It's unlikely that they are. Reliable national data on the racial/ethnic makeup of schools isn't available before 1968. And, before Brown v. Board of Education the majority of African American students in the south attended schools that were more than 99% African American.
However, a recent study by UCLA showed that U.S. school segregation hasn't been as high as it is now SINCE 1968. And, by some measures, it is more segregated now than it was then. For example, more Latino students now attend schools that are more with more than 50% minority students.
http://www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/deseg/reversals_reseg_need.pdf
Racial Segregated schools where where people separated black people from white and kept them in different school.
segregated white people had their own schools and black people had their own schools
The significance of the last segregated school in the United States was that it marked the end of legally enforced racial segregation in public schools. This school's closure symbolized a milestone in the civil rights movement and the ongoing struggle for equality and integration in American society.
The freedom riders rode buses south to segregated public transportation and education. Today schools and transportation are no longer segregated.
It helped usher the black movement in. It was the beginning of blacks gaining rights, such as being able to go to the same schools as white students and not being segregated from restaurants and stores.
No. Scince the civil right movement, it has been illegal to segregate in schools because of race or religion.
Public schools became segregated in the United States as well as other public places due to the reconstruction amendments collapsing along with the Reconstruction era.
Racial Segregated schools where where people separated black people from white and kept them in different school.
not sure
segregated white people had their own schools and black people had their own schools
No, though some high schools can be Boys or Girls only.
Segregated schools can be separated by religion, gender. Like if you have catholic schools. Only catholics go. Or separated by gender like an all boys/girls school.
No. A major part of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s was school integration, and some children faced protests and the possibility of violence when they attended formerly all-white schools. Educational conditions had been poor in many underfunded segregated black schools.
Highly segregated with poor schools
They were mostly segregated.
During the nineteen sixties, when the equal rights movement was making waves, black students began to branch out of their segregated schools to attend integrated schools. The University of Columbia and Berkeley College were among the top schools for black college students.
The significance of the last segregated school in the United States was that it marked the end of legally enforced racial segregation in public schools. This school's closure symbolized a milestone in the civil rights movement and the ongoing struggle for equality and integration in American society.