Sentences with phrase «changing racial compositions»

The site's time - series maps show the changing racial compositions of New York City from 1910 to 2000 and of Los Angeles County from 1940 to 2000.
I'm not sure how to change the racial composition of an audience unless I'm at a predominately black institution.

Not exact matches

That changed its ethnic and racial composition: While the number of blacks stayed roughly the same, there are fewer whites and more Hispanics.
By this measure, schools are closer to complete integration than ever before, and thus racial composition would have to change less now than when the report was released.
In a 2014 study, Stephen Billings and his colleagues used administrative data and variation in school assignments for students who lived on opposite sides of new catchment area boundaries in Charlotte - Mecklenburg, North Carolina, following the district's release from court supervision to identify the effects of changes in racial composition and school resources.
While informative, they do not conclusively show the effects of policies that alter the overall racial composition of a school through changes in attendance patterns, the policies that are of greatest concern to both the courts and to state and district policymakers.
The study, Resegregation in American Schools, analyzes the latest data from the National Center of Education Statistics» Common Core of Education Statistics, and examines changes in racial composition in American schools, national patterns of segregation, the relationship between segregation by race and schools experiencing concentrated poverty, the difference in segregation in different regions and types of school districts, and the extent and segregation of multiracial schools.
Nor does he bemoan - again, at least not directly - the changing racial and ethnic composition of America.
The change in the racial composition of the 750 + student school was less than one percent.
2002); Brief for Armor et al. as Amici Curiae, with Rosen, Perhaps Not All Affirmative Action is Created Equal, N. Y. Times, June 11, 2006 (quoting David Armor as commenting»» [w] e did find the [racial] achievement gap changing significantly»» and acknowledging that he» «did find a modest association for math but not reading in terms of racial composition and achievement, but there's a big state variation»» (emphasis added)-RRB-.
, Pew Hispanic Center, June 6, 2007), and that black and Hispanic students are increasingly isolated from white students in the public schools (Fry, The Changing Racial and Ethnic Composition of U.S. Public Schools, Pew Hispanic Center, Aug. 30, 2007).
Another school lost six black students and saw a change in racial composition from 30.1 percent black to 29.2 percent black.
The reason has to do with dramatic changes in the racial / ethnic composition of the U.S. student population during the past few decades.
The Changing Racial and Ethnic Composition of U.S. Public Schools.
This was a period of significant social change, as the racial composition of big city schools...
It is illegal to consider the racial, ethnic, religious or national origin composition of a neighborhood or geographic area surrounding a housing accommodation or whether or not such composition is undergoing change, or is expected to undergo change, in appraising a housing accommodation or in determining whether or not, or under what terms and condition, to provide financial assistance.
Blockbusting, or panic peddling, is a practice in which some real estate brokers, exploiting fears of change in the racial composition of the neighborhood and potential decline in property values, encourage owners to put their homes on the market.
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