American Decades
The Effects of 1960s Activism on the 1970s
A Decade of Ferment.
The social movements, political forces, and student activism that characterized the 1960s continued, and in some cases intensified in the 1970s, profoundly affecting American education. Antiwar protests led by students continued to disrupt campus life; political activism reshaped educational curricula; the counterculture transformed student lifestyles and interests. Social preoccupations outside the university restructured life within the university. Demands for educational relevance, diversity, and democracy filtered down from the colleges to local schools. Drugs moved from campus dorm-rooms to high-school bathrooms. As James Perkins, former Cornell president explained, "The university is the canary in the coal mine. It's the most sensitive barometer of social change." The seventies were the decade when the sixties permanently altered the nature of American education.
Kent State and After.
In...
[The entire page is 1956 words long]
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
