Monthly Archives: March 2024

Bibliography: Civil Rights (Part 899 of 996)

Murphy, Lila C.; Vetter, Louise B. (1990). Federal Legislation To Eliminate Sex Discrimination in Vocational Education: "The Impossible Acts," 1976 and 1984. This project is a detailed history of two pieces of legislation that sought to eliminate sex discrimination in vocational education: the Vocational Education Amendments of 1976 and the Carl D. Perkins Act of 1984. The report explains why they happened and the results as seen by those most involved. It looks at the key individuals and groups that made a difference; what really happened during the legislative process; and how agencies, programs, and students were affected by the changes mandated under the new laws. The study collected qualitative information from those who created federal legislation, subsequent reports and studies on that legislation, and the National Assessment of Vocational Education. The study covers the 10-year period from 1977 to 1987. Information for the study was obtained by conducting personal interviews, making contacts, and reviewing legislation and national survey data. The following five chapters are included in this report: (1) the legislation–hearings…

Furst, Lyndon G. (1990). Due Process in Student Discipline in Non-Public Schools. A study to determine the status of disciplinary procedures in nonpublic high schools in Nebraska and Kansas is described in this report. A two-part questionnaire to assess schools' written policies and actual practices was administered to 68 out of 72 private schools, a 94 percent response rate. Findings indicate that the majority of nonpublic schools in the two states under study provide students with procedural due process in disciplinary situations involving suspension and expulsion, although compliance is not legally required. A majority of the schools had written student discipline policies, provided student access to evidence, and empowered the principal as decision maker. Appendices include the questionnaire, correspondence, and survey results. (13 references) (LMI)…

Hamadache, Ali (1990). Literacy, Human Rights and Peace. Literacy Lessons. International Literacy Year, 1990, is intended to alert readers to the persistence of illiteracy. The challenge of illiteracy can only be met by concerted action on the part of all those concerned, acting together to conquer ignorance, eliminate poverty, promote peace, and assert the solidarity and interdependence of nations and peoples. As early as 1946, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization began promotion of basic education. From 1960 to 1985, the rate of illiteracy among adults was reduced from 39.3 percent to 27.7 percent worldwide. This reduction was primarily due to the expanded enrollment of children in school rather than to any progress in the struggle against adult illiteracy. The absolute number of illiterate adults is steadily increasing, with the figures having risen from 740 million in 1970 to 889 million in 1985. Progress in schooling is offset by the effects of population growth. The average illiteracy rate conceals disparities between…

Krause, Fred J. (1986). President's Committee on Mental Retardation: A Historical Review 1966-1985. Recommendations of the President's Committee on Mental Retardation to encourage collaboration among government, voluntary, individual, community, and private sector efforts are reported in this publication which presents a historical review of the Committee from 1966 through 1986. The background and establishment of the Committee are discussed in the first section, covering appointment of a panel (1961), a national advertising and awareness campaign (1963), a White House Conference (1963), and major legislation for mental retardation planning, program development, and construction (1963). The Committee's initial work (1966-1972) is described in the second section, including information on early leaders, major publications, concern for native Americans, goal setting, and the legal rights movement. The work of the Committee from 1973-1980 is discussed in the third section, covering such areas as White House activities, emphasis on community programs, and prevention of mental… [PDF]

Murphy, Paul L. (1986). The Constitution in the Twentieth Century: Implications for Citizenship Education. A major constitutional issue in the twentieth century is the extent to which the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted to fit changing times and circumstances. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, the Supreme Court dispensed a "mechanical jurisprudence" based on an "objective" interpretation of the Constitution and the "original intent" of its authors. In the twentieth century, the Court has tended to respond to changing social conditions with flexible and expansive interpretations of basic constitutional principles. The "popular will" became a factor in decisions which has troubled "legal purists" who believe that the courts should be above public opinion as judges apply legal logic and precedents to reach their conclusions. The "purists" believe the task is not to keep the Constitution in tune with the times, but rather to keep the times in tune with the Constitution. In contrast, "pragmatic…

(1984). Equality Now! Report of the Special Committee on Visible Minorities in Canadian Society. This report presents 80 recommendations for governmental, institutional, and organizational cooperation to amend inequities of race and ethnicity in Canada. According to a general introduction, most non-white minorities are not participating fully in Canadian society: their opportunities are being denied because they are frequently believed to be from a different culture that will not "fit" the structures of public and private institutions in Canada. The government is called upon to consciously remove all obstacles preventing the full participation of all citizens in employment, education, and politics. The introduction describes how institutions, often unintentionally, can restrict the life chances of non-white individuals through a variety of seemingly neutral rules, regulations, and procedures. The introduction also gives a brief account of the creation by the House of Commons of the Special Committee on Visible Minorities, and tells how witnesses appearing before the…

(1984). Response of the Government of Canada to "Equality Now!"=Response du gouvernement du Canada a l'Egalite, ca presse!. In 1984, Canada's Special Parliamentary Committee on Visible Minorities in Canadian Society issued a set of recommendations which challenged government at all levels, institutions, organizations, and individuals to commit themselves to the full development of a dynamic and socially harmonious multicultural and multiracial society. This document lists 80 recommendations presented in the Committee Report and briefly describes the action the government has taken, or promises to take, in response to each recommendation. The recommendations are presented under six headings: social integration; employment; public policy; justice; media; and education. (KH)…

Parsons, Patrick R. (1986). Toward a Theory of Cable Rights. Noting that the fundamental philosophical barrier to fashioning an appropriate model of cable television rights is the equitable balancing of individual and collective First Amendment claims against the medium, this paper offers an approach for such a balancing that is based on the underlying dimension of the inherent social utility in expression. Various models of cable rights (Print, Broadcast, Public Forum, Common Carrier, and Public Utility) are tested against the resultant standard and each is found defective on either practical or philosophical grounds. It is suggested that under current constitutional interpretation only the Print model of cable rights is logically acceptable and as such nearly every form of federal, state, and local control over cable violates the First Amendment rights of the cable operator. However, since this conclusion does not satisfy the proposed aim of constitutional balancing, there should be a reinterpretation of the pivotal "Tornillo v. Miami…

Clewell, Beatriz C.; Ficklen, Myra S. (1986). Improving Minority Retention in Higher Education: A Search for Effective Institutional Practices. Programs and policies at four-year majority white institutions with good minority retention rates are examined, and factors contributing to their success that are adaptable to other sites are identified. Identification of the institutions used in the study was based on an objective statistical procedure and expert nomination. The four institutions chosen were Boston College, California State University at Fresno, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and Purdue University Minority Engineering Program. An introduction to the report provides a statement of the problem; review of the literature (student characteristics and behavior and environmental factors); and a summary of the study including descriptions of the two methods used to select the institutions and synthesis of results from methods one and two). Case studies focus on the following: Boston College (the institution, African American/Hispanic/Asian/Native American student programs, and conclusions); California State… [PDF]

Noah, Harold J. (1983). Educational Policy for Linguistic and Cultural Minorities: The State and the Individual. The problem of educational policy for language minorities, particularly those minorities who might be considered oppressed, include the right to education in the minority language. Rights properly considered also carry with them obligations; in this case, minority language speakers would have obligations toward the language of the majority. Two considerations in the area of minority and majority claims and counterclaims relate to economics and to the concept of \mediating structures.\ Economic considerations relate to the costs and benefits of different policies, as evaluated by the different language groups. These evaluations affect the extent to which formally enunciated rights and obligations are honored in practice. With regard to policy, its aim should be to minimize the perceived costs of a pluralistic approach and to maximize the perceived benefits to all concerned. The second set of considerations on \mediating structures\ is shown to be relevant for policies governing the… [PDF]

Kidwell, Clara Sue (1989). American Indians in Graduate Education. CGS Communicator, v22 n2 p5,8 Feb. The number of American Indians enrolled in institutions of higher education is very small. Enrollment figures for fall 1984 show Indians made up .68% of the total enrollment in institutions of higher education in the country, but only 15% of them were in universities. Their largest representation was in two-year institutions, where 54% of Indian students were enrolled. This is probably due to the existence of 25 Indian run community colleges. Preliminary data from the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) 1986 enrollment survey show Indians comprise .4% of graduate students in CGS institutions. The historical experience of American Indians with education provides a background for such underrepresentation in higher education, especially graduate education. Indian people in the past have had education used as a means of forcible acculturation to American society. Though many Indian parents value education for their children, expectations of the results are often vague because they… [PDF]

Lines, Patricia M. (1984). Who Will Get Merit Pay? Who Goes up the Career Ladder? A Legal Perspective. This discussion on merit pay and career ladders focuses on legal questions about evaluation fairness. If the concern of teachers for fairness is heeded, policymakers must include in enabling legislation for teacher incentive programs procedures designed to minimize the impact of bias for or against particular individuals or particular teaching methods. Existing constitutional and legal requirements for due process, or for hearings, are not adequate, and new law is needed. Teacher incentives may be a good idea, but if they are based on the wrong criteria or poor evaluations, they will backfire. If a commitment to developing and paying for a good system is lacking, these programs should be tabled. Everything depends upon the development of criteria that truly measure good teaching, and a fair and workable evaluation system. (JD)…

Fadely, Dean; Greene, Ronald W. (1984). Pulpit Responses to Contemporary Issues: The On-Going Rhetoric of Dr. Martin Luther King. Many theoreticians have indicated that a major task of the nonpresumptive rhetor is to gain presumption, thereby shifting the burden of proof to the opposition. Rhetorically, Martin Luther King, Jr., sought to effect this shift in the burden of proof through the use of hierarchies of values. At the top of his value system was the love of God. The next level was the love between humans. A set of morals, established from this love, were then utilized as the criteria for defining justice, and justice was the authority for laws. Most of King's rhetoric attempted to take advantage of the fact that a religious hierarchy of values was predominant in the minds of most Americans. Another characteristic of King's rhetoric was the initiation of a proposition with a fact or truth, mediated with a transitional metaphor, and argued from a value stance. Not only did the rhetoric of Martin Luther King, Jr, address a myriad of propositions of fact, value, and policy, but it was also directed toward…

Finkelstein, Harry (1981). The Mentally Retarded and the Educational System in Denmark. The history of educational services for mentally retarded persons in Denmark is traced, along with the evolution of attitudes toward the population from a protectionist philosophy which promoted segregation to current thinking about normalization. The role of the national parents' association in influencing service review and reform is stressed. The relationship between the objective of normalization and the working methods of integration and segregation is considered. Changes in Danish laws to guarantee equal rights to mentally retarded persons are reviewed, as are conditions surrounding and influencing the changes. The effects of the normalization principle on housing and work of mentally retarded persons, including adults, are discussed. (CL)…

Howard, Melissa (1981). My Neighbor Is a Battered Woman. This book is intended as a general introduction to the problems of battered women. The format for part 1 consists of the presentation of facts about wife beating, i.e., who are victims, characteristics of batterers, the environment in which family violence exists, and services for battered women. These facts are illustrated by the presentation, on alternating pages, of a fictional wife battering situation. Part 2 of the booklet provides advice for the victim before, during, and after the attack and presents information on the role of the police, going to court, criminal and civil charges, and restraining orders. The decision about whether a battered woman should stay with the man or end the relationship is also discussed. Part 3 of the booklet includes a suggested reading list and a resource list of shelters and other family violence programs and resources in New Mexico. Although the information about legal matters and resources for battered women is geographically specific to New…

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Bibliography: Civil Rights (Part 900 of 996)

Deloria, Vine (1974). Integrity Before Education. Integrated Education, 12, 3, 22-28, May-Jun 74. Disputes the belief that there is some way to motivate people who are culturally different to become like whites: if Indian legal rights are protected only to the extent that the Indians conform to white society, then one is not talking about legal rights at all. (Author/JM)…

Blumenthal, Karen; Mendell, Judy (1977). The Parents' Handbook: A Guide for Parents of Children in Foster Care. This guide for parents whose children have been placed in foster care explains the foster care process and offers advice on the parent's role, rights, and responsibilities. Section headings are: What Is Foster Care?; How Does My Child Come into Foster Care?; How Should I Work With My Agency Caseworker?; How Do I Plan for My Child's Future?; What Are My Parental Rights and Responsibilities?; What Can I Do if I Have a Complaint?; How Can I Get a Lawyer?; and What Court Actions Can Take Place Concerning Me and My Child? A \Request for discharge of child from foster care\ form and legal service telephone numbers for New York City are included. (SB)…

Gluckman, Ivan B. (1977). Students and the Law. This publication consists of 29 articles that were published between April 1974 and June 1977 in the \Students and the Law\ column of the National Association of Secondary School Principals' magazine, the \Student Advocate.\ In editing the articles, an attempt has been made to eliminate or update any suggestions or conclusions that may have been inaccurate because of changes in the law. Titles of the articles include: \Student Rights and Responsibilities,\\Due Process,\\Rights to Privacy,\\Suspension and Due Process,\\Students' Constitutional Rights,\\Expulsion and Suspension,\\Do Students Have Rights?\\Students in Double Jeopardy,\\Student Records,\\Smoking in the Public Schools,\\Student Responsibilities,\\Freedom of Speech,\\Hair and Dress Codes,\\Student Marriage and Pregnancy,\\Patriotic Observances,\\Compulsory School Attendance,\\Sex Ed Controversy,\\Title IX–Ending Sex Discrimination,\\Brown Bagging with Federal Funds,\\Use of School Funds,\\Student Council…

Clark, James F. (1977). Legal Liability of Individual School Board Members. The speaker examines the issue of the legal liability of individual school board members as it has arisen as a result of such court cases as Wood v. Strickland and Goss v. Lopez. The discussion includes questions of infringement on students' and teachers' rights and cases of school officials acting as individuals rather than in an official capacity. (IRT)… [PDF]

Jones, nathaniel (1975). Implications of the Weinstein Decision. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 143-146, May-Jun 75. This testimony, by the General Counsel for the National Association Advancement Colored People before the May 1974 public hearings of the New York City Commission on Human Rights, discusses the case entitled "Jeffrey Hart et al Vs The Community School Board of Brooklyn, District 21", which has come to be known as both the Weinstein case and the Coney Island case. (Author/JM)…

Van Hoose, William H. (1975). Children's Rights and the School Counselor. Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 9, 4, 279-286, May 75. The author presents the case for the rights of children. He also demonstrates how schools can guarantee more democratic treatment for children by recognizing children's rights and gives his views on the counselor's role as child advocate. (Author/HMV)…

Garber, Lee O.; Reutter, E. Edmund, Jr. (1969). Education, Society, and Government. Yearbook Sch Law 1969, 1-13, 69. Chapter 1…

(1981). Minorities and Mathematics. A Ford Foundation Staff Paper No. 415. This report opens with a bleak picture of the kind of mathematics now taught within American classrooms. The situation for minority students is viewed as particularly grim. The Ford Foundation has launched a major national effort to improve minority students' performance in mathematics and to help mathematics teachers improve the quality of their instruction. The Foundation expects that the lessons learned and the techniques developed will help advance learning in science and mathematics for all students. Nine grants made recently as part of the Foundation's initiative into this area are profiled in the remainder of the document. (MP)…

Adkison, Judith A. (1982). Advocates and Administrators: Perspectives on the Title IX Coordinator's Role. The role perceptions and activities of seven individuals responsible for coordination of the efforts of their respective districts to comply with the requirements of Title IX of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act are described in this research report. All seven districts involved in the study complied at least with the letter of the law. Six went beyond compliance on paper to compliance in fact, and four beyond formal compliance to positive action embodying the spirit of equality. Researchers found that conditions identified by previous studies as necessary to successful fulfillment of the role of Title IX coordinator were not in fact present in all cases where coordinators proved effective. In each instance it was the particular interrelationship of district and coordinator characteristics, rather than the specific characteristics themselves, that appeared vital to coordinator effectiveness. (Author/PGD)…

Steiner, Linda C. (1981). The Importance of Early Suffrage Papers in Constructing a Community. An analysis of five mid-nineteenth century women's suffrage periodicals (\The Lily,\\The Genius of Liberty,\\The Una,\\The Revolution,\ and \The Woman's Journal\) suggests that the papers succeeded in creating, sustaining, and inspiring the suffrage community as it developed and matured, and in dramatizing and debating alternative versions of a new life style for women. In 1893, the 13,000 members enrolled in the official suffrage organization had few opportunities for face-to-face interaction and communication and saw themselves as poorly (negatively and infrequently) reported in the popular press. Thus it was through and with their own papers that the suffragists came together as a community. (AEA)… [PDF]

Jafar, S. M. (1977). Student Unrest in India. A Select Bibliography. Responding to the problem of student unrest in India, this bibliography offers 1,415 articles from periodicals and books examining the nature, causes, and remedies of student unrest. A brief survey of the historical background of student involvement in Indian society traces the student movement from its earlier purpose to help the Indian National Movement in preindependence days to its degeneration into a movement merely concerned with local issues in the post-independence period. A review of the literature reveals several causes of unrest such as too much leisure time, lack of facilities for representation of complaints, lack of proper academic atmosphere, political interference, growth of economic difficulties, and a general loss of idealism. The available data on the problem of student unrest suggests two general trends of thinking: (1) students as a class are nonconformists; and (2) the economic, political, social, cultural and psychological problems created by educational…

(1978). The President's Commission on Mental Health. Report to the President. Volume 1. The mental health needs and services available in the United States were investigated by the President's Commission on Mental Health. Results indicated that: (1) mental health services are primarily located in urban areas; (2) the needs of racial and cultural minorities, children, adolescents, and older adults are not being met; (3) national policies and delivery systems need to be developed to provide more comprehensive services; and (4) efforts must be conducted to increase public understanding and community support for mental health services. (HLM)… [PDF]

Sorenson, Gail Paulus (1980). Intellectual Freedom in the Public Schools: An Assessment of "Tinker" and Its Progeny, 1969-1979. In 1969, in "Tinker v. Des Moines," the Supreme Court declared that both students and teachers were entitled to exercise their constitutional rights while in school. The purpose of this dissertation was to discover whether the propositions and the philosophy of "Tinker" have been used by state and federal courts to support intellectual freedom in the schools. The first two chapters survey various interpretations of the purpose and importance of free speech and examine the importance of intellectual freedom for education in a democratic society. Against this background, cases involving issues of intellectual freedom for teachers and students in public schools are then analyzed. Consideration is given to how the courts have balanced the preferred right of free speech with the unique needs and purposes of public schools. It is concluded that the major importance of the Tinker case has been its recognition and reassertion of a philosophy that respects children's… [PDF]

(1980). Promoting Sex Equity in the Classroom. Module 1, An Introduction. Revised, 1980. Serving as an introduction, this module is the first in a series of twelve modules designed to provide guidelines for evaluating recource materials and compiling creative strategies to promote sex equity in vocational technical education classrooms and in out-of-school learning experiences. This introductory module explains what a teacher can do to promote sex equity, how the sex equity guidelines can be used, how strategies designed to promote sex equity can enhance instruction, and how the sex equity materials are intended to be used. (LRA)…

Bronson, Ron, Comp. (1979). The Gifted: A Perishable Resource. The booklet is designed to help parents understand how they can help in the development of their gifted children. Included are such topics as the characteristics of giftedness; the four \faces\ of gifted adolescents (high achieving studious, social leader, creative intellectual, and rebel); the role of parents; a checklist for assessing the school's needs; and individualized educational plan facts for parents. Due process procedures – including the rights to notice, program placement conferences, a due process hearing, and appeal – are discussed. A section for teachers of gifted children provides chapters with the following titles: \Establishing Goals for You and Your Students\, \All Gifted Children Don't Learn Alike\, \Meaningful/Less Meaningful Learning for the Gifted\, and \A Point to Ponder\ (which examines the necessity of special program for the gifted). A list of suggested reading and bibliographies are provided. (PHR)…

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