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segregation in the 1940's in south carolina in schools

2006-11-19 07:51:13 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

2 answers

Segregation in education meant separating black and white schoolchildren from one another, forcing them to attend black-or white-only schools. A national issue, segregation was most prominent in the South, where it was enforced by law and where it fit into a broader pattern of social segregation and political oppression of African Americans known as Jim Crow. The Jim Crow school system was patently unfair to the educational aspirations of millions of southern blacks. In many cases no institution of high training would accept black students; at the primary and secondary levels, white school boards badly underfunded black-only schools, failing to provide adequate facilities, textbooks and instructional materials, or qualified teachers. In 1949, for example, Clarendon County, South Carolina, spent $179 on each white child enrolled in school but only $43 on each black student. While public education was generally in dismal...

See the whole article at http://history.enotes.com/1940-education-american-decades/segregation-schools

2006-11-19 07:54:17 · answer #1 · answered by blapath 6 · 0 0

wikepedia

2006-11-19 16:49:15 · answer #2 · answered by Supreet 3 · 0 0

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