American Decades
A Report to the President: The Committee for the White House Conference on Education—Full Report.
Report
Date: April 1956
Source: A Report to the President: The Committee for the White House Conference on Education—Full Report. Washington, D.C., April 1956, 3342–3347.
Introduction
Throughout the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth, strong opposition to U.S. government involvement in education was an obstacle to passing federal legislation or allocating federal funds. Some contended that such involvement was unconstitutional. For example, the Tenth Amendment reserves to the states any powers not specifically granted to the federal government—education is not mentioned in the Constitution. Others argued that federal funding meant federal control in opposition to the long-cherished tradition of local control of education in United States. Since every locality is different, it was asserted, the local authorities are in the best position to make decisions for...
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1950's Education Primary Sources
- Doremus et al. v. Board of Education of Borough of Hawthorne et al.
- "8 Teacher Ousters in Communist Case Asked by Examiner"
- Defining "Equal" in Higher Education
- God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of "Academic Freedom"
- What Educational TV Offers You
- Why Johnny Can't Read—and What You Can Do About It
- A Report to the President: The Committee for the White House Conference on Education—Full Report.
- Education of Mentally Retarded Children Act
- The Cold War's Effect on U.S. Education
- Education and Liberty: The Role of the Schools in a Modern Democracy
- The Long Shadow of Little Rock: A Memoir
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
