i dont know so leave me the heck alone
she did in 1951
"Brown V The Board of education" was the landmark case that stated that schools should be segregated "separate but equal" .
The case of Brown v Board of Education in Topeka Kansas resolved the issue of spereate but equal schools by overturning Plessy v Ferguson ruling, and allowing blacks and whites to go to the same schools.
apex: do black schools and white schools have equal protection of the law?.. :)
all citizens have the right to public education and should have equal access to it
The Supreme Court decision that found separate but equal schools to be unconstitutional and fundamentally unequal was Brown v. Board of Education (1954). This landmark ruling declared that racial segregation in public schools violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. It overturned the "separate but equal" doctrine established in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
In Brown v. Board of Education, (1954), the US Supreme Court concluded that "separate but equal was inherently unequal," and declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional.The Court ordered schools integrated in Brown v. Board of Education II, (1955).
the right of all people to become educated the policy of busing students to schools far from home the right of the courts to decide educational issues the "separate (schools) but equal (schools)" principle
The case of Brown v Board of Education in Topeka Kansas resolved the issue of spereate but equal schools by overturning Plessy v Ferguson ruling, and allowing blacks and whites to go to the same schools.
Decision in Brown v. Board of Education.
Brown VS the Board of Education helped to end the laws of segregation in schools which were called equal but separate. They were hardly equal since the books and other classroom supplies were not as good as the 'white' school's classrooms had.
Following the Brown v. Board of Education case, schools had to allow black and white pupils to have an education together. They could no longer be separated into different schools. Black and white children had to be given the same, equal opportunities.