It didn't stop it. The Supreme Court ruling in 1954 of Brown v School board stopped it. They ruled that separate was not equal and all children were to receive the same education. Some southern schools tried to introduce the idea of vouchers to stop the intergration of schools ( this is where the idea of vouchers came from) because they knew that African American parents wouldn't be able to get the voucher thus making some schools private using public tax dollars. This has since been changed into a " school choice " movement, but essentially the idea was/is to stop the intergration of public schools.
After the law was passed for there to be no segregation in schools is required and desegregation was happening almost everywhere in the U.S.
The Supreme court impacted the desegregation of public by giving them free rights and get them educated!
The last state to desegregate its schools was Alabama, which did not fully comply with desegregation laws until the late 1990s.
desegregation
Some similar cases to Brown v. Board of Education that have had a significant impact on school desegregation in the United States include Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, which addressed busing as a means of achieving integration, and Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, which dealt with segregation in northern schools. These cases helped further the cause of desegregation in schools across the country.
It was called desegregation, which means that they had stopped separating people into groups based on race.
What is the elimination or practice or providing separate schools and other facilities
By closing schools or ending their funding, by paying for white students to attend private schools, and by requiring tests for black students
One significant step toward the desegregation of public schools was the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional. This decision paved the way for the desegregation of schools across the United States.
public schools
After the law was passed for there to be no segregation in schools is required and desegregation was happening almost everywhere in the U.S.
With threats and marches.
The Supreme court impacted the desegregation of public by giving them free rights and get them educated!
law schools
One example of white resistance to desegregation was the closing of public schools and using the funds to provide private school vouchers to white parents. Another example was passing laws that forbade any integrated schools from receiving state funds and allowed the governor to close those schools. Another example was the formation of a pupil placement board which determined which school a student would attend. The majority of the placement decisions were based on race.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 caused desegregation.For many years, blacks protested until desegregation was made.:D Hope you like it.
Desegregation