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Item Details
Title:
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TALENT KNOWS NO COLOR
THE HISTORY OF AN ARTS MAGNET HIGH SCHOOL |
By: |
Elaine Clift Gore, O. L. Davis |
Format: |
Hardback |
List price:
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£84.78 |
We currently do not stock this item, please contact the publisher directly for
further information.
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ISBN 10: |
1593117620 |
ISBN 13: |
9781593117627 |
Publisher: |
INFORMATION AGE PUBLISHING |
Pub. date: |
26 June, 2007 |
Series: |
Research in Curriculum and Instruction |
Description: |
High School of Performing and Visual Arts was the first United States public school for the arts specifically used for racial desegregation purposes. Presenting the history of HSPVA, this book chronicles multi-perspective participant experiences within the context of changing district education policies and demographics. |
Synopsis: |
In the summer of 1970, the members of the New Orleans Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals understood clearly the realities of race in the South. Houston, Texas, like other Southern cities, had made haste toward racial school desegregation as slowly as the White Southern Federal courts would allow. When the High School of Performing and Visual Arts opened its doors in Houston a year later, a new superintendent and liberal-dominated Board of Education wished to demonstrate the positive potential of a voluntarily desegregated student body. HSPVA was the first United States public school for the arts specifically used for racial desegregation purposes, the prototype for the first public urban magnet program of desegregation used to replace a standing court order, and a continuing prototype for other public magnet schools for the arts across the United States. Talent Knows No Color is a 35-year history of HSPVA, exemplary in both arts and academics, which chronicles multi-perspective participant experiences within the context of ever-changing district education policies and demographics.Ten years of school system and HSPVA archival research, examination of local newspapers, and oral history interviews allow a rich narrative unusual among the already limited number of scholarly histories of individual public schools. It is the description and analysis of everyday occurrences that assist the reader in understanding what Series Editor O. L. Davis, Jr. refers to as "the continuing, likely never ending, practical development of one particular high school and its curriculum." |
Illustrations: |
black & white illustrations |
Publication: |
US |
Imprint: |
Information Age Publishing |
Returns: |
Non-returnable |
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