American Decades
Busing to Achieve Desegregation
"With All Deliberate Speed."
Busing as a means of transporting students to public schools was nothing new, with about 43 percent of the nation's schoolchildren riding buses each day in the years 1972-1973. Busing children from school to school in order to provide school districts with racial balance, however, was new. Busing for large-scale desegregation purposes was started in 1971, when the U.S. Supreme Court decided that many school districts had not complied with the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision and its 1955 follow-up, wherein the justices had ordered desegregation "with all deliberate speed." In the South that mandate had produced some "freedom of choice" plans under which students were technically free to choose any school in the district and hence provide racial balance; in practice, however, most students stayed where they were, and most school districts stayed segregated. By 1971, however, in...
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1970's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Politics and Funding During the Nixon-Carter Years
- Federal Education Legislation for the Handicapped
- Federal and State Bilingual Education Policy
- Busing to Achieve Desegregation
- The Literacy Crisis
- Textbooks Under Fire
- Religious Schooling During the 1970s
- Open-Admissions Policies in Higher Education
- Minority-Admissions Policies: Before and After Bakke
- Progress for Women in Education
- Teacher Organizations and Politics in the 1970s
- Black Educational Issues of the 1970s
- Vocational and Community Colleges
- The Effects of 1960s Activism on the 1970s
- The Open Classroom, Open Schooling, and Informal Learning
- Curricular Innovations: Stepping Forward, Then Stepping Back
- School-Financing Decisions from the Courts
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1970–1979
