka - Kansas - USA (40940562055).jpg|thumb|Quote from Supreme Court Decision in [[Brown v. Board of Education]] case, hung at the Historic Site in Topeka, Kansas, USA]]
''Plessy v. Ferguson'' was subsequently overturned in 1954, when the Supreme Court ruling in ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'' ended ''[[de jure]]'' segregation in the United States.<ref name="Orfield2001">Orfield, Gary. [http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/schools-more-separate-consequences-of-a-decade-of-resegregation/orfield-schools-more-separate-2001.pdf "Schools More Separate: Consequences of a Decade of Resegregation."] ''Harvard Civil Rights Project''. (2001). (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> The state of Arkansas would experience some of the first successful school integrations below the Mason-Dixon Line.<ref name="arkansasintegration">{{cite news|date=September 10, 2007|title=Before Little Rock: Successful Arkansas School Integration|publisher=University of Arkansas|url=https://news.uark.edu/articles/9136/before-little-rock-successful-arkansas-school-integration|url-status=live|access-date=September 13, 2020}}</ref> In the decade following ''Brown,'' the South resisted enforcement of the Court's decision.<ref name="Orfield2001" /> States and school districts did little to reduce segregation, and schools remained almost completely segregated until 1968, after Congressional passage of civil rights legislation.<ref name="Reardonowens">{{cite web|title=60 Years After Brown: Trends and Consequences of School Segregation|url=https://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/reardon%20owens%20ARS%20segregation%20oct2013.pdf|publisher=Stanford University|author=Sean Reardon|author2=Anne Owens |date=October 2013}}</ref> In response to pressures to desegregate in the [[State school|public school]] system, some white communities started [[Segregation academy|private segregated schools]], but rulings in ''Green v. Connally'' (1971) and ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'' (1976) prohibited racial discrimination in private schools and revoked IRS-granted non-profit status of schools in violation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/05/religious-right-real-origins-107133|title=The Real Origins of the Religious Right|website=POLITICO Magazine}}</ref> Desegregation efforts reached their peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s, a period in which the South transitioned from complete segregation to being the nation's most integrated region.<ref name="Orfield2001" />
''Plessy v. Ferguson'' was overturned in 1954, when the Supreme Court ruling in ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'' ended ''[[de jure]]'' segregation in the United States.<ref name="Orfield2001">{{cite journal| author-link=Gary Orfield |last=Orfield|first=Gary |title=Schools More Separate: Consequences of a Decade of Resegregation|journal=Harvard Civil Rights Project|date=2001|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/schools-more-separate-consequences-of-a-decade-of-resegregation/orfield-schools-more-separate-2001.pdf|access-date=September 24, 2013}}</ref> The state of Arkansas would experience some of the first successful school integrations below the [[Mason–Dixon line]].<ref name="arkansasintegration">{{cite news|date=September 10, 2007|title=Before Little Rock: Successful Arkansas School Integration|publisher=University of Arkansas|url=https://news.uark.edu/articles/9136/before-little-rock-successful-arkansas-school-integration|access-date=September 13, 2020}}</ref> In the decade following ''Brown,'' the South resisted enforcement of the Court's decision.<ref name="Orfield2001" /> States and school districts did little to reduce segregation, and schools remained almost completely segregated until 1968, after Congressional passage of civil rights legislation.<ref name="Reardonowens">{{cite web|title=60 Years After Brown: Trends and Consequences of School Segregation|url=https://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/reardon%20owens%20ARS%20segregation%20oct2013.pdf|publisher=Stanford University|author=Sean Reardon|author2=Anne Owens |date=October 2013}}</ref> In response to pressures to desegregate in the [[State school|public school]] system, some white communities started [[Segregation academy|private segregated schools]], but rulings in ''Green v. Connally'' (1971) and ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'' (1976) prohibited racial discrimination in private schools and revoked IRS-granted non-profit status of schools in violation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/05/religious-right-real-origins-107133|title=The Real Origins of the Religious Right|website=POLITICO Magazine|date=May 27, 2014 }}</ref> Desegregation efforts reached their peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the South transitioned from complete segregation to being the nation's most integrated region.<ref name="Orfield2001" />


=== Mexican-American segregation during these eras ===
While African Americans faced legal segregation in civil society, [[Mexican Americans]] who lived in southwestern states often dealt with ''de facto'' ''segregation'',<ref>{{Cite web|title=De Facto Segregation|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/de_facto_segregation|access-date=2021-10-14|website=LII / Legal Information Institute|language=en}}</ref> meaning no laws explicitly barred their access to schools or other public facilities, yet they were still separated from White people.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Powers|first1=Jeanne M.|last2=Patton|first2=Lirio|date=March 1, 2008|title=Between Mendez and Brown: Gonzales v. Sheely (1951) and the Legal Campaign Against Segregation|journal=Law & Social Inquiry|language=en|volume=33|issue=1|pages=127–171|doi=10.1111/j.1747-4469.2008.00096.x|issn=1747-4469}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | title = Francisco Maestas et al. v. George H. Shone et al: Mexican American Resistance to School Segregation in the Hispano Homeland, 1912–1914 | last1 = Donato | first1 = Ruben | last2 = Guzmán | first2 = Gonzalo | last3 = Hanson | first3 = Jarrod | journal = Journal of Latinos and Education | volume = 16 | issue = 1 | pages = 3–17 | year = 2017| doi = 10.1080/15348431.2016.1179190 | s2cid = 151545402 }}</ref> The proponents of Mexican-American segregation were often officials who worked at the state and local school level and often defended the creation and sustaining of separate "Mexican schools".<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Donato|first1=Rubén|last2=Hanson|first2=Jarrod|date=June 15, 2012|title=Legally White, Socially "Mexican": The Politics of De Jure and De Facto School Segregation in the American Southwest|journal=Harvard Educational Review|language=en|volume=82|issue=2|pages=202–225|doi=10.17763/haer.82.2.a562315u72355106}}</ref> In other cases, the [[NAACP]] challenged segregation policies in institutions where exclusion was targeted only at African-American students and where there was an already established Mexican-American presence.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Quest for Equality: The Failed Promise of Black-Brown Solidarity|last=Foley|first=Nick|publisher=Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press|year=2010|isbn=9780674050235}}</ref>
While African Americans faced legal segregation in civil society, [[Mexican Americans]] often dealt with ''de facto'' ''segregation'', meaning no federal laws explicitly barred their access to schools or other public facilities, yet they were still separated from white people. The proponents of Mexican-American segregation were often officials who worked at the state and local school level and often defended the creation and sustaining of separate "Mexican schools". Prior to the 1930s, segregation of Mexican children in schools was a rarity.<ref name="Guzmán 392–422">{{Cite journal|last=Guzmán|first=Gonzalo|date=November 2021|title="Things change you know": Schools as the Architects of the Mexican Race in Depression-Era Wyoming|journal=History of Education Quarterly|language=en|volume=61|issue=4|pages=392–422|doi=10.1017/heq.2021.37|s2cid=240357463 |issn=0018-2680|doi-access=free}}</ref> Following the Great Depression, funding from the New Deal and legislation such as the 1934 Sugar Act enabled the creation of segregated schools for Mexican American children in Wyoming.<ref name="Guzmán 392–422"/> An example of Mexican-American school segregation is from the city of Oxnard, California.<ref name=":72">{{Cite journal|last1=Garcia|first1=David G.|last2=Yasso|first2=Tara J.|date=2013|title="Strictly in the Capacity of Servant": The Interconnection Between Residential and School Segregation in Oxnard, California, 1934-1954|journal=History of Education Quarterly|volume=53|pages=64–89|doi=10.1111/hoeq.12003|s2cid=142762356|via=JSTOR}}</ref> According to the district records, the schools and neighborhoods in Oxnard were segregated based on ethnicity. The number of Latino migrants in Oxnard was climbing, causing overcrowding in the schools, which triggered local officials to "solve" this issue by creating a "school-within-a-school" form of segregation, and eventually by establishing a separate school for Latino students. School segregation occurred due to the residential segregation that was also present in Oxnard. By placing restrictive policies and covenants on properties, officials in Oxnard were able to keep Latino residents in a separate neighborhood from the "American" (or non-Latino residents), which provided a justification for segregating the schools.<ref name=":72" /> The segregation of Mexican children occurred throughout much of the U.S. West. During the Depression era in Wyoming, the segregation of Mexican children—whether they were US citizens or not—mirrored Jim Crow laws. The segregation of Mexicans also took place in Colorado, Montana, Nebraska,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Guzmán |first1=Gonzalo |title="Things change you know": Schools as Architects of the Mexican Race in Depression-Era Wyoming |journal=History of Education Quarterly |date=2021 |volume=61 |issue=4 |pages=392–422 |doi=10.1017/heq.2021.37|s2cid=240357463 |doi-access=free }}</ref> and Texas. The [[Blackwell School]] in Texas is one of the few remaining formerly ''de facto'' segregated Mexican school buildings.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Preserving the Complicated History at a Segregated Texas School |url=https://www.npca.org/advocacy/96-preserving-the-complicated-history-at-a-segregated-texas-school |access-date=2022-10-24 |website=National Parks Conservation Association |language=en}}</ref>


Parents of both African-American and Mexican-American students challenged school segregation in coordination with civil rights organizations such as the [[NAACP]], [[American Civil Liberties Union|ACLU]], and [[League of United Latin American Citizens|LULAC]]. Both groups challenged discriminatory policies through litigation in courts, with varying success, and at times challenging policies. They often had small successes.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Powers|first=Jeanne M.|date=November 1, 2014|title=On Separate Paths: The Mexican American and African American Legal Campaigns against School Segregation|journal=American Journal of Education|volume=121|issue=1|pages=29–55|doi=10.1086/678124|s2cid=144425943|issn=0195-6744}}</ref> For instance, the NAACP initially challenged graduate and professional school segregation because they believed that desegregation at this level would result in the least backlash and opposition by whites.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality|last=Kluger|first=Richard|publisher=New York: Vintage|year=2004|isbn=978-1400030613}}</ref>
Parents of both African-American and Mexican-American students challenged school segregation in coordination with civil rights organizations such as the [[NAACP]], [[American Civil Liberties Union|ACLU]], and [[League of United Latin American Citizens|LULAC]]. Both groups challenged discriminatory policies in court, with varying success. The NAACP initially challenged graduate and professional school segregation asserting that desegregation at this level would result in the least backlash and opposition by whites.

Various means to desegregate schools have been tried including [[desegregation busing|busing]] students.

*{{See also|Del Rio ISD v. Salvatierra}}
*{{See also|Clark v. Board of School Directors}}
*{{See also|Lemon Grove Incident}}
*{{See also|Mendez vs. Westminster: For All the Children}}
*{{See also|Maestas vs. George H. Shone}}


=== Catholic schools ===
=== Catholic schools ===
Initially, Catholic schools in the South generally followed the pattern of segregation of public schools, sometimes forced to do so by law. However, most Catholic dioceses began moving ahead of public schools to desegregate. In St. Louis, Catholic schools were desegregated in 1947.<ref name="marian">{{cite news|work=[[Marian University (Indiana)|Marian University]]|title=Cardinal Joseph E. Ritter|url=http://www.marian.edu/CardinalRitterScholarship/Pages/CARDINALJOSEPHERITTER.aspx|access-date=January 22, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100527182704/http://www.marian.edu/CardinalRitterScholarship/Pages/CARDINALJOSEPHERITTER.aspx|archive-date=May 27, 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref> In Washington, DC, the Catholic schools were desegregated in 1948. Catholic schools in Tennessee were desegregated in 1954,<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/02/15/archives/most-rev-william-adrian-exbishop-of-tennessee.html|title=Most Rev. William Adrian, Ex‐Bishop of Tennessee|newspaper=The New York Times|date=February 15, 1972}}</ref> Atlanta in 1962, and Mississippi in 1965, all ahead of the public school systems.
Initially, Catholic schools in the South generally followed the pattern of segregation in public schools, sometimes enforced by law. However, most Catholic dioceses began moving ahead of public schools to desegregate. Prior to the desegregation of public schools, St. Louis was the first city to desegregate its Catholic schools in 1947.<ref name="marian">{{cite news|work=[[Marian University (Indiana)|Marian University]]|title=Cardinal Joseph E. Ritter|url=http://www.marian.edu/CardinalRitterScholarship/Pages/CARDINALJOSEPHERITTER.aspx|access-date=January 22, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100527182704/http://www.marian.edu/CardinalRitterScholarship/Pages/CARDINALJOSEPHERITTER.aspx|archive-date=May 27, 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref> Following this, Catholic schools followed in Mississippi (1965)<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/02/15/archives/most-rev-william-adrian-exbishop-of-tennessee.html|title=Most Rev. William Adrian, Ex-Bishop of Tennessee|newspaper=The New York Times|date=February 15, 1972}}</ref>, Atlanta (1962), Tennessee (1954), and Washington, DC (1948). Due to different integration plans in different locations, some schools decided to desegregate before public schools in their own communities. The first African American Catholic schools were established in states with large Catholic populations and a history of slavery, such as Maryland and Louisiana.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Green |first=Paul |date=September 2011 |title=African Americans in Urban Catholic Schools: Faith, Leadership and Persistence in Pursuit of Educational Opportunity |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11256-010-0171-9 |journal=The Urban Review |language=en |volume=43 |issue=3 |pages=436–464 |doi=10.1007/s11256-010-0171-9 |issn=0042-0972|doi-access=free }}</ref>


=== Protestant schools ===
=== Protestant schools ===
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, when some states (including Alabama, Virginia, and Louisiana) closed their public schools to protest integration, [[Jerry Falwell Sr.]] seized the opportunity to open "Christian academies" for white students.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Paretsky|first=Sara|title=Writing in an Age of Silence|url=https://archive.org/details/writinginageofsi00pare|url-access=limited|publisher=Verso|year=2007|pages=[https://archive.org/details/writinginageofsi00pare/page/49 49]}}</ref>
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, when some states (including Alabama, Virginia, and Louisiana) closed their public schools to protest integration, [[Jerry Falwell Sr.]] took the opportunity to open "Christian academies" for white students.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Paretsky|first=Sara|title=Writing in an Age of Silence|url=https://archive.org/details/writinginageofsi00pare|url-access=limited|publisher=Verso|year=2007|pages=[https://archive.org/details/writinginageofsi00pare/page/49 49]|isbn=9781844671229 }}</ref>


== Contemporary Segregation ==
== More recent segregation ==


=== Trends ===
=== Segregation since the 1960s ===
From 1968 to 1980, segregation between blacks and whites in schools declined.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> School integration peaked in the 1980s and then gradually declined over the course of the 1990s, as income differences increased.<ref name="stroub">Stroub, Kori J., and Meredith P. Richards. [http://aer.sagepub.com/content/50/3/497.full "From Resegregation to Reintegration: Trends in the Racial/Ethnic Segregation of Metropolitan Public School."] ''American Educational Research Journal''. no. 3 (2013): 497-531. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> In the 1990s and early 2000s, minority students attended schools with a declining proportion of white students, so that the rate of segregation as measured as isolation resembled that of the 1960s.<ref name="Fiel">Fiel, Jeremy E. [http://asr.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/08/23/0003122413496252.full.pdf "Decomposing School Resegregation: Social Closure, Racial Imbalance, and Racial Isolation."] ''American Sociological Review''. no. 5 (2013): 1-21. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> There is some disagreement about what to make of trends since the 1980s; while some researchers have presented trends as evidence of "resegregation," others argue that changing demographics in school districts, including class and income, are responsible for most of the changes in the racial composition of schools.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> A 2013 study by Jeremy Fiel found that, "for the most part, compositional changes are to blame for the declining presence of whites in minorities' schools," and that racial balance increased from 1993 to 2010.<ref name="Fiel" /> The study found that minority students became more isolated and less exposed to whites, but that all students became more evenly distributed across schools. Another 2013 study found that segregation measured as exposure increased over the previous 25 years due to changing demographics.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> The study did not, however, find an increase in racial balance; rather, racial unevenness remained stable over that time period. Researcher Kori Stroub found that the "racial/ethnic resegregation of public schools observed over the 1990s has given way to a period of modest reintegration," but that segregation between school districts has increased even though within-district segregation is low.<ref name="stroub" /> Fiel believes that increasing interdistrict segregation will exacerbate racial isolation.<ref name="Fiel" />
From 1968 to 1980, segregation declined.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> School integration peaked in the 1980s and then gradually declined over the course of the 1990s.<ref name="stroub">Stroub, Kori J., and Meredith P. Richards. [http://aer.sagepub.com/content/50/3/497.full "From Resegregation to Reintegration: Trends in the Racial/Ethnic Segregation of Metropolitan Public School."] ''American Educational Research Journal''. no. 3 (2013): 497-531. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> In the 1990s and early 2000s, minority students attended schools with a declining proportion of white students, so that the rate of segregation as measured as isolation resembled that of the 1960s.<ref name="Fiel">Fiel, Jeremy E. [http://asr.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/08/23/0003122413496252.full.pdf "Decomposing School Resegregation: Social Closure, Racial Imbalance, and Racial Isolation."] ''American Sociological Review''. no. 5 (2013): 1-21. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> A study by The Civil Rights Project found that in the 2016 to 2017 school year, nearly half of all black and Latino students in the U.S. went to schools where the student population was 90% people of color, while the average white student went to schools that were 69% white.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Frankenberg |first=Erica |title=What school segregation looks like in the US today, in 4 charts |url=http://theconversation.com/what-school-segregation-looks-like-in-the-us-today-in-4-charts-120061 |access-date=2023-03-31 |website=The Conversation |date=July 19, 2019 |language=en}}</ref> There is some disagreement about trends since the 1980s; while some researchers presented trends as evidence of "resegregation," others argue that changing demographics in school districts, including class and income, are responsible for most of the changes in the racial composition of schools.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> A 2013 study by Jeremy Fiel found that, "for the most part, compositional changes are to blame for the declining presence of whites in minorities' schools," and that racial balance increased from 1993 to 2010.<ref name="Fiel" /> The study found that minority students became more isolated and less exposed to whites within a school although districts were statistically more integrated.<ref name="Fiel" /> Another 2013 study found that segregation measured increased over the previous 25 years due to changing demographics.<ref name="Reardonowens" /> The study did not find an increase in racial balance. Racial unequality remained stable. Researcher Kori Stroub found that the "racial/ethnic resegregation of public schools observed over the 1990s gave way to a period of modest reintegration," but segregation between school districts increased even though within-district segregation is low.<ref name="stroub" /> Fiel believed that increasing interdistrict segregation would exacerbate racial isolation.<ref name="Fiel" />


=== Causes ===
=== Sources ===
One reasoning for the resegregation of blacks lies in the fact that public schools were mandated by law to institute effective plans to combat segregation for only five years starting in 1968.<ref name=":04">{{Cite journal|last=Rosiek|first=Jerry|date=2019|title=School segregation: A realist’s view|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26614874|journal=The Phi Delta Kappan|volume=100|issue=5|pages=8–13|issn=0031-7217}}</ref> After the peak of desegregation in 1980, the pressure conservatives under [[Richard Nixon]]'s presidency were instrumental in the ruling of [https://www.oyez.org/cases/1991/89-1290 ''Freeman v. Pitts''] which allowed for the preservation of school segregation.<ref name=":04" /> Today, the increase in inter-district segregation is present because of the ruling of [[Milliken v. Bradley]] that banned desegregation across district lines, which allowed for the diverse districts to simply contained a few majority minority schools while most schools remained predominantly white.


==== Residential segregation ====
Another aspect that supports the reversion back to segregated schools is the concept of [[white flight]] which occurs when white families utilize the privilege of school choice to move their children into schools with lower minority populations. Factors such as zoning of schools, housing policies, and school choice are the driving factors in the segregation today which shifts to incorporate not only grouping by race, but also by economic class.A wealthier family becomes more likely to relocate and invest in the educational resources of that school zone because it is more affordable. An extension of this choice becomes classroom specific in desegregated schools by way of implementations of courses at the levels of [[Advanced Placement]], [[International Baccalaureate]], and Honors programs which tend to have a higher white majority.<ref name=":05">{{Cite journal|last=Rosiek|first=Jerry|date=2019|title=School segregation: A realist’s view|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26614874|journal=The Phi Delta Kappan|volume=100|issue=5|pages=8–13|issn=0031-7217}}</ref>
A source of school segregation is [[Residential segregation in the United States|residential segregation]]. Residence and school assignment are linked due to the tradition of locally controlled schools.<ref name="frankenberg">Frankenberg, Erica.{{cite journal |title= The Role of Residential Segregation in Contemporary School Segregation |journal= Education and Urban Society|volume= 45|issue= 5|pages= 548–570|doi= 10.1177/0013124513486288|year= 2013|last1= Frankenberg|first1= Erica|s2cid= 143706769}}</ref> Residential segregation is related to growing [[income inequality in the United States]].


The deterioration of cities and urban education systems between the 1950-80s was the consequence of several post-war policies like the [[Home Owners' Loan Corporation|Home Owners' Loans Corporation]], [[Federal Housing Administration]], [[Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956|Interstate Highway Act]], and discriminatory [[zoning]] practices. The loss of war-time industrial employment perpetuated '[[white flight]]' and [[Urban sprawl|suburban sprawl]] at the expense of poor, marginalized urban residents.<ref name=":02" /> Mid-20th century urban divestment and suburban development redirected social services and federal funding to predominantly white residencies. Remaining urban residents witnessed dramatic decreases in quality of living, creating countless barriers to a stable life, including in academic success. Consequently, urban school districts became relatively accurate measures for documenting the increasing educational inequalities among students of color.<ref name=":02">{{cite journal|last1=Lee|first1=Chungmei| author-link2=Gary Orfield |last2=Orfield|first2=Gary|title=Why Segregation Matters: Poverty and Educational Inequality|journal=The Civil Rights Project|year=2005|series=Harvard University|pages=1–47| url = https://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/why-segregation-matters-poverty-and-educational-inequality}}</ref>
== Sources of contemporary segregation ==

=== Residential segregation ===
A principal source of school segregation is the persistence of [[Residential segregation in the United States|residential segregation]] in American society; residence and school assignment are closely linked due to the widespread tradition of locally controlled schools.<ref name="frankenberg">Frankenberg, Erica.{{cite journal |title= The Role of Residential Segregation in Contemporary School Segregation |journal= Education and Urban Society|volume= 45|issue= 5|pages= 548–570|doi= 10.1177/0013124513486288|year= 2013|last1= Frankenberg|first1= Erica|s2cid= 143706769}}</ref> Residential segregation is related to growing [[income inequality in the United States]].

The deterioration of cities and urban education systems between the 1950-80s is the consequence of several post-war policies like the [[Home Owners' Loan Corporation|Home Owners' Loans Corporation]], [[Federal Housing Administration]], [[Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956|Interstate Highway Act]], discriminative [[zoning]] practices, and loss of war-time industrial employment perpetuated [[white flight]] and [[Urban sprawl|suburban sprawl]] at the expense of poor, marginalized urban residents.<ref name=":02" /> Mid-20th century urban divestment and suburban development redirected social services and federal funding to predominantly white residencies. Remaining urban residents witnessed dramatic decreases in quality of living, creating countless barriers to a stable life, including in academic success. Consequently, urban school districts became relatively accurate measures for documenting the increasing educational inequalities among students of color.<ref name=":02">{{Cite journal|last=Orfield, Gary, and Chungmei Lee|date=2005|title=Why Segregation Matters: Poverty and Educational Inequality|url=https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED489186.pdf|journal=Harvard Education Publishing Group|via=ERIC}}</ref>


A study conducted by [[Sean Reardon]] and John Yun found that from 1990 to 2000, residential black/white and Hispanic/white segregation declined by a modest amount in the United States, while public school segregation increased slightly during the same time period.<ref name="Reardon2002" /> Because the two variables moved in opposite directions, changes in residential patterns were not responsible for changes in school segregation trends. Rather, the study determined that in 1990, schools showed less segregation than neighborhoods, indicating that local policies were helping to ameliorate the effects of residential segregation on school composition.<ref name="Reardon2002" /> By 2000, however, racial composition of schools had become more closely correlated to neighborhood composition, indicating that public policies no longer redistributed students as evenly as before.<ref name="Reardon2002">{{cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean|author2=John Yun |title=Integrating neighborhoods, segregating schools: The retreat from school desegregation in the South, 1990-2000|journal=North Carolina Law Review|year=2002|volume=81|url=http://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/81NCLRev.pdf|access-date=October 19, 2013}}</ref>
A study conducted by [[Sean Reardon]] and John Yun found that from 1990 to 2000, residential black/white and Hispanic/white segregation declined by a modest amount in the United States, while public school segregation increased slightly during the same time period.<ref name="Reardon2002" /> Because the two variables moved in opposite directions, changes in residential patterns were not responsible for changes in school segregation trends. Rather, the study determined that in 1990, schools showed less segregation than neighborhoods, indicating that local policies were helping to ameliorate the effects of residential segregation on school composition.<ref name="Reardon2002" /> By 2000, however, racial composition of schools had become more closely correlated to neighborhood composition, indicating that public policies no longer redistributed students as evenly as before.<ref name="Reardon2002">{{cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean|author2=John Yun |title=Integrating neighborhoods, segregating schools: The retreat from school desegregation in the South, 1990-2000|journal=North Carolina Law Review|year=2002|volume=81|url=http://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/81NCLRev.pdf|access-date=October 19, 2013}}</ref>


In the 2005 Civil Rights Project conducted at Harvard University, researchers reported that over 80% of high-minority schools—where the student population is over 90% non-white—are high poverty schools as indicated by a large majority qualifying for free and reduced lunch.<ref name=":02" /> Additionally, of five million enrolled students in two dozen of the largest central cities, 70% are Black and Latino students in predominantly minority-majority, urban schools.<ref name=":02" />
In the 2005 Civil Rights Project conducted at Harvard University, researchers reported that over 80% of high-minority schools—where the student population is over 90% non-white—are high poverty schools as indicated by a large majority qualifying for free and reduced lunch.<ref name=":02" /> Additionally, of five million enrolled students in two dozen of the largest central cities, 70% are black and Latino students in predominantly minority-majority, urban schools.<ref name=":02" />


Another study targets spatial inequalities and student outcomes based on the physical and social presence in specific neighborhoods. Factors like pollution, perceived safety, proximity to other students, and healthy learning environments can all affect academic outcomes of various student groups.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|date=2018-03-01|title=Neighborhood, race and educational inequality|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0264275117311046|journal=Cities|language=en|volume=73|pages=1–13|doi=10.1016/j.cities.2017.09.013|issn=0264-2751}}</ref> In correspondence to high poverty environments, students are likely to face various obstacles that prevent effective learning environments including food and housing insecurity.<ref name=":2" /> Likewise, Black, Latino, and Indigenous students experience twice the exposure to poor students than their Asian and white counterparts.<ref name=":02" />
Another study targets spatial inequalities and student outcomes based on the physical and social presence in specific neighborhoods. Factors like pollution, perceived safety, proximity to other students, and healthy learning environments can all affect academic outcomes of various student groups.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|date=2018-03-01|title=Neighborhood, race and educational inequality|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0264275117311046|journal=Cities|language=en|volume=73|pages=1–13|doi=10.1016/j.cities.2017.09.013|issn=0264-2751|last1=Wei|first1=Yehua Dennis|last2=Xiao|first2=Weiye|last3=Simon|first3=Christopher A.|last4=Liu|first4=Baodong|last5=Ni|first5=Yongmei}}</ref> In correspondence to high poverty environments, students are likely to face various obstacles that prevent effective learning environments including food and [[Housing insecurity in the United States|housing insecurity]].<ref name=":2" /> Likewise, black, Latino, and Indigenous students experience twice the exposure to poor students than their Asian and white counterparts.<ref name=":02" />


Award-winning CQ Researcher Peter Katel amplifies the argument made by Maya Rockeymoore, CEO of Global Policy Solutions, who addresses the geospatial resegregation of schools as structural barriers for impoverished students in inner-city neighborhoods who are never actually prepared to achieve higher education.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=Katel|first=Peter|date=2020|title=Racial Conflict|journal=CQ Press}}</ref> Katel also reports that educational experts see high densities of marginalized students as a loss of financial resources that most white families do not experience because they are more likely to have the capability to move schools.<ref name=":3" /> Acknowledging the resegregation of school and disproportionate allocation of resources is crucial to addressing how the achievement gap is concentrated in underserved urban communities.
Researcher Peter Katel addressed the resegregation of schools as barriers for poor students in inner-city neighborhoods who are unprepared for higher education.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=Katel|first=Peter|date=2020|title=Racial Conflict|journal=CQ Press}}</ref> Katel also reported that educational experts viewed high densities of marginalized students as a loss of funding that most white families do not experience, because they are more likely to have the capability to attend different schools.<ref name=":3" /> A 2013 study corroborated these findings, showing that the relationship between residential and school segregation became stronger between 2000 and 2010. In 2000, segregation of black people in schools was lower than in their neighborhoods; by 2010, the two patterns of segregation were "nearly identical".<ref name="frankenberg" />


==== Supreme Court rulings ====
A 2013 study corroborated these findings, showing that the relationship between residential and school segregation became stronger over the decade between 2000 and 2010. In 2000, segregation of blacks in schools was lower than in their neighborhoods; by 2010, the two patterns of segregation were "nearly identical".<ref name="frankenberg" />
The Court's 1970 ruling in ''[[Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education]]'' furthered desegregation efforts by upholding [[desegregation busing|busing]] as constitutional, but the ruling had no effect on the increasing segregation between school districts.<ref name="chemerinksy">Chemerinsky, Erwin. [http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1712&context=faculty_scholarship "The Segregation and Resegregation of American Public Education: The Court's Role." ''North Carolina Law Review''.] (2003): 1598-1622. (accessed September 24, 2013).</ref> The court's ruling in ''[[Milliken v. Bradley]]'' in 1974 prohibited interdistrict desegregation by busing.<ref name="dorsey">Dorsey, Dana N. [http://eus.sagepub.com/content/45/5/533.full.pdf+html "Segregation 2.0: The New Generation of School Segregation in the 21st Century."] Education and Urban Society. no. 5 (2013). (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref>


The 1990 decision in ''[[Board of Education of Oklahoma City v. Dowell]]'' declared that once schools districts had made a practicable, "good faith" effort to desegregate, they could be declared to have achieved "unitary" status, releasing them from court oversight.<ref name="Reardon2012">Reardon, Sean F., Elena T. Grewal, Demetra Kalogrides, and Erica Greenberg. [http://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/reardon%20brown%20fades%20JPAM%20final%20jan%202011.pdf "Brown Fades: The End of Court-Ordered School Desegregation and the Resegregation of American Public Schools."] ''Journal of Policy Analysis and Management''. no. 4 (2012): 876-904. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> The decision allowed schools to end previous desegregation efforts even in cases where a return to segregation was likely.<ref name="chemerinksy" /> The court's ruling in ''Freeman v. Pitts'' went further, ruling that districts could be released from oversight in "incremental stages", meaning that courts would continue to supervise only those aspects of integration that had not yet been achieved.<ref name="dorsey" />[[File:Operation Arkansas, Little Rock Nine.jpg|thumb|Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division escort African-American students to [[Little Rock Central High School|Central High School]] in Little Rock in Sept. 1957, after the governor of Arkansas tried to enforce segregation]]A 2012 study determined that "half of all districts ever under court-ordered desegregation [had] been released from court oversight, with most of the releases occurring in the last 20 years". The study found that segregation levels in school districts did not rise sharply following court dismissal, but rather increased gradually for the next 10 to 12 years. As compared to districts that had never been placed under court supervision, districts that had achieved unitary status and were released from court-ordered desegregation had a subsequent change in segregation patterns that was 10 times as great. The study concludes that "court-ordered desegregation plans are effective in reducing racial school segregation, but&nbsp;... their effects fade over time in the absence of continued court oversight."<ref name=Reardon2012 />
=== Supreme Court rulings ===
Although the US Supreme Court's decision in ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'' set desegregation efforts in motion, subsequent rulings have created serious obstacles to continued integration. The court's 1970 ruling in ''[[Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education]]'' furthered desegregation efforts by upholding [[desegregation busing|busing]] as a constitutional means to achieve integration within a school district, but the ruling had no effect on the increasing level of segregation between school districts.<ref name="chemerinksy">Chemerinsky, Erwin. [http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1712&context=faculty_scholarship "The Segregation and Resegregation of American Public Education: The Court's Role." ''North Carolina Law Review''.] (2003): 1598-1622. (accessed September 24, 2013).</ref> The court's ruling in ''[[Milliken v. Bradley]]'' in 1974 prohibited interdistrict desegregation by busing.<ref name="dorsey">Dorsey, Dana N. [http://eus.sagepub.com/content/45/5/533.full.pdf+html "Segregation 2.0: The New Generation of School Segregation in the 21st Century."] Education and Urban Society. no. 5 (2013). (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref>

The 1990 decision in ''[[Board of Education of Oklahoma City v. Dowell]]'' declared that once schools districts had made a practicable, "good faith" effort to desegregate, they could be declared to have achieved "unitary" status, releasing them from court oversight.<ref name="Reardon2012">Reardon, Sean F., Elena T. Grewal, Demetra Kalogrides, and Erica Greenberg. [http://cepa.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/reardon%20brown%20fades%20JPAM%20final%20jan%202011.pdf "Brown Fades: The End of Court-Ordered School Desegregation and the Resegregation of American Public Schools."] ''Journal of Policy Analysis and Management''. no. 4 (2012): 876-904. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> The decision allowed schools to end previous desegregation efforts even in cases where a return to segregation was likely.<ref name="chemerinksy" /> The court's ruling in ''Freeman v. Pitts'' went further, ruling that districts could be released from oversight in "incremental stages", meaning that courts would continue to supervise only those aspects of integration that had not yet been achieved.<ref name="dorsey" />[[File:Operation Arkansas, Little Rock Nine.jpg|thumb|Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division escort African-American students to Central High School in Little Rock in Sept. 1957, after the governor of Arkansas tried to enforce segregation]]A 2012 study determined that "half of all districts ever under court-ordered desegregation [had] been released from court oversight, with most of the releases occurring in the last 20 years". The study found that segregation levels in school districts did not rise sharply following court dismissal, but rather increased gradually for the next 10 to 12 years. As compared to districts that had never been placed under court supervision, districts that had achieved unitary status and were released from court-ordered desegregation had a subsequent change in segregation patterns that was 10 times as great. The study concludes that "court-ordered desegregation plans are effective in reducing racial school segregation, but&nbsp;... their effects fade over time in the absence of continued court oversight."<ref name=Reardon2012 />


In a pair of rulings in 2007 (''[[Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1]]'' and ''Meredith v. Jefferson County Board of Education''), the court's decision limited schools' ability to use race as a consideration in school assignment plans. In both cases, the Court struck down school assignment plans designed to ensure that the racial composition of schools roughly reflected the composition of the district as a whole, saying that the plans were not "narrowly tailored" to achieve the stated goal and that race-neutral alternatives had not been given adequate consideration.<ref name=Tefera>{{cite web|last=Tefera|first=Adai|title=Integrating Suburban Schools: How to Benefit from Growing Diversity and Avoid Segregation|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/integrating-suburban-schools-how-to-benefit-from-growing-diversity-and-avoid-segregation/tefera-suburban-manual-2011.pdf|publisher=UCLA Civil Right Project|access-date=October 19, 2013|author2=Erica Frankenberg |author3=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley |author4=Gina Chirichigno |year=2011}}</ref>
In a pair of rulings in 2007 (''[[Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1]]'' and ''Meredith v. Jefferson County Board of Education''), the court's decision limited schools' ability to use race as a consideration in school assignment plans. In both cases, the Court struck down school assignment plans designed to ensure that the racial composition of schools roughly reflected the composition of the district as a whole, saying that the plans were not "narrowly tailored" to achieve the stated goal and that race-neutral alternatives had not been given adequate consideration.<ref name=Tefera>{{cite web|last=Tefera|first=Adai|title=Integrating Suburban Schools: How to Benefit from Growing Diversity and Avoid Segregation|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/integrating-suburban-schools-how-to-benefit-from-growing-diversity-and-avoid-segregation/tefera-suburban-manual-2011.pdf|publisher=UCLA Civil Right Project|access-date=October 19, 2013|author2=Erica Frankenberg |author3=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley |author4=Gina Chirichigno |year=2011}}</ref>


=== School choice ===
==== School choice ====


While greater [[school choice]] could potentially increase integration by drawing students from larger and more geographically diverse areas (as opposed to segregated neighborhoods), expanded choice often has the opposite effect.<ref name=Frankenberg2009 /> Studies conducted on the relationship between expanded school choice and school segregation show that when studies compare the racial/ethnic composition of [[charter school]]s to local public schools, researchers generally find that charter schools preserve or intensify existing racial and economic segregation, and/or facilitate [[white flight]] from public schools.<ref name=miron>Miron, G., Urschel, J. L., Mathis, W, J., & Tornquist, E. "[http://ea.niusileadscape.org/docs/FINAL_PRODUCTS/LearningCarousel/SchoolsWODiversity.pdf Schools without Diversity: Education Management Organizations, Charter Schools and the Demographic Stratification of the American School System"] (2010). Boulder and Tempe: Education and the Public Interest Center & Education Policy Research Unit. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> Furthermore, studies that compare individual students' demographic characteristics to the schools they are leaving (public schools) and the schools they are switching to (charter schools) generally demonstrate that students "leave more diverse public schools and enroll in less diverse charter schools".<ref name=miron />
While greater [[school choice]] may increase integration by drawing students from more diverse areas, expanded choice often has the opposite effect.<ref name=Frankenberg2009 /> When studies compare the racial and ethnic composition of [[charter school]]s to public schools, researchers generally find that charter schools preserve or intensify racial and economic segregation, and/or facilitate [[white flight]] from public schools.<ref name=miron>Miron, G., Urschel, J. L., Mathis, W, J., & Tornquist, E. "[http://ea.niusileadscape.org/docs/FINAL_PRODUCTS/LearningCarousel/SchoolsWODiversity.pdf Schools without Diversity: Education Management Organizations, Charter Schools and the Demographic Stratification of the American School System"] (2010). Boulder and Tempe: Education and the Public Interest Center & Education Policy Research Unit. (accessed September 24, 2013)</ref> Furthermore, studies that compare individual students' demographic characteristics to the schools they are leaving (public schools) and the schools they are switching to (charter schools) generally demonstrate that students "leave more diverse public schools and enroll in less diverse charter schools".<ref name=miron />


Private schools constitute a second important type of school choice. A 2002 study found that private schools continued to contribute to the persistence of school segregation in the South over the course of the 1990s. Enrollment of whites in private schools increased sharply in the 1970s, remained unchanged in the 1980s, and increased again over the course of the 1990s. Because the changes over the latter two decades was not substantial, however, researcher [[Sean Reardon]] concludes that changes in private school enrollment is not a likely contributor to any changes in schools segregation patterns during that time.<ref name=Reardon2002 />
Private schools constitute a second important type of school choice. A 2002 study found that private schools continued to contribute to the persistence of school segregation in the South over the course of the 1990s. Enrollment of whites in private schools increased sharply in the 1970s, remained unchanged in the 1980s, and increased again over the course of the 1990s. Because the changes over the latter two decades was not substantial, however, researcher [[Sean Reardon]] concludes that changes in private school enrollment is not a likely contributor to any changes in schools segregation patterns during that time.<ref name=Reardon2002 />
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In contrast to charter and private schools, [[Magnet Schools of America|magnet schools]] generally foster racial integration rather than hinder it.<ref name=Frankenberg2009 /> Such schools were initially presented as an alternative to unpopular busing policies, and included explicit desegregation goals along with provisions for recruiting and providing transportation for diverse populations.<ref name=Tefera /> Although today's magnet schools are no longer as explicitly oriented towards integration efforts, they continue to be less racially isolated than other forms of school choice.<ref name=Tefera />
In contrast to charter and private schools, [[Magnet Schools of America|magnet schools]] generally foster racial integration rather than hinder it.<ref name=Frankenberg2009 /> Such schools were initially presented as an alternative to unpopular busing policies, and included explicit desegregation goals along with provisions for recruiting and providing transportation for diverse populations.<ref name=Tefera /> Although today's magnet schools are no longer as explicitly oriented towards integration efforts, they continue to be less racially isolated than other forms of school choice.<ref name=Tefera />


== Outcomes ==
== Implications of segregation ==


=== Educational outcomes ===
=== Education ===
The level of racial segregation in schools has important implications for the educational outcomes of minority students. Desegregation efforts of the 1970s and 1980s led to substantial academic gains for black students; as integration increased, blacks' [[educational attainment]] increased while that of whites remained largely unchanged.<ref name=Reardon2012 /> Historically, greater access to schools with higher enrollments of white students helped "reduce blacks' high school dropout rate, reduce the black-white [[Achievement gaps in the United States|test score gap]], and improve outcomes for black in areas such as earnings, health, and [[Imprisonment|incarceration]]."<ref name=Fiel />
Desegregation in the 1970s and 1980s led to academic gains for black students. As integration increased, the [[educational attainment]] of black students increased while that of whites remained largely unchanged.<ref name=Reardon2012 /> Historically, greater access to schools with higher enrollment of white students reduced high school dropout rates for black students, and reduced the [[Achievement gaps in the United States|test score gap]].<ref name=Fiel />


Nationwide, minority students continue to be concentrated in high-poverty, low-achieving schools, while white students are more likely to attend high-achieving, more affluent schools.<ref name=Fiel /> Resources such as funds and high-quality teachers attach unequally to schools according to racial and [[Socioeconomics|socioeconomic]] composition.<ref name=Fiel /> Schools with high proportions of minority enrollment are often characterized by "less experienced and less qualified teachers, high levels of teacher turnover, less successful peer groups and inadequate facilities and learning materials."<ref name=Orfield2012>{{cite journal|last=Orfield|first=Gary |author2=John Kucsera |author3=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley|title=E Pluribus...Separation: Deepening Double Segregation for More Students|journal=The Civil Rights Project|date=September 2012|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/mlk-national/e-pluribus...separation-deepening-double-segregation-for-more-students/orfield_epluribus_revised_omplete_2012.pdf|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref> These schools also tend to have less challenging curricula and fewer offerings of [[Advanced Placement]] courses.<ref name=Orfield2012 />
Minority students continue to be concentrated in high-poverty, low-achieving schools, while white students are more likely to attend high-achieving, more affluent schools.<ref name=Fiel /> Resources such as funds and high-quality teachers attach unequally to schools according to racial and [[Socioeconomics|socioeconomic]] composition.<ref name=Fiel /> Schools with high proportions of minority enrollment are often characterized by "less experienced and less qualified teachers, high levels of teacher turnover, less successful peer groups and inadequate facilities and learning materials."<ref name=Orfield2012>{{cite journal| author-link=Gary Orfield |last=Orfield|first=Gary |author2=John Kucsera |author3=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley|title=E Pluribus...Separation: Deepening Double Segregation for More Students|journal=The Civil Rights Project|date=September 2012|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/mlk-national/e-pluribus...separation-deepening-double-segregation-for-more-students/orfield_epluribus_revised_omplete_2012.pdf|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref> These schools also tend to have less challenging curricula and fewer offerings of [[Advanced Placement]] courses.<ref name=Orfield2012 /> Additionally, in recent years, schools have become dependent on the internet for doing and submitting homework. As a result, 25% of black teens and 17% of Latino teens cannot complete their homework due to a lack of reliable internet connection, as opposed to only 13% of White teens.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Schaeffer |first=Katherine |title=What we know about online learning and the homework gap amid the pandemic |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/10/01/what-we-know-about-online-learning-and-the-homework-gap-amid-the-pandemic/ |access-date=2023-03-31 |website=Pew Research Center |date=October 2021 |language=en-US}}</ref>


Access to resources is not the only factor determining education outcomes; the very racial composition of schools can have an effect independent of the level of other resources. A 2009 study determined that attending school with a high proportion of black students negatively affected black academic achievement, even after controlling for school quality, differences in ability, and family background. The effect of racial composition on white achievement was insignificant.<ref name=Hanushek>{{cite journal|last=Hanushek|first=Eric A. |author2=John F. Kain |author3=Steven G. Rivkin|title=New Evidence about Brown v. Board of Education: The Complex Effects of School Racial Composition on Achievement|journal=Journal of Labor Economics|year=2009|issue=3|pages=349–383|jstor=10.1086/600386|doi=10.1086/600386|volume=27|s2cid=32967483 |url=http://www.nber.org/papers/w8741.pdf}}</ref>
A 2009 study determined that attending school with a high proportion of black students negatively affected black academic achievement, even after controlling for school quality, differences in ability, and family background. The effect of racial composition on white achievement was insignificant.<ref name=Hanushek>{{cite journal|last=Hanushek|first=Eric A. |author2=John F. Kain |author3=Steven G. Rivkin|title=New Evidence about Brown v. Board of Education: The Complex Effects of School Racial Composition on Achievement|journal=Journal of Labor Economics|year=2009|issue=3|pages=349–383|jstor=10.1086/600386|doi=10.1086/600386|volume=27|s2cid=32967483 |url=http://www.nber.org/papers/w8741.pdf}}</ref> However, a 2006 study found that white students are more inclined to take higher level courses at integrated schools to decrease exposure to minorities while the black-white test score gap still decreases with movement from a segregated city to an integrated city.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Card|first1=David|last2=Rothstein|first2=Jesse|date=2007|title=Racial segregation and the black–white test score gap|url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0047272707000503|journal=Journal of Public Economics|language=en|volume=91|issue=11–12|pages=2158–2184|doi=10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.03.006|s2cid=13468169}}</ref>


The categorization of ‘at-risk’ youth typically defines learning differences as disabilities based on a standardized, non-inclusive curriculum; the label ‘at-risk’ inherently follows students of color and low-income students as a generalized academic failure.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gershon|first=Walter S.|date=2012-10-01|title=Troubling notions of risk: dissensus, dissonance, and making sense of students and learning|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2012.704881|journal=Critical Studies in Education|volume=53|issue=3|pages=361–373|doi=10.1080/17508487.2012.704881|issn=1750-8487}}</ref> National academic standardization also extends to federal policies like the [[No Child Left Behind Act]] (NCLB), which implemented high-stakes standardized testing across the country in an attempt to address socio-economic disparities in learning outcomes.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Yaffe|first=Deborah|date=2009|title=Addressing Achievement Gaps|url=https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED505582.pdf|journal=ETC Policy Information Center|via=Education Resources Information Center (ERIC)}}</ref> Schools that were labelled “failures” and faced sanctions under the NCLB Act were typically high poverty schools in segregated districts.<ref name=":02" /> Both the standardization of learning outcomes and the implementation of these policies fail to address the structural barriers that created high poverty, highly segregated schools.<ref name=":1" />
The categorization of 'at-risk' youth typically defines learning differences as disabilities based on a standardized, non-inclusive curriculum; the label 'at-risk' inherently follows students of color and low-income students as a generalized academic failure.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gershon|first=Walter S.|date=2012-10-01|title=Troubling notions of risk: dissensus, dissonance, and making sense of students and learning|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2012.704881|journal=Critical Studies in Education|volume=53|issue=3|pages=361–373|doi=10.1080/17508487.2012.704881|s2cid=143536577|issn=1750-8487}}</ref> National academic standardization also extends to federal policies like the [[No Child Left Behind Act]] (NCLB), which implemented high-stakes standardized testing across the country in an attempt to address socio-economic disparities in learning outcomes.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Yaffe|first=Deborah|date=2009|title=Addressing Achievement Gaps|url=https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED505582.pdf|journal=ETC Policy Information Center|via=Education Resources Information Center (ERIC)}}</ref> Schools that were labelled "failures" and faced sanctions under the NCLB Act were typically high poverty schools in segregated districts.<ref name=":02" /> Both the standardization of learning outcomes and the implementation of these policies fail to address the structural barriers that created high poverty, highly segregated schools.<ref name=":1" />


=== Short-term versus long-term outcomes ===
=== Social well-being ===
Integration has a small beneficial impact on short-term outcomes for black students, and a beneficial impact on long-term outcomes, such as school attainment.<ref name=Hanushek2>{{cite book|last=Hanushek|first=Eric A.|author2=Finis Welch |title=Has School Desegregation Improved Academic and Economic Outcomes for Blacks?|year=2006|volume=2|url=http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic1333338.files/RivkinWelch_Oct1.pdf|access-date=November 19, 2013|doi=10.1016/s1574-0692(06)02017-4|pages=1019–1049|series=Handbook of the Economics of Education|isbn=9780444528193}}</ref> Integrated education is positively related to short-term outcomes such as K–12 school performance, cross-racial friendships, acceptance of cultural differences, and declines in racial fears and [[prejudice]]. Short-term and long-term benefits of integration are found for minority and white students alike. Students who attend integrated schools are more likely to live in diverse neighborhoods as adults than those students who attended more segregated schools. Integrated schools also reduce the maintenance of stereotypes and prevent the formation of prejudices in both majority and minority students.<ref name="frankenberg" />
The research that has been conducted on the effects of school segregation can be divided into studies that observe short-term and long-term outcomes of segregated schooling; these outcomes can be either academic or non-academic in nature. Studies of short-term outcomes observe the relationship between school segregation and outcomes such as academic achievement (test scores), [[Racism|racial prejudice]]/fear, and cross-cultural friendships. Long-term outcomes may refer to educational attainment, occupational attainment, adults' intergroup relations, [[crime]] and [[violence]], and [[civic engagement]].<ref name=Mickelson>{{cite journal|last=Mickelson|first=Roslyn Arlin|author2=Mokubung Nkomo |title=Integrated Schooling, Life Course Outcomes, and Social Cohesion in Multiethnic Democratic Societies|journal=Review of Research in Education|date=March 2012|volume=36|issue=1|doi=10.3102/0091732x11422667|pages=197–238|s2cid=143278881}}</ref>


=== Economics ===
The mixed findings of research on the effects of integration on Black students has resulted in ambiguous conclusions as to the influence of desegregation plans.<ref name=Hanushek /> Generally, integration has a small but beneficial impact on short-term outcomes for Black students (i.e. education achievement), and a clearly beneficial impact on longer-term outcomes, such as school attainment (i.e. level of education attained) and earnings.<ref name=Hanushek2>{{cite book|last=Hanushek|first=Eric A.|author2=Finis Welch |title=Has School Desegregation Improved Academic and Economic Outcomes for Blacks?|year=2006|volume=2|url=http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic1333338.files/RivkinWelch_Oct1.pdf|access-date=November 19, 2013|doi=10.1016/s1574-0692(06)02017-4|pages=1019–1049|series=Handbook of the Economics of Education|isbn=9780444528193}}</ref> Integrated education is positively related to short-term outcomes such as K–12 school performance, cross-racial friendships, acceptance of cultural differences, and declines in racial fears and [[prejudice]]. In the long run, integration is associated with higher educational and occupational attainment across all ethnic groups, better intergroup relations, greater likelihood of living and working in an integrated environment, lower likelihood of involvement with the [[Criminal justice|criminal justice system]], espousal of [[Democracy|democratic values]], and greater civic engagement.<ref name=Mickelson />
Integration is associated with higher educational and occupational attainment across all ethnic groups, better intergroup relations, greater likelihood of living and working in an integrated environment, lower likelihood of involvement with the [[Criminal justice|criminal justice system]], espousal of [[Democracy|democratic values]], and greater civic engagement.<ref name="Mickelson">{{cite journal|last=Mickelson|first=Roslyn Arlin|author2=Mokubung Nkomo|date=March 2012|title=Integrated Schooling, Life Course Outcomes, and Social Cohesion in Multiethnic Democratic Societies|journal=Review of Research in Education|volume=36|issue=1|pages=197–238|doi=10.3102/0091732x11422667|s2cid=143278881}}</ref> On the other hand, a 2014 study highlights that as segregated schooling increases, the socioeconomic inequalities based on race increases.<ref name="jstor.org">{{Cite journal|last1=Billings|first1=Stephen B.|last2=Deming|first2=David J.|last3=Rockoff|first3=Jonah|title=School Segregation, Educational Attainment, and Crime|date=2014|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26372552|journal=The Quarterly Journal of Economics|volume=129|issue=1|pages=435–476|doi=10.1093/qje/qjt026|jstor=26372552|issn=0033-5533}}</ref> Billings, Deming, and Rockoff demonstrate how a certain school district focused on the allocation of funds redistributed to schools with a high volume of minority students.<ref name="jstor.org"/> Majority-minority schools present areas with high percentages of property that correspond to fewer resources and lower academic capability.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Reardon|first1=Sean F.|last2=Owens|first2=Ann|date=2014-07-30|title=60 Years After Brown : Trends and Consequences of School Segregation|url=https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|journal=Annual Review of Sociology|language=en|volume=40|issue=1|pages=199–218|doi=10.1146/annurev-soc-071913-043152|issn=0360-0572}}</ref>


A 1994 study found support for the theory that interracial contact in elementary or secondary school positively affects long-term outcomes in a way that can overcome perpetual segregation against Black communities.<ref name=Wells&Crain>{{cite journal|last=Wells|first=Amy Stuart|author2=Robert L. Crain |title=Perpetuation Theory and the Long-Term Effects of School Desegregation|journal=Review of Educational Research|year=1994|volume=64|issue=4|doi=10.3102/00346543064004531|pages=531–555|s2cid=145441194}}</ref> The study reviewed previous research and determined that, as compared to segregated Black people, desegregated Black people are more likely to set higher occupational aspirations, attend desegregated colleges, have desegregated social and professional networks as adults, gain desegregated employment, and work in [[white-collar worker|white-collar]] and professional jobs in the private sector.
A 1994 study found support for the theory that interracial contact in elementary or secondary school positively affects long-term outcomes in a way that can overcome perpetual segregation against black communities.<ref name=Wells&Crain>{{cite journal|last=Wells|first=Amy Stuart|author2=Robert L. Crain |title=Perpetuation Theory and the Long-Term Effects of School Desegregation|journal=Review of Educational Research|year=1994|volume=64|issue=4|doi=10.3102/00346543064004531|pages=531–555|s2cid=145441194}}</ref> The study reviewed previous research and determined that, as compared to segregated Black people, desegregated Black people are more likely to set higher occupational aspirations, attend desegregated colleges, have desegregated social and professional networks as adults, gain desegregated employment, and work in [[white-collar worker|white-collar]] and professional jobs in the private sector. In schools with a relatively high average income per students, students are more likely to perform better because they feel safer.<ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last=Goldsmith|first=Pat Rubio|date=2011|title=Coleman Revisited: School Segregation, Peers, and Frog Ponds|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27975300|journal=American Educational Research Journal|volume=48|issue=3|pages=508–535|doi=10.3102/0002831210392019|jstor=27975300|s2cid=145549866 |issn=0002-8312}}</ref>


Urban high schools reported significantly greater drop-out rates than their suburban counterparts. Nationwide, high school drop-out rates are centered in a few hundred public schools that are overwhelmingly impoverished, urban, and non-white.<ref name=":02" /> The [[2000 census (USA)|2000 Census]] noted that roughly 50% of high school dropouts are employed and earning 35% less than the average national income while college graduates make 131% of the mean national income with 85% employment.<ref name=":02" />
Urban high schools reported significantly greater drop-out rates than their suburban counterparts. Nationwide, high school drop-out rates are centered in a few hundred public schools that are overwhelmingly impoverished, urban, and non-white.<ref name=":02" /> The [[2000 census (USA)|2000 Census]] noted that roughly 50% of high school dropouts are employed and earning 35% less than the average national income while college graduates make 131% of the mean national income with 85% employment.<ref name=":02" />


=== Public school teachers ===
Short-term and long-term benefits of integration are found for minority and white students alike. Students who attend integrated schools are more likely to live in diverse neighborhoods as adults than those students who attended more segregated schools. Integrated schools also reduce the maintenance of stereotypes and prevent the formation of prejudices in both majority and minority students.<ref name=frankenberg />
''Brown v. Board of Education'' led to a loss of black teachers.<ref name=":8">{{Cite journal|last1=D'Amico|first1=Diana|last2=Pawlewicz|first2=Robert J.|last3=Earley|first3=Penelope M.|last4=McGeehan|first4=Adam P.|date=2017|title=Where Are All the Black Teachers? Discrimination in the Teacher Labor Market|journal=Harvard Educational Review|volume=87|pages=26–49|doi=10.17763/1943-5045-87.1.26|url=https://commons.und.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=acc-fac}}</ref><ref name=":9">{{Cite journal|last=Madkins|first=Tia C.|date=2011|title=The Black Teacher Shortage: A Literature Review of Historical and Contemporary Trends|journal=The Journal of Negro Education|volume=80|pages=417–427}}</ref> This resulted in racial incongruence between teachers and student population.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal|last1=Williams|first1=J.A.|last2=Davis|first2=A.|last3=Butler|first3=B.R.|date=2020|title=Reducing discipline disparities by expanding the Black teacher pipeline: A descriptive analysis of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District.|journal=The Urban Review|volume=52|issue=3|pages=505–520|doi=10.1007/s11256-020-00558-y|s2cid=214186454 }}</ref> D'Amico et al. (2017) stated that ''Brown v. Board of Education'' "mandated the integration of the nation's schoolchildren but said nothing of the teacher labor force, effectively diminishing the demand for black teachers and thus eliminating these community-supported schools and the teachers who staffed them," (p.&nbsp;29).<ref name=":8" /> This elimination has perpetuated itself into our current day school system, with statistics showing the number of black teachers as disproportionate to the student population.<ref name=":10" /> Drawing on a study done by Pew Research center in 2021, they analyzed three decades of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) survey data, and Pew found that 79% of "U.S. public school teachers identified as non-Hispanic White during the 2017-18 school year.<ref name="pewresearch.org">{{cite web |last1=Schaeffer |first1=Katherine |title=America's public school teachers are far less racially and ethnically diverse than their students |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/12/10/americas-public-school-teachers-are-far-less-racially-and-ethnically-diverse-than-their-students/ |access-date=30 March 2023 |website=Pew Reaserch Center |date=December 10, 2021 }}</ref> And additionally, "fewer than one-in-ten teachers were either black (7%), Hispanic (9%) or Asian American (2%)".<ref name="pewresearch.org"/> This suggests that public elementary school teachers are significantly less racially and ethnically diverse and not keeping up with the diversity within their student body.<ref name="pewresearch.org"/>


== Proposed policies ==
== Proposals ==
Although the Supreme Court's ruling in ''[[Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1]]'' limited school districts' ability to take race into account during the school assignment process, the ruling did not prohibit racial considerations altogether. According to the UCLA Civil Rights Project, a school district may consider race when using any of the following strategies: "site selection of new schools; drawing attendance zones with general recognition of the racial demographics of neighborhoods; allocating resources for special programs; recruiting students and faculty in a targeted manner; [and] tracking enrollments, performance, and other statistics by race."<ref name=Tefera /> Districts may use income-based school assignment policies to try to indirectly achieve racial integration, but in practice such policies are not guaranteed to produce even a modest degree of racial integration.<ref name=ReardonYun>{{cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean F. |author2=John T. Yun |author3=Michal Kurlaender|title=Implications of Income-Based School Assignment Policies for Racial School Segregation|journal=Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis|year=2006|volume=28|issue=1|doi=10.3102/01623737028001049|pages=49–75|jstor=3699542|s2cid=20367573 }}</ref>
Although the Supreme Court's ruling in ''[[Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1]]'' limited school districts' ability to take race into account during the school assignment process, the ruling did not prohibit racial considerations altogether. According to the UCLA Civil Rights Project, a school district may consider race when using: "site selection of new schools; drawing attendance zones with general recognition of the racial demographics of neighborhoods; allocating resources for special programs; recruiting students and faculty in a targeted manner; [and] tracking enrollments, performance, and other statistics by race."<ref name=Tefera /> Districts may use [[Means test|income-based]] school assignment policies to try to indirectly achieve racial integration, but in practice such policies are not guaranteed to produce even a modest degree of racial integration.<ref name=ReardonYun>{{cite journal|last=Reardon|first=Sean F. |author2=John T. Yun |author3=Michal Kurlaender|title=Implications of Income-Based School Assignment Policies for Racial School Segregation|journal=Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis|year=2006|volume=28|issue=1|doi=10.3102/01623737028001049|pages=49–75|jstor=3699542|s2cid=20367573 }}</ref>


Other researchers argue that, given restrictive court rulings and the increasingly strong relationship between neighborhood and school segregation, integration efforts should instead focus on reducing racial segregation in neighborhoods.<ref name=frankenberg /> This could be achieved, in part, by greater enforcement of the [[Civil Rights Act of 1968|Fair Housing Act]] and/or removal of low-density [[Zoning|zoning laws]]. Policy could also set aside low-income housing in new community developments that have a strong school district based on income.<ref name=Orfield2012 />
Other researchers argue that, given restrictive court rulings and the increasingly strong relationship between neighborhood and school segregation, integration efforts instead focus on reducing racial segregation in neighborhoods.<ref name=frankenberg /> This could be achieved, in part, by greater enforcement of the [[Civil Rights Act of 1968|Fair Housing Act]] and removal of low-density [[Zoning|zoning laws]]. Policy could also set aside low-income housing in new communities with a strong school district based on income.<ref name=Orfield2012 />


In the school choice realm, policy can ensure that greater choice facilitates integration by, for instance, adopting "civil rights policies" for charter schools.<ref name=Orfield2012 /> Such policies could require charter schools to recruit diverse faculty and students, provide transportation to ensure access for poor students, and/or have a racial composition that does not differ greatly from that of the public school population.<ref name=Frankenberg2009>{{cite journal|last=Frankenberg|first=Erica|author2=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley |title=Equity Overlooked: Charter Schools and Civil Rights Policy|journal=The Civil Rights Project|date=November 2009|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/equity-overlooked-charter-schools-and-civil-rights-policy/frankenberg-equity-overlooked-report-2009.pdf|access-date=November 4, 2013}}</ref> Expanding the availability of magnet schools—which were initially created with school desegregation efforts and civil rights policies in mind—could also lead to increased integration, especially in those instances when magnet schools can draw students from separate (and segregated) attendance zones and school districts.<ref name=Tefera /> Alternatively, states could move towards county- or region-level school districting, allowing students to be drawn from larger and more diverse geographic areas.<ref name=frankenberg />
Policy regarding school choice can ensure greater integration by adopting "civil rights policies" for charter schools.<ref name=Orfield2012 /> These could require charter schools to recruit diverse faculty and students, provide transportation poor students, and have a racial composition that does not differ greatly from that of public schools.<ref name=Frankenberg2009>{{cite journal|last=Frankenberg|first=Erica|author2=Genevieve Siegel-Hawley |title=Equity Overlooked: Charter Schools and Civil Rights Policy|journal=The Civil Rights Project|date=November 2009|url=http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/equity-overlooked-charter-schools-and-civil-rights-policy/frankenberg-equity-overlooked-report-2009.pdf|access-date=November 4, 2013}}</ref> Expanding the availability of magnet schools—which were initially created with school desegregation efforts and civil rights policies in mind—could also lead to increased integration, especially in those instances when magnet schools can draw students from separate (and segregated) attendance zones and school districts.<ref name=Tefera /> Alternatively, states could move towards county- or region-level school districting, allowing students to be drawn from larger and more diverse geographic areas.<ref name=frankenberg />


According to some scholars, school assignment policies should primarily focus on socioeconomic integration rather than racial integration. As Richard D. Kahlenberg writes, "Racial integration is a very important aim, but if one's goal is boosting academic achievement, what really matters is economic integration."<ref name=kahlenberg>{{cite journal|last=Kahlenberg|first=Richard D.|title=From All Walks of Life: New Hope for School Integration|journal=American Educator|year=2012|url=http://www.aft.org/pdfs/americaneducator/winter1213/Kahlenberg.pdf|access-date=November 21, 2013}}</ref> Kahlenberg refers to a body of research showing that the low overall socioeconomic status of a school is clearly linked to less learning for students, even after controlling for age, race, and family socioeconomic status. In particular, the socioeconomic composition of a school may lead to lower student achievement through its effect on "school processes", such as academic climate and teachers' expectations of students' ability to learn.<ref name=rumberger /> If reforms could equalize these school processes across schools, socioeconomic and racial integration policies might not be necessary to close achievement gaps.<ref name=rumberger>{{cite journal|last=Rumberger|first=Russell W.|author2=Gregory J. Palardy|title=Does Segregation Still Matter? The Impact of Student Composition on Academic Achievement in High School|journal=Teachers College Record|year=2005|volume=107|issue=9|url=http://www.acri.org/blog/wp-content/does_segregation_still_matter.pdf|access-date=November 24, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101204135917/http://www.acri.org/blog/wp-content/does_segregation_still_matter.pdf|archive-date=December 4, 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref> [[Sociology|Sociologist]] Amy Stuart Wells, however, argues that the original intent of school desegregation was to improve blacks' access to important social institutions and opportunities, thereby improving their long-run life outcomes.<ref name=Wells2>{{cite journal|last=Wells|first=Amy Stuart|title=The 'Consequences' of School Desegregation: The Mismatch Between the Research and the Rationale|journal=Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly|year=2001|volume=28|url=http://www.hastingsconlawquarterly.org/archives/V28/I4/Wells.pdf|access-date=November 19, 2013}}</ref> Discussions about ending racial integration policies, though, largely focus on the relationship between integration and short-run outcomes such as test scores.<ref name=Wells2 /> In Stuart's view, long-term outcomes should be emphasized in order to appreciate the true social importance of integration.
Richard Kahlenberg writes, "Racial integration is a very important aim, but if one's goal is boosting academic achievement, what really matters is economic integration."<ref name=kahlenberg>{{cite journal|last=Kahlenberg|first=Richard D.|title=From All Walks of Life: New Hope for School Integration|journal=American Educator|year=2012|url=http://www.aft.org/pdfs/americaneducator/winter1213/Kahlenberg.pdf|access-date=November 21, 2013}}</ref> Kahlenberg refers the low overall socioeconomic status of a school is linked to reduced learning, even after [[Controlling for a variable|controlling]] for age, race, and socioeconomic status. The socioeconomic composition of a school may lead to lower student achievement through its effect on "school processes", such as academic climate and teachers' expectations.<ref name=rumberger /> If reforms could equalize these school processes across schools, socioeconomic and racial integration policies might not be necessary to close achievement gaps.<ref name=rumberger>{{cite journal|last=Rumberger|first=Russell W.|author2=Gregory J. Palardy|title=Does Segregation Still Matter? The Impact of Student Composition on Academic Achievement in High School|journal=Teachers College Record|year=2005|volume=107|issue=9|pages=1999–2045 |doi=10.1177/016146810510700905 |url=http://www.acri.org/blog/wp-content/does_segregation_still_matter.pdf|access-date=November 24, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101204135917/http://www.acri.org/blog/wp-content/does_segregation_still_matter.pdf|archive-date=December 4, 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}

===United States===
* [[American Indian boarding schools]]
* [[American Indian boarding schools]]
* [[Desegregation in the United States|Desegregation]]
* [[Education segregation in Indiana]]
* [[Education segregation in Indiana]]
* [[Education segregation in the Mississippi Delta|Education segregation in Mississippi Delta]]
* [[Education segregation in the Mississippi Delta]]
* [[Education segregation in the Mississippi Red Clay region]]
* [[Education segregation in the Mississippi Red Clay region|Education segregation in Mississippi Red Clay region]]
* [[Education segregation in New Jersey]]
* [[Education segregation in New Jersey]]
* [[Education segregation in Wisconsin]]
* [[Education segregation in Wisconsin]]
* [[Racial segregation in the United States]]
* [[Racial segregation in the United States]]
* [[School integration in the United States]]
* [[School integration in the United States]]
* [[School segregation in California]]
* [[Segregated prom]]
* [[Segregation academy]]
* [[Segregation academy]]
* ''[[The Shame of the Nation]]''
* ''[[The Shame of the Nation]]''
*[[Educational inequality in the United States|Educational Inequality in the United States]]
* [[Educational inequality in the United States]]
{{div col end}}

===Other countries===
* [[Apartheid|Apartheid in South Africa]]
* [[Canadian Indian residential school system]]
* [[Native schools|Native schools in New Zealand]]


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
Line 152: Line 146:


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* Brown, Nikki L.M., and Barry M. Stentiford, eds. ''The Jim Crow Encyclopedia'' (Greenwood, 2008)
* {{cite book| first = Jennifer R. | last = Nájera | title = The Borderlands of Race: Mexican Segregation in a South Texas Town | location = Austin, TX | publisher = University of Texas Press | year = 2015 | doi = 10.7560/767553 | jstor = 10.7560/767553 | isbn =978-1-4773-1129-5 }}
* {{cite book| first = Jennifer R. | last = Nájera | title = The Borderlands of Race: Mexican Segregation in a South Texas Town | location = Austin, TX | publisher = University of Texas Press | year = 2015 | doi = 10.7560/767553 | jstor = 10.7560/767553 | isbn =978-1-4773-1129-5 }}


Line 163: Line 158:
[[Category:Education in the United States]]
[[Category:Education in the United States]]
[[Category:History of racial segregation in the United States]]
[[Category:History of racial segregation in the United States]]
[[Category:African-American history]]
[[Category:African-American segregation in the United States]]
[[Category:Mexican-American history]]
[[Category:History of Mexican Americans]]
[[Category:Race and education in the United States]]
[[Category:Race and education in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 04:43, 25 November 2024

In 1960, U.S. marshals were needed to escort Ruby Bridges to and from school in New Orleans, Louisiana, as she broke the State of Louisiana's segregation rules

School segregation in the United States was the segregation of students in educational facilities based on their race and ethnicity. While not prohibited from having or attending schools, various minorities were barred from most schools that admitted white students. Segregation was enforced legally in the U.S. states, primarily in the Southern United States, although segregation could occur in informal settings or through social expectations and norms. Segregation laws were met with resistance by Civil Rights activists and began to be challenged in 1954 by cases brought before the U.S. Supreme Court. Segregation continued longstanding exclusionary policies in much of the Southern United States (where most African Americans lived) after the Civil War. Jim Crow laws codified segregation. These laws were influenced by the history of slavery and discrimination in the US. Secondary schools for African Americans in the South were called training schools instead of high schools in order to appease racist whites and focused on vocational education.[1] School integration in the United States took place at different times in different areas and often met resistance. After the ruling of Brown v. Board of Education, which banned segregated school laws, school segregation took de facto form. School segregation declined rapidly during the late 1960s and early 1970s as the government became strict on schools' plans to combat segregation more effectively as a result of Green v. County School Board of New Kent County.[2] Voluntary segregation by income appears to have increased since 1990.[2] Racial segregation has either increased or stayed constant since 1990, depending on which definition of segregation is used.[2][3] In general, definitions based on the amount of interaction between black and white students (exposure definitions) show increased racial segregation, while definitions based on the proportion of black and white students in different schools (unevenness definitions) show racial segregation remaining approximately constant.[2]

Residential segregation in the United States and school choice, both historically and currently, have had a considerable effect on school segregation.[4][5] Not only does the current segregation of neighborhoods and schools in the US affect social issues and practices, but it is considered by some to be a factor in the achievement gap between black and white students.[5] Some authors such as Jerry Roziek and Ta-Nehisi Coates highlight the importance of tackling the root concept of racism instead of desegregation efforts that arise as a result of the end of de jure segregation.[6][7] Along with educational and social outcomes, the average income and occupational aspirations of minority households that are products of segregated schooling have worse outcomes than the products of desegregated schooling.[8][9]

More than half of students in the United States attend school districts with high concentrations of people (over 75%) of their own ethnicity and about 40% of black students attend schools where 90%-100% of students are non-white.[10][11]

Blacks, "Mongolians" (Chinese), Japanese, Latino, and Native American students were segregated in California.[12] Native American children faced separation from their families and forced assimilation programs at boarding schools. But there were also cases where Native Americans successfully challenged school segregation and won access to public schools.[13]

Historical segregation

[edit]

Antebellum era

[edit]

African Free School was in New York City in the 18th century. Education during the slave period in the United States was limited. Richard Humphreys, Samuel Powers Emlen Jr, and Prudence Crandall established schools for African Americans in the decades preceding the Civil War.

In 1832, Prudence Crandall admitted an African American girl to her all-white Canterbury Female Boarding School in Canterbury, Connecticut, which was the subject of public backlash and protests. She converted the boarding school to one for only African American girls, but Crandall was jailed for her efforts for violating a Black Law. In 1835, an anti-abolitionist mob attacked and destroyed Noyes Academy, an integrated school in Canaan, New Hampshire founded by abolitionists in New England. In 1849, the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that segregated schools were allowed under the Constitution of Massachusetts (Roberts v. City of Boston).[14] Emlen Institution was a boarding school for African American and Native American orphans in Ohio and then Pennsylvania.[15][16] Richard Humphreys (philanthropist) bequeathed money to establish the Institute for Colored Youth in Philadelphia.[17] Yale Law School co-founder, judge, and mayor of New Haven David Daggett was a leader in the fight against schools for African Americans and helped block plans for a college for African Americans in New Haven, Connecticut.

Black schools were established by some religious groups and philanthropists to educate African Americans. Oberlin Academy was one of the early schools to integrate. Lowell High School also accepted African American students.

Reconstruction era

[edit]
Jim Crow laws in the Southern United States (shaded red) required school segregation, 1877–1954. Other states outside the south prohibited school segregation (green) or allowed local choice (blue)

The formal segregation of black and white people began following the end of the Reconstruction Era in 1877.[18] The United States Supreme Court's Dred Scott v. Sandford decision upheld the denial of citizenship to African Americans and found that descendants of slaves are "so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."

Students in a one-room school in Waldorf, Maryland (1941)

Following the American Civil War, the Thirteenth Amendment was ratified and ended slavery nationwide. The Fourteenth Amendment, guaranteeing equal protection under the law, was ratified in 1868, and citizenship was extended to African Americans.[19] Congress also passed the Civil Rights Act of 1875, banning racial discrimination in public accommodations. But in 1883, the Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, finding that discrimination by individuals or private businesses was constitutional.[20]

Jim Crow era

[edit]

The Dunning School at Columbia University, provided the intellectual underpinning for Jim Crow era discrimination. Segregation continued in de jure form with the passage of Jim Crow laws in the 19th century. The Reconstruction era saw efforts at integration in the South, but discriminatory laws were also passed by state legislatures in the South and parts of the lower Midwest and Southwest, segregating public schools.[21] These stated that schools should be separated by race and offer equal amenities, but conditions were far from equal.[22]

Segregated drinking fountain in the American south under the Jim Crow Laws.

The constitutionality of Jim Crow laws was upheld in the Supreme Court's decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which ruled that separate facilities for black and white people were permissible provided that the facilities were of equal quality.[18]

New Deal era

[edit]

Franklin D. Roosevelt enacted housing reforms that focused their benefits on home buying aid to only white Americans.[23] These restrictions in loans further separated black and white neighborhoods, which introduced the long term effects of residential segregation projects on schooling. The boundaries housing projects were intentionally drawn so that black neighborhoods had less access to education and jobs.[24] This depletion of resources led to an increase in poverty rates which broadened academic achievement gaps.[23][24]

The establishment of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) in 1939 serves as the foundation of the efforts and funding to challenge school segregation. Charles Hamilton Houston initially ran the LDF, and focused heavily on proving that black schools were severely unequal to white schools[25] Eventually, the LDF shifted its leadership to Thurgood Marshall, who became the first director of the LDF and was a leader in significant court battles including Brown v. Board of Education.[26]

Civil Rights era

[edit]
Quote from Supreme Court Decision in Brown v. Board of Education case, hung at the Historic Site in Topeka, Kansas, USA

Plessy v. Ferguson was overturned in 1954, when the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education ended de jure segregation in the United States.[27] The state of Arkansas would experience some of the first successful school integrations below the Mason–Dixon line.[28] In the decade following Brown, the South resisted enforcement of the Court's decision.[27] States and school districts did little to reduce segregation, and schools remained almost completely segregated until 1968, after Congressional passage of civil rights legislation.[29] In response to pressures to desegregate in the public school system, some white communities started private segregated schools, but rulings in Green v. Connally (1971) and Runyon v. McCrary (1976) prohibited racial discrimination in private schools and revoked IRS-granted non-profit status of schools in violation.[30] Desegregation efforts reached their peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the South transitioned from complete segregation to being the nation's most integrated region.[27]

Mexican-American segregation during these eras

[edit]

While African Americans faced legal segregation in civil society, Mexican Americans often dealt with de facto segregation, meaning no federal laws explicitly barred their access to schools or other public facilities, yet they were still separated from white people. The proponents of Mexican-American segregation were often officials who worked at the state and local school level and often defended the creation and sustaining of separate "Mexican schools". Prior to the 1930s, segregation of Mexican children in schools was a rarity.[31] Following the Great Depression, funding from the New Deal and legislation such as the 1934 Sugar Act enabled the creation of segregated schools for Mexican American children in Wyoming.[31] An example of Mexican-American school segregation is from the city of Oxnard, California.[32] According to the district records, the schools and neighborhoods in Oxnard were segregated based on ethnicity. The number of Latino migrants in Oxnard was climbing, causing overcrowding in the schools, which triggered local officials to "solve" this issue by creating a "school-within-a-school" form of segregation, and eventually by establishing a separate school for Latino students. School segregation occurred due to the residential segregation that was also present in Oxnard. By placing restrictive policies and covenants on properties, officials in Oxnard were able to keep Latino residents in a separate neighborhood from the "American" (or non-Latino residents), which provided a justification for segregating the schools.[32] The segregation of Mexican children occurred throughout much of the U.S. West. During the Depression era in Wyoming, the segregation of Mexican children—whether they were US citizens or not—mirrored Jim Crow laws. The segregation of Mexicans also took place in Colorado, Montana, Nebraska,[33] and Texas. The Blackwell School in Texas is one of the few remaining formerly de facto segregated Mexican school buildings.[34]

Parents of both African-American and Mexican-American students challenged school segregation in coordination with civil rights organizations such as the NAACP, ACLU, and LULAC. Both groups challenged discriminatory policies in court, with varying success. The NAACP initially challenged graduate and professional school segregation asserting that desegregation at this level would result in the least backlash and opposition by whites.

Catholic schools

[edit]

Initially, Catholic schools in the South generally followed the pattern of segregation in public schools, sometimes enforced by law. However, most Catholic dioceses began moving ahead of public schools to desegregate. Prior to the desegregation of public schools, St. Louis was the first city to desegregate its Catholic schools in 1947.[35] Following this, Catholic schools followed in Mississippi (1965)[36], Atlanta (1962), Tennessee (1954), and Washington, DC (1948). Due to different integration plans in different locations, some schools decided to desegregate before public schools in their own communities. The first African American Catholic schools were established in states with large Catholic populations and a history of slavery, such as Maryland and Louisiana.[37]

Protestant schools

[edit]

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, when some states (including Alabama, Virginia, and Louisiana) closed their public schools to protest integration, Jerry Falwell Sr. took the opportunity to open "Christian academies" for white students.[38]

Contemporary Segregation

[edit]

Segregation since the 1960s

[edit]

From 1968 to 1980, segregation declined.[29] School integration peaked in the 1980s and then gradually declined over the course of the 1990s.[39] In the 1990s and early 2000s, minority students attended schools with a declining proportion of white students, so that the rate of segregation as measured as isolation resembled that of the 1960s.[40] A study by The Civil Rights Project found that in the 2016 to 2017 school year, nearly half of all black and Latino students in the U.S. went to schools where the student population was 90% people of color, while the average white student went to schools that were 69% white.[41] There is some disagreement about trends since the 1980s; while some researchers presented trends as evidence of "resegregation," others argue that changing demographics in school districts, including class and income, are responsible for most of the changes in the racial composition of schools.[29] A 2013 study by Jeremy Fiel found that, "for the most part, compositional changes are to blame for the declining presence of whites in minorities' schools," and that racial balance increased from 1993 to 2010.[40] The study found that minority students became more isolated and less exposed to whites within a school although districts were statistically more integrated.[40] Another 2013 study found that segregation measured increased over the previous 25 years due to changing demographics.[29] The study did not find an increase in racial balance. Racial unequality remained stable. Researcher Kori Stroub found that the "racial/ethnic resegregation of public schools observed over the 1990s gave way to a period of modest reintegration," but segregation between school districts increased even though within-district segregation is low.[39] Fiel believed that increasing interdistrict segregation would exacerbate racial isolation.[40]

Sources

[edit]

Residential segregation

[edit]

A source of school segregation is residential segregation. Residence and school assignment are linked due to the tradition of locally controlled schools.[42] Residential segregation is related to growing income inequality in the United States.

The deterioration of cities and urban education systems between the 1950-80s was the consequence of several post-war policies like the Home Owners' Loans Corporation, Federal Housing Administration, Interstate Highway Act, and discriminatory zoning practices. The loss of war-time industrial employment perpetuated 'white flight' and suburban sprawl at the expense of poor, marginalized urban residents.[43] Mid-20th century urban divestment and suburban development redirected social services and federal funding to predominantly white residencies. Remaining urban residents witnessed dramatic decreases in quality of living, creating countless barriers to a stable life, including in academic success. Consequently, urban school districts became relatively accurate measures for documenting the increasing educational inequalities among students of color.[43]

A study conducted by Sean Reardon and John Yun found that from 1990 to 2000, residential black/white and Hispanic/white segregation declined by a modest amount in the United States, while public school segregation increased slightly during the same time period.[44] Because the two variables moved in opposite directions, changes in residential patterns were not responsible for changes in school segregation trends. Rather, the study determined that in 1990, schools showed less segregation than neighborhoods, indicating that local policies were helping to ameliorate the effects of residential segregation on school composition.[44] By 2000, however, racial composition of schools had become more closely correlated to neighborhood composition, indicating that public policies no longer redistributed students as evenly as before.[44]

In the 2005 Civil Rights Project conducted at Harvard University, researchers reported that over 80% of high-minority schools—where the student population is over 90% non-white—are high poverty schools as indicated by a large majority qualifying for free and reduced lunch.[43] Additionally, of five million enrolled students in two dozen of the largest central cities, 70% are black and Latino students in predominantly minority-majority, urban schools.[43]

Another study targets spatial inequalities and student outcomes based on the physical and social presence in specific neighborhoods. Factors like pollution, perceived safety, proximity to other students, and healthy learning environments can all affect academic outcomes of various student groups.[45] In correspondence to high poverty environments, students are likely to face various obstacles that prevent effective learning environments including food and housing insecurity.[45] Likewise, black, Latino, and Indigenous students experience twice the exposure to poor students than their Asian and white counterparts.[43]

Researcher Peter Katel addressed the resegregation of schools as barriers for poor students in inner-city neighborhoods who are unprepared for higher education.[46] Katel also reported that educational experts viewed high densities of marginalized students as a loss of funding that most white families do not experience, because they are more likely to have the capability to attend different schools.[46] A 2013 study corroborated these findings, showing that the relationship between residential and school segregation became stronger between 2000 and 2010. In 2000, segregation of black people in schools was lower than in their neighborhoods; by 2010, the two patterns of segregation were "nearly identical".[42]

Supreme Court rulings

[edit]

The Court's 1970 ruling in Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education furthered desegregation efforts by upholding busing as constitutional, but the ruling had no effect on the increasing segregation between school districts.[47] The court's ruling in Milliken v. Bradley in 1974 prohibited interdistrict desegregation by busing.[48]

The 1990 decision in Board of Education of Oklahoma City v. Dowell declared that once schools districts had made a practicable, "good faith" effort to desegregate, they could be declared to have achieved "unitary" status, releasing them from court oversight.[49] The decision allowed schools to end previous desegregation efforts even in cases where a return to segregation was likely.[47] The court's ruling in Freeman v. Pitts went further, ruling that districts could be released from oversight in "incremental stages", meaning that courts would continue to supervise only those aspects of integration that had not yet been achieved.[48]

Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division escort African-American students to Central High School in Little Rock in Sept. 1957, after the governor of Arkansas tried to enforce segregation

A 2012 study determined that "half of all districts ever under court-ordered desegregation [had] been released from court oversight, with most of the releases occurring in the last 20 years". The study found that segregation levels in school districts did not rise sharply following court dismissal, but rather increased gradually for the next 10 to 12 years. As compared to districts that had never been placed under court supervision, districts that had achieved unitary status and were released from court-ordered desegregation had a subsequent change in segregation patterns that was 10 times as great. The study concludes that "court-ordered desegregation plans are effective in reducing racial school segregation, but ... their effects fade over time in the absence of continued court oversight."[49]

In a pair of rulings in 2007 (Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1 and Meredith v. Jefferson County Board of Education), the court's decision limited schools' ability to use race as a consideration in school assignment plans. In both cases, the Court struck down school assignment plans designed to ensure that the racial composition of schools roughly reflected the composition of the district as a whole, saying that the plans were not "narrowly tailored" to achieve the stated goal and that race-neutral alternatives had not been given adequate consideration.[50]

School choice

[edit]

While greater school choice may increase integration by drawing students from more diverse areas, expanded choice often has the opposite effect.[51] When studies compare the racial and ethnic composition of charter schools to public schools, researchers generally find that charter schools preserve or intensify racial and economic segregation, and/or facilitate white flight from public schools.[52] Furthermore, studies that compare individual students' demographic characteristics to the schools they are leaving (public schools) and the schools they are switching to (charter schools) generally demonstrate that students "leave more diverse public schools and enroll in less diverse charter schools".[52]

Private schools constitute a second important type of school choice. A 2002 study found that private schools continued to contribute to the persistence of school segregation in the South over the course of the 1990s. Enrollment of whites in private schools increased sharply in the 1970s, remained unchanged in the 1980s, and increased again over the course of the 1990s. Because the changes over the latter two decades was not substantial, however, researcher Sean Reardon concludes that changes in private school enrollment is not a likely contributor to any changes in schools segregation patterns during that time.[44]

In contrast to charter and private schools, magnet schools generally foster racial integration rather than hinder it.[51] Such schools were initially presented as an alternative to unpopular busing policies, and included explicit desegregation goals along with provisions for recruiting and providing transportation for diverse populations.[50] Although today's magnet schools are no longer as explicitly oriented towards integration efforts, they continue to be less racially isolated than other forms of school choice.[50]

Outcomes

[edit]

Education

[edit]

Desegregation in the 1970s and 1980s led to academic gains for black students. As integration increased, the educational attainment of black students increased while that of whites remained largely unchanged.[49] Historically, greater access to schools with higher enrollment of white students reduced high school dropout rates for black students, and reduced the test score gap.[40]

Minority students continue to be concentrated in high-poverty, low-achieving schools, while white students are more likely to attend high-achieving, more affluent schools.[40] Resources such as funds and high-quality teachers attach unequally to schools according to racial and socioeconomic composition.[40] Schools with high proportions of minority enrollment are often characterized by "less experienced and less qualified teachers, high levels of teacher turnover, less successful peer groups and inadequate facilities and learning materials."[53] These schools also tend to have less challenging curricula and fewer offerings of Advanced Placement courses.[53] Additionally, in recent years, schools have become dependent on the internet for doing and submitting homework. As a result, 25% of black teens and 17% of Latino teens cannot complete their homework due to a lack of reliable internet connection, as opposed to only 13% of White teens.[54]

A 2009 study determined that attending school with a high proportion of black students negatively affected black academic achievement, even after controlling for school quality, differences in ability, and family background. The effect of racial composition on white achievement was insignificant.[55] However, a 2006 study found that white students are more inclined to take higher level courses at integrated schools to decrease exposure to minorities while the black-white test score gap still decreases with movement from a segregated city to an integrated city.[56]

The categorization of 'at-risk' youth typically defines learning differences as disabilities based on a standardized, non-inclusive curriculum; the label 'at-risk' inherently follows students of color and low-income students as a generalized academic failure.[57] National academic standardization also extends to federal policies like the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), which implemented high-stakes standardized testing across the country in an attempt to address socio-economic disparities in learning outcomes.[58] Schools that were labelled "failures" and faced sanctions under the NCLB Act were typically high poverty schools in segregated districts.[43] Both the standardization of learning outcomes and the implementation of these policies fail to address the structural barriers that created high poverty, highly segregated schools.[58]

Social well-being

[edit]

Integration has a small beneficial impact on short-term outcomes for black students, and a beneficial impact on long-term outcomes, such as school attainment.[59] Integrated education is positively related to short-term outcomes such as K–12 school performance, cross-racial friendships, acceptance of cultural differences, and declines in racial fears and prejudice. Short-term and long-term benefits of integration are found for minority and white students alike. Students who attend integrated schools are more likely to live in diverse neighborhoods as adults than those students who attended more segregated schools. Integrated schools also reduce the maintenance of stereotypes and prevent the formation of prejudices in both majority and minority students.[42]

Economics

[edit]

Integration is associated with higher educational and occupational attainment across all ethnic groups, better intergroup relations, greater likelihood of living and working in an integrated environment, lower likelihood of involvement with the criminal justice system, espousal of democratic values, and greater civic engagement.[60] On the other hand, a 2014 study highlights that as segregated schooling increases, the socioeconomic inequalities based on race increases.[61] Billings, Deming, and Rockoff demonstrate how a certain school district focused on the allocation of funds redistributed to schools with a high volume of minority students.[61] Majority-minority schools present areas with high percentages of property that correspond to fewer resources and lower academic capability.[62]

A 1994 study found support for the theory that interracial contact in elementary or secondary school positively affects long-term outcomes in a way that can overcome perpetual segregation against black communities.[8] The study reviewed previous research and determined that, as compared to segregated Black people, desegregated Black people are more likely to set higher occupational aspirations, attend desegregated colleges, have desegregated social and professional networks as adults, gain desegregated employment, and work in white-collar and professional jobs in the private sector. In schools with a relatively high average income per students, students are more likely to perform better because they feel safer.[9]

Urban high schools reported significantly greater drop-out rates than their suburban counterparts. Nationwide, high school drop-out rates are centered in a few hundred public schools that are overwhelmingly impoverished, urban, and non-white.[43] The 2000 Census noted that roughly 50% of high school dropouts are employed and earning 35% less than the average national income while college graduates make 131% of the mean national income with 85% employment.[43]

Public school teachers

[edit]

Brown v. Board of Education led to a loss of black teachers.[63][64] This resulted in racial incongruence between teachers and student population.[65] D'Amico et al. (2017) stated that Brown v. Board of Education "mandated the integration of the nation's schoolchildren but said nothing of the teacher labor force, effectively diminishing the demand for black teachers and thus eliminating these community-supported schools and the teachers who staffed them," (p. 29).[63] This elimination has perpetuated itself into our current day school system, with statistics showing the number of black teachers as disproportionate to the student population.[65] Drawing on a study done by Pew Research center in 2021, they analyzed three decades of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) survey data, and Pew found that 79% of "U.S. public school teachers identified as non-Hispanic White during the 2017-18 school year.[66] And additionally, "fewer than one-in-ten teachers were either black (7%), Hispanic (9%) or Asian American (2%)".[66] This suggests that public elementary school teachers are significantly less racially and ethnically diverse and not keeping up with the diversity within their student body.[66]

Proposals

[edit]

Although the Supreme Court's ruling in Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1 limited school districts' ability to take race into account during the school assignment process, the ruling did not prohibit racial considerations altogether. According to the UCLA Civil Rights Project, a school district may consider race when using: "site selection of new schools; drawing attendance zones with general recognition of the racial demographics of neighborhoods; allocating resources for special programs; recruiting students and faculty in a targeted manner; [and] tracking enrollments, performance, and other statistics by race."[50] Districts may use income-based school assignment policies to try to indirectly achieve racial integration, but in practice such policies are not guaranteed to produce even a modest degree of racial integration.[67]

Other researchers argue that, given restrictive court rulings and the increasingly strong relationship between neighborhood and school segregation, integration efforts instead focus on reducing racial segregation in neighborhoods.[42] This could be achieved, in part, by greater enforcement of the Fair Housing Act and removal of low-density zoning laws. Policy could also set aside low-income housing in new communities with a strong school district based on income.[53]

Policy regarding school choice can ensure greater integration by adopting "civil rights policies" for charter schools.[53] These could require charter schools to recruit diverse faculty and students, provide transportation poor students, and have a racial composition that does not differ greatly from that of public schools.[51] Expanding the availability of magnet schools—which were initially created with school desegregation efforts and civil rights policies in mind—could also lead to increased integration, especially in those instances when magnet schools can draw students from separate (and segregated) attendance zones and school districts.[50] Alternatively, states could move towards county- or region-level school districting, allowing students to be drawn from larger and more diverse geographic areas.[42]

Richard Kahlenberg writes, "Racial integration is a very important aim, but if one's goal is boosting academic achievement, what really matters is economic integration."[68] Kahlenberg refers the low overall socioeconomic status of a school is linked to reduced learning, even after controlling for age, race, and socioeconomic status. The socioeconomic composition of a school may lead to lower student achievement through its effect on "school processes", such as academic climate and teachers' expectations.[69] If reforms could equalize these school processes across schools, socioeconomic and racial integration policies might not be necessary to close achievement gaps.[69]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
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  3. ^ Richmond, Emily (June 11, 2012). "Schools Are More Segregated Today Than During the Late 1960s". The Atlantic. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  4. ^ Frankenberg, Erica; Genevieve Siegel-Hawley (November 2009). "Equity Overlooked: Charter Schools and Civil Rights Policy" (PDF). The Civil Rights Project. Retrieved November 4, 2013.
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  6. ^ Rosiek, Jerry (2019). "School segregation: A realist's view". The Phi Delta Kappan. 100 (5): 8–13. doi:10.1177/0031721719827536. ISSN 0031-7217. JSTOR 26614874. S2CID 150138749.
  7. ^ Coates, Ta-Nehisi (2015). Between the world and me. New York. ISBN 978-0-8129-9354-7. OCLC 912045191.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Brown, Nikki L.M., and Barry M. Stentiford, eds. The Jim Crow Encyclopedia (Greenwood, 2008)
  • Nájera, Jennifer R. (2015). The Borderlands of Race: Mexican Segregation in a South Texas Town. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. doi:10.7560/767553. ISBN 978-1-4773-1129-5. JSTOR 10.7560/767553.
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