American Decades
People in the News
In 1975 Jerald Bachman, of the University of Michigan, revealed results of a four-year study that suggested that high-school dropouts do not suffer financially or emotionally by quitting school before graduating.
Rutgers University sociologist Peter Berger said in a 1972 keynote address to the American Association of State Colleges and Universities that "counter culture values" among upper-middle-class students had turned some of the most prestigious universities into "vast identity workshops" where "intellectual rot" replaced a valid curriculum.
In 1972, after a Brooklyn teacher was assaulted in front of his class by the older brother of a pupil he had corrected, New York state representative John Bingham urged that the New York Board of Education provide every teacher with a silent electronic alarm device for protection.
In 1972 Harvard president Derek Bok defended special-admissions...
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1970's Education
- Overview
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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
