25 results
Search Results
2. A Critical Look at Choice Options as Solutions to Milwaukee's Schooling Inequities.
- Author
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CHAPMAN, THANDEKA K. and ANTROP-GONZÁLEZ, RENÉ
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *CRITICAL race theory , *SCHOOL integration , *SEGREGATION in education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *CURRICULUM , *SCHOOL administration , *URBAN schools - Abstract
Background/Context: The lack of court-ordered support for race-based policies that maintain and create integrated schools has forced communities of color to seek other avenues to obtain equitable education, such as school choice. Individual states and the federal government, as seen in grant provisions through the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act, are encouraging the expansion of choice at the very time that options for increasing student diversity, particularly racial diversity, are being narrowed by the courts. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: The article uses critical race theory to examine the outcomes of specific school reforms, based on market theory models of school choice, that were designed to alleviate schooling inequities in urban districts. Setting: The context of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, serves as a microcosm of urban districts that have embraced school choice to create more equitable schooling options. Milwaukee, like most metropolitan areas, has a history of court-ordered desegregation that served as a temporary solution to racially segregated schools. Given the federal and district court turn from supporting race-based desegregation policies in schools, Milwaukee and other metropolitan districts are looking for new models to serve students of color in their districts and cities. Research Design: This article is a conceptual paper that incorporates data from a variety of sources to support the authors' conclusions. Data Collection and Analysis: Data for this project were taken from the U.S. Census Bureau, documents from newly created small high schools, such as Web sites and curriculum designs; current newspaper articles discussing issues of small high schools; archival newspaper articles documenting the creation of the 1990 choice and charter programs; professional experiences as a member of the Bill and Melinda Gates institutional selection and small-school team support system; and an empirical study that documents teachers' attempts to provide curriculum and instruction in newly created small schools. Conclusions/Recommendations: In combination, these data sources tell the story of market theory reforms that will continue to struggle to meet reformists' goals to serve all Milwaukee populations so long as policy makers and the courts continue to deny the irrefutable power that race and class exercise in parental choice in U.S. urban schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Turning feral spaces into trendy places: a coffee house in every park?
- Author
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Perkins, Harold A.
- Subjects
- *
PARKS , *URBAN parks , *PUBLIC spaces , *CITIES & towns , *ECONOMIC development , *COMMERCIAL geography , *ECONOMIC geography , *ECONOMIC activity , *ECONOMICS , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Dynamic modes of political economic regulation impact provision for the parks system in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Green spaces during Milwaukee's first liberal era consisted mostly of private properties accessible only to the city's elite and/or to those willing to pay a fee to drink in its boisterous bier garlens. Collective open space investment at the turn of the 19th century signaled the beginning of a second, decades-long era of Keynesian state provision for parks. A steady decline in that investment for Milwaukee's parks since the 1980s has provided the context for a set of new, yet seemingly liberalized governance experiments to emerge from the now defunct managerialist system. In this paper I employ regulation and regime theories in conjunction with thirty-six in-depth inter- views to argue that these new parks experiments hail the beginning of a third era in parks provision. The new era is marked by an apparently neoliberal shift in regulation for open space on the basis of state actions to market public parks provision to a multiplicity of private actors. It is different from the first liberal era because the state withdraws its fiscal commitment to parks but still employs them to continue its active role in environmental and-by extension-social regulation. A multiplicity of local parks governances are promoted in the name of environmental citizenship but are problematic because they form new and localized geographies of social reproductive discipline in the benevolent rhetoric of responsibility, choice, and empowerment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Transmission of Family Values, Work, and Welfare Among Poor Urban Black Women.
- Author
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Iversen, Roberta Rehner and Farber, Naomi B.
- Subjects
- *
BLACK women , *WOMEN employees , *FAMILY-work relationship - Abstract
The article analyzes the transmission of family values, work and welfare among poor urban Black women in the U.S. In this paper, the authors present findings about the dynamic interaction among family values, family transmission processes, and young people's attitudes and behavior regarding both work and welfare, a dual focus that is seldom seen in research about occupational attainment. The authors examine the values about work and welfare and their transmission in relation to work status and perceptions of future work among a group of 50 poor Black women aged 15 to 23 from inner-city Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The findings of the authors indicate both that and how the intra-familial value transmission processes are important to the economic lives of young adults. These findings provide direct support for the expansion rather than reduction of economic and social welfare policies and related programs that will maximize the abilities of all family members to contribute to social capital development.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Midwest Nursing Research Society News.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,NURSING & society - Abstract
The article announces the 30th Annual Midwest Nursing Research Society conference which will be held on March 31 to April 3, 2006 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The conference is hosted by a number of schools including Marquette University, University of Wisconsin-Madison and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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6. Midwest Nursing Research Society News 30th Annual MNRS Conference.
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,NURSES ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,SEMINARS ,NURSING research ,MEETINGS - Abstract
The article provides information related to the 30th Annual Midwest Nursing Research Society Conference held from March 31 to April 4, 2006 at the Hilton Milwaukee City Center in Wisconsin. The theme of the conference is "Linking Research and Practice: A Roadmap for the Future." The event features a number of special event to mark its thirty years in existence.
- Published
- 2006
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7. REPORT OF THE REPRESENTATIVE TO THE AMERICAN PRISON CONGRESS.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,CORRECTIONS (Criminal justice administration) ,PRISON educators ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The Seventy-ninth Annual Congress of Corrections, sponsored by the American Prison Association, was held at the Hotel Schroeder in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from September 25-30, 1949. The Congress included meetings of the American Prison Association, the National Probation and Parole Association, the National Jail Association, the National Chaplains' Association, the National Conference of Juvenile Agencies, the Correctional Education Association, the Correctional Service Associates, the Medical Correctional Association, the Wardens' Association, the National Prisoners' Aid Association, the Penal Industries Association, and the Association of Administrators of the Interstate Compact for the Supervision of Parolees and Probationers. There were also meetings sponsored by the Committee on Classification and Case Work, the Committee on Professional Standards and Training, the Committee on Women's Institutions, the Committee on Institution Libraries, and the Committee on Crime Prevention. A goodly number of academic sociologists who are members of the American Sociological Society were present.
- Published
- 1950
8. Police Violence and Citizen Crime Reporting in the Black Community.
- Author
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Desmond, Matthew, Papachristos, Andrew V., and Kirk, David S.
- Subjects
POLICE brutality ,CITIZEN crime reporting ,BLACK people ,TELEPHONE emergency reporting systems ,PUBLIC safety ,BLACK men ,CRIME victims ,HISTORY ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,TELEPHONES & society ,CRIME ,MAPS ,POLICE ,RACE ,REPORT writing ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,TRAFFIC accidents ,VIOLENCE ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
High-profile cases of police violence—disproportionately experienced by black men—may present a serious threat to public safety if they lower citizen crime reporting. Using an interrupted time series design, this study analyzes how one of Milwaukee’s most publicized cases of police violence against an unarmed black man, the beating of Frank Jude, affected police-related 911 calls. Controlling for crime, prior call patterns, and several neighborhood characteristics, we find that residents of Milwaukee’s neighborhoods, especially residents of black neighborhoods, were far less likely to report crime after Jude’s beating was broadcast. The effect lasted for over a year and resulted in a total net loss of approximately 22,200 calls for service. Other local and national cases of police violence against unarmed black men also had a significant impact on citizen crime reporting in Milwaukee. Police misconduct can powerfully suppress one of the most basic forms of civic engagement: calling 911 for matters of personal and public safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. Unpolicing the Urban Poor: Consequences of Third-Party Policing for Inner-City Women.
- Author
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Desmond, Matthew and Valdez, Nicol
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,DOMESTIC violence ,URBAN women ,LAW enforcement ,SOCIAL history ,CRIME ,METROPOLITAN areas ,POLICE ,POPULATION geography ,RACE ,STATISTICS ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,INTER-observer reliability ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Recent decades have witnessed a double movement within the field of crime control characterized by the prison boom and intensive policing, on the one hand, and widespread implementation of new approaches that assign policing responsibilities to non-police actors, on the other. The latter development has been accomplished by expansion of third-party policing policies; nuisance property ordinances, which sanction landlords for their tenants’ behavior, are among the most popular. This study, an analysis of every nuisance citation distributed in Milwaukee over a two-year period, is among the first to evaluate empirically the impact of coercive third-party policing on the urban poor. Properties in black neighborhoods disproportionately received citations, and those located in more integrated black neighborhoods had the highest likelihood of being deemed nuisances. Nearly a third of all citations were generated by domestic violence; most property owners abated this “nuisance” by evicting battered women. Landlords also took steps to discourage tenants from calling 911; overrepresented among callers, women were disproportionately affected by these measures. By looking beyond traditional policing, this study reveals previously unforeseen consequences of new crime control strategies for women from inner-city neighborhoods. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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10. Off the Mark?: Efficiency in Targeting the Most Marketable Sites Rather Than Equity in Public Assistance for Brownfield Redevelopment.
- Author
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McCarthy, Linda
- Subjects
BROWNFIELDS ,EQUALITY ,POOR people ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,URBAN planning ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Targeting public redevelopment funding toward the most marketable brownfields is viewed as an economically efficient use of scarce resources because it may guarantee the greatest likelihood of success. But to what extent does this policy result in spatial and social inequities by neglecting contaminated sites in distressed neighborhoods containing minority and low-income populations? This case study of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, identified that tracts with above-average percentages of African Americans and Hispanics, although containing above-average numbers of brownfields per square mile and higher percentages of brownfields compared to percentage of the city's area, had below-average city-assisted redevelopments as a percentage of all brownfields. A policy implication is that despite difficulties promoting brownfield redevelopment in distressed neighborhoods, in addition to economic efficiencies, more emphasis is needed on the social benefits of public assistance for brownfield redevelopment, including potential spillover benefits, such as crime reduction and health improvements for surrounding neighborhoods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Assessing the Effect of Publicly Assisted Brownfield Redevelopment on Surrounding Property Values.
- Author
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De Sousa, Christopher A., Changshan Wu, and Westphal, Lynne M.
- Subjects
REAL property ,VALUATION ,URBAN planning ,BROWNFIELDS ,LAND use - Abstract
This study measures and compares the impact of publicly assisted brownfield redevelopment on nearby residential property values in Milwaukee and Minneapolis. It also examines the influence of land use, neighborhood characteristics, and other redevelopment factors on this impact. The research approach incorporates a hedonic method to quantify nearby property value effects at more than 100 brownfield projects, and stakeholder interviews are used to assess perceived impacts to real estate conditions. The results reveal that the spillover effect in terms of raising surrounding property values is significant in both quantity and geographic scope, as redevelopment led to a net increase of 11.4% in nearby housing prices in Milwaukee and 2.7% in Minneapolis. It also reveals that project size, value, and the amount of public funding have minor impacts on this effect; factors such as proximity to major roads, distance from rail, and higher incomes have greater positive impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. RACIAL PROFILING IN THE NEWSROOM.
- Author
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Pritchard, David and Stonbely, Sarah
- Subjects
MINORITY journalists ,EQUALITY in the workplace ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,DIVERSITY in the workplace ,NEWSPAPERS ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
This article examines patterns of story assignments at a metropolitan daily newspaper. The study's content analysis documents a form of racial profiling in which African American reporters write stories mostly about minority issues, while white reporters write stories mostly about government and business. Interviews with journalists documented the widespread belief that experience as a member of a racial minority helps the newspaper provide better coverage of minority issues. However, journalists of all races spoke off racial diversity only when they weir talking about minority reporters and minority-oriented topics. The hegemony of whiteness was such that none of the journalists appeared to have thought about the role of whiteness in the coverage of the largely white realms of politics and business. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. LOOKING BEYOND THE NUMBERS The Struggles of Black Businesses to Survive: A Qualitative Approach.
- Author
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Bonds, Michael
- Subjects
AFRICAN American businesspeople ,AFRICAN American business enterprises ,BUSINESS ethics ,CONSUMER behavior ,CONSUMER attitudes - Abstract
This study obtained Black business owners' experiences in Milwaukee. Wisconsin, via qualitative methods, The same issues (racism, loan denial, etc.) that quantitative analyses of Black businesses found existed in this study, However, this study's findings departed from previous Black business studies by providing insights into the human side of Black business owners by allowing them to provide insights into their daily challenges (inability to work with other Black businesses and lack of support from African American customers). And it found that Milwaukee's Black business owners were pessimistic about Black business opportunities over time and relative to African American businesses in other cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. DEALING WITH DIVERSITY: Milwaukee's Multiethnic Festivals and Urban Identity, 1840-1940.
- Author
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Greene, Victor
- Subjects
ETHNIC groups ,AMERICANIZATION ,IDENTITY politics ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This article is a history of how Milwaukee urban leaders treated their diverse, ethnic communities by "Americanizing" them. The Milwaukee experience with their immigrants was both similar to and distinctive of other American cities. Basing their reception on the German tradition of fellowship as other midwestern centers, Milwaukeeans were unique throughout in combining a love for promoting the ethnic diversity of dress, music, and dance with teaching foreigners the English language and American democratic principles. Therefore, from especially the 1920s on, Americanizing foreigners in tax-supported, school social centers meant teaching them to be loyal Americans while offering training in and promotion of cultural differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Psychosocial Issues in the Era of New AIDS Treatments from the Perspective of Persons Living with HIV.
- Author
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Bogart, Laura M., Catz, Sheryl L., Kelly, Jeffrey A., Gray-bernhardt, Michelle L., Hartmann, Barbara R., Otto-Salaj, Laura L., Hackl, Kristine L., and Bloom, Frederick R.
- Subjects
AIDS treatment ,HIV ,PSYCHOLOGICAL mindedness - Abstract
In the past, HIV disease meant an almost invariably downward health course. New highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens have improved the health outlook for many persons living with HIV/AIDS but may create new psychological and coping challenges. In this study, open-ended, in-depth interviews were undertaken with an ethnically diverse sample of 44 purposively selected men and women with HIV disease who were on HAART regimens. The interviews were transcribed and qualitatively coded to identify major themes. While patients responding well to the regimens held optimistic views for their future, some who continued to have detectable viral load exhibited depression and feelings of hopelessness. Many patients reported stress associated with the demands of adhering to complex HAART regimens. Other common themes emerging in the interviews involved concerns about employment, romantic and non-romantic relationship formation, sexual behavior and serostatus disclosure, whether to plan families, and experiences of AIDS-related discrimination. There continue to be critical roles for psychological services in the care of persons living with HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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16. Arterioureteral Fistula Report of Two Cases and a Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Brown, Kellie R., Jean-Claude, Jessie M., Rilling, William S., Donnell, Robert F., Seabrook, Gary R., Towne, Jonathan B., and Cambria, Robert A.
- Subjects
FISTULA ,ANGIOGRAPHY ,HEMATURIA ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Presents case reports on management of arterioureteral fistulae in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Details on the risk factors for arterioureteral fistula; Information on the medical history of the patients; Consideration of angiography as the most commonly performed preoperative study; Usefulness of stent graft placement in treating hematuria.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. FRINGE BANKING IN MILWAUKEE.
- Author
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Squires, Gregory D. and O'Connor, Sally
- Subjects
CHECK cashing services ,BANKING industry ,CONSUMERS ,CUSTOMER services - Abstract
Check-cashing businesses constitute a growing industry, particularly in low-income and nonwhite neighborhoods. This case study of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, finds that check-cashing businesses are concentrated in the central city while conventional banks are concentrated in outlying city and suburban communities. These services are growing, despite relatively high fees, primarily because of their convenient hours and locations for central-city residents, exclusionary behavior by conventional institutions, and financial problems of area households. More effective marketing by conventional banks and more aggressive enforcement of community reinvestment requirements by regulatory agencies would blunt development of two-tiered banking and facilitate revitalization of distressed communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Breast Frozen Section Outcome in the Community Hospital Setting.
- Author
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Caya, James G.
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,FROZEN tissue sections ,DIAGNOSIS ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
The author presents a detailed analysis of 932 breast frozen sections performed at a Milwaukee, Wisconsin community hospital over a 54-month period. These 932 frozen sections came from a total of 857 women and 22 men (mean age 55.5 years and range 20.1-97.2 years). Frozen section diagnosis was deferred in 31 cases (3.3%) and dignostic accuracy for presence or absence of malignant neoplasia (excluding deferred diagnoses) was 99.2%, while strict diagnostic accuracy was 97.8%; one false positive case (pathologist judgement error) and six false negative cases (four sample and two pathologist judgment errors) were detected. Seventy-one of 324 positive frozen sections (21.9%) were followed by completion mastectomy. The author provides a detailed histopathologic analysis, discusses pitfalls and limitations in breast frozen section diagnosis, and concludes that frozen section accuracy in an active community hospital setting can compare favorably with that observed at academic medical centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Childhood asthma surveillance using computerized billing...
- Author
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Morris, Robert D., Naumova, Elena N., Goldring, Jay, Hersch, Melanie, Munasinghe, Rajika L., and Anderson, Henry
- Subjects
ASTHMA in children ,JUVENILE diseases - Abstract
Describes a pilot project to develop and implement a low-cost system for ongoing surveillance of childhood asthma in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Design of the project's workshop; Background on the disease; Comparison of data from Children's Hospital of Wisconsin (CHW) to data from other emergency departments; Utilization of care by patient subgroups; Surveillance costs; Adapting the project model to other communities.
- Published
- 1997
20. Crime, Punishment, and Stake in Conformity: Legal and Informal Control of Domestic Violence.
- Author
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Sherman, Lawrence W., Smith, Douglas A., Schmidt, Janell D., and Rogan, Dennis P.
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,CRIME ,PUNISHMENT ,ARREST ,CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Deterrence theories and labeling theories offer inconsistent predictions about the relative impact of legal and informal controls on the subsequent criminal activities of arrested persons. In a controlled experiment using police contacts for domestic violence offenses in Milwaukee, we test whether the effect of arrest on recidivism is conditional on key individual characteristics indicating a "stake in conformity." Contrary to deterrence theories, arrest had no overall crime reduction effect in either the official or victim interview measures of repeat domestic violence. Consistent with labeling theories, arrest increased recidivism among those with a low stake in conformity: the unemployed and the unmarried. Neither race nor a record of prior offenses conditioned the effect of arrest on subsequent domestic violence. The results are consistent with findings from similar experiments in Omaha, Dade County (Miami), and Colorado Springs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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21. Developing a Leading Indicator Series for a Metropolitan Area.
- Author
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Crane, Steven E.
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
In this article, a composite leading indicator of employment conditions is constructed for the Milwaukee, Wisconsin metropolitan area. This index contains both purely local data series and several national data series. After describing the process for constructing this index, we explored its ability to accurately track and anticipate employment conditions, both in a purely after-the-fact review and in a more stringent "real time" simulation. The overall conclusion is that this index does an effective job of signaling changing employment conditions. This effectiveness, combined with the simplicity and flexibility of the index construction process, indicates that such an index can be useful to economic developers and others interested in tracking local employment conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Professo Rene´ Leriche.
- Author
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Samuels, Saul S.
- Subjects
LIFE ,COLLEGE teachers ,PATHOLOGY ,ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
Focuses on the life and works of professor René Leriche in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Contributions of professor Leriche in the study of pathology; Career history; Level of achievements.
- Published
- 1956
23. NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT AND COLLEGE PLANS.
- Author
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Sewell, William H. and Armer, J. Michael
- Subjects
SOCIAL status ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,STUDENT aspirations ,HIGH school students - Abstract
The popular thesis that neighborhood socioeconomic status exerts considerable influence on educational aspirations of youth is examined, using data on Milwaukee metropolitan area public high school seniors. Large differences are found in the college plans of students from neighborhoods classified by occupational composition. When sex, family socioeconomic status, and intelligence are simultaneously controlled, these differences tend to be eliminated or greatly reduced, except for a few subpopulations--most notably girls of all intelligence levels from high socioeconomic status families. Correlation analysis indicates that neighborhood context adds little to the explained variance in college plans beyond that accounted for by sex, family socioeconomic status, and intelligence. Consequently, the evidence from this study suggests that past claims for the importance of neighborhood context in the development of educational aspirations may have been overstated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. INCIDENTAL FINDINGS ON URBAN INVASION.
- Author
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BRUSSAT, WILLIAM K.
- Subjects
INTERNAL migration ,INTERNAL migrants ,AFRICAN Americans ,DEMOGRAPHY ,WORLD War II ,CITIES & towns ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
The article offers information on observations made in a neighborhood survey in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with regard to a variant of the traditional process of intra-urban invasion. The population was relatively homogeneous, predominantly Irish-Catholic. It is reported that there has been an influx of African Americans into the area since the World War II. The influx seems not to be following the traditional pattern. It rather appeared to be leap-frogging over white areas to establish minor Black districts in deteriorating external areas. The survey found that the invaders did not think about the influx in temporary terms.
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Richard Conway.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,COLLEGE teachers - Abstract
A biography of Richard Conway, a professor of Cornell University is presented. He was born on December 12, 1931 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He is a recipient of varsity letter and an endowed chairman from Cornell. He was one of the founders of Cornell's Department of Computer Science and become the first Emerson Electric Professor of Manufacturing Management. He was known for his important research contributions in three areas of computer operations and programming.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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