Desegregating America's Schools
Desegregating America's Schools
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Author(s): Hinton, KaaVonia
ISBN No.: 9781584157373
Pages: 48
Year: 200907
Format: Library Binding
Price: $ 41.33
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Education in the United States has not always been free and available to all. Even after the Fourteenth Amendment was passed, which guaranteed citizenship rights to all regardless of race, blacks and whites had separate schools and other public facilities. Though the schools were supposed to be equal, they were not. Black schools were old, overcrowded, and ill-equipped. Many people believed segregated schools were unfair, so they turned to the courts for help. A large battle was won with Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, in 1954, but the struggle continued. As schools were mandated to integrate, students faced rioting.


In some areas, they had to be escorted by armed guards. In cities that faced residential segregation, busing was required-but that solution also had its downside. This book tells the important story about the struggle for school desegregation and the courageous people who made it possible. Book jacket.


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