American Decades
People in the News
Horace Mann Bond was influential in the integration of Lincoln (Pennsylvania) University. He was the first black to become president of the school (1945-1957) and became dean of the School of Education at Atlanta University in 1957.
The 1954 class-action suit named after eleven-year-old Linda Brown, Brown v. Board of Education ofTopeka, Kansas; ended racial segregation in the public schools.
Autherine Lucy was admitted to the University of Alabama by court order in 1957. After riots broke out, university officials removed her from campus. She made several allegations against the university regarding her poor treatment which resulted in her permanent expulsion from the school. This action made her a symbol of the struggle of desegregation.
Sol Markoff, associate general director of the National Child Labor Committee, in 1952 criticized Congress for spending $6.5 million yearly to...
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1950's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Adult Education
- Church vs. State
- Curricula
- Desegregating Education
- John Dewey and Progressive Education
- Drafting College Students
- Federal Funding for Education
- Great Books Program
- Midcentury White House Conference on Children and Youth
- National Defense Education Act of 1958
- Office of Education and Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (Hew)
- President's Committee on Education Beyond the High School
- Quality in Education?
- Funding the Future Through R and D
- The "Red Scare" in Education
- Report Cards
- School Dropouts
- School Shortages
- Teachers
- Television's Effect on Education
- U.S. vs. Soviet Schools
- White House Conference on Education
- Why Johnny Can't Read
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1950–1959
