OE [publication]1966 |
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Page 8
... participation rates were : in the metropolitan North and West , 72 percent ; metro- politan South and Southwest , 65 percent ; non- metropolitan North and West , 82 percent ; non- metropolitan South and Southwest 61 percent . All the ...
... participation rates were : in the metropolitan North and West , 72 percent ; metro- politan South and Southwest , 65 percent ; non- metropolitan North and West , 82 percent ; non- metropolitan South and Southwest 61 percent . All the ...
Page 20
... participation in an increasingly technical world . Consequently , a pupil's test results at the end of public school provide a good measure of the range of oppor- tunities open to him as he finishes school- a wide range of choice of ...
... participation in an increasingly technical world . Consequently , a pupil's test results at the end of public school provide a good measure of the range of oppor- tunities open to him as he finishes school- a wide range of choice of ...
Page 148
... participation in professional organizations . It is principally in the South and Southwest that teachers of Negroes have attended NSF , NDEA , and ESEA summer institutes proportionately more often than have teachers of whites . By ...
... participation in professional organizations . It is principally in the South and Southwest that teachers of Negroes have attended NSF , NDEA , and ESEA summer institutes proportionately more often than have teachers of whites . By ...
Page 218
... participation , for wise consumption . Such intellectual skills were far less important in the simpler rural society from which ours has grown , and , as in all such rural societies , the schooling to develop these skills was less ...
... participation , for wise consumption . Such intellectual skills were far less important in the simpler rural society from which ours has grown , and , as in all such rural societies , the schooling to develop these skills was less ...
Page 478
... participants in a social experiment and felt personally responsible . Many students rejected their parents ' biased viewpoints , perhaps in a spirit of rebellion . In any event , disciplinary problems of the sort experienced at Garfield ...
... participants in a social experiment and felt personally responsible . Many students rejected their parents ' biased viewpoints , perhaps in a spirit of rebellion . In any event , disciplinary problems of the sort experienced at Garfield ...
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Common terms and phrases
4th 1st ability group academic achievement answer sheet attend schools average Negro Average number average white background ber of institu blacken the circle Control and region desegregation designated quarter-percent differences elementary schools enrollment future teachers grade 12 graduate Head Start high school Indian Americans Item Question number Lakes and Plains less metropolitan and nonmetropolitan metropolitan South Mexican Americans minority groups Negro counselors Negro pupils Negro students Negro White Negroes and whites nonmetropolitan areas nonparticipants North and West North Atlantic___ Oriental Americans participants percent Negro principals Private institutions proportion Public institutions Puerto Ricans questionnaire race racial composition Rocky Mountains sample schools attended secondary schools South and Southwest South___ STANDARDIZED SCORE student body students in designated survey booklet teaching test scores tions 1st 2d variables variance variance accounted verbal W N W(N West South Southwest White Negro white pupils white students
Popular passages
Page 695 - Georgia 12. Hawaii 13. Idaho 14. Illinois 15. Indiana 16. Iowa 17. Kansas 18. Kentucky 19. Louisiana 20. Maine 21. Maryland 22. Massachusetts 23. Michigan 24. Minnesota 25. Mississippi 26. Missouri 27. Montana 28. Nebraska 29. Nevada 30. New Hampshire 31. New Jersey 32. New Mexico 33. New York 34. North Carolina 35. North Dakota 36. Ohio 37. Oklahoma 38.
Page 23 - The responses of pupils to questions in the survey show that minority pupils, except for Orientals, have far less conviction than whites that they can affect their own environments and futures.
Page 315 - That schools bring little-^ influence to bear on a child's achievement that is independent of his background and general social context...
Page 20 - What they measure are the skills which are among the most important in our society for getting a good job and moving up to a better one, and for full participation in an increasingly technical world.
Page iii - Congress, within two years of the enactment of this title, concerning the lack of availability of equal educational opportunities for individuals by reason of race, color, religion, or national origin in public educational institutions at all levels in the United States, its territories and possessions, and the District of Columbia.
Page 39 - Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota...
Page 22 - To put it another way, the achievement of minority pupils depends more on the schools they attend than does the achievement of majority pupils.
Page 633 - Manager— such as sales manager, store manager, office manager, factory supervisor, etc. Proprietor or owner— such as owner of a small business, wholesaler, retailer, contractor, restaurant owner, etc.
Page 21 - Thus, by this measure, the deficiency in achievement is progressively greater for the minority pupils at progressively higher grade levels. For most minority groups, then, and most particularly the Negro, schools provide little opportunity for them to overcome this initial deficiency; in fact they fall farther behind the white majority in the development of several skills which are critical to making a living and participating fully in modern society.
Page 546 - The standard error is primarily a measure of sampling variability, that is, of the variations that occur by chance because a sample rather than the whole of the population is surveyed.