History of Multicultural Education

  • First African American Student

    First African American Student
    Ruby Bridges was the first African American Student in an elementary school, but she became one in a classroom, because all the white students parents took their kids from this school.
  • Coral Way Elementary School

    Coral Way Elementary School
    After the Cuban revolution, a large number of refugee children entered the elementary school. He became the first bilingual school and it became a multicultural school.
  • Hart-Cellar Act

    Hart-Cellar Act
    Linden Johnson signed the immigration law of 1965 on October 3rd, which is the so-called Hart-Cellar Law. This has made it possible for immigrant families to emerge quickly and to make the school model more diversified.
  • African American educator

    African American educator
    Shirley Anita Sanhir Chisholm is an African American educator and she is the first African-American woman to serve in the United States Congress.
  • Case of Lau v. Nichols

    Case of Lau v. Nichols
    There is no language service in the San Francisco area, which makes many foreign students unable to integrate into the local education system. This violates the civil rights law
  • National Association of Bilingual Education

    National Association of Bilingual Education
    The National Bilingual Education Association was established, which means that bilingual education has become a social demand, which also means the progress of multiple cultures.
  • "Mariel Boatlift"

    "Mariel Boatlift"
    The admission of refugees brought 3 million children into education in the United States, which added more cultural elements to the United States. This is another update of the cultural component.
  • Emergency Immigrant Education Program

    Emergency Immigrant Education Program
    To assist State education agencies and local education agencies in
    providing supplementary educational services and offsetting costs for immigrant children enrolled in elementary and secondary public and nonpublic schools.
  • The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1990

    The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1990
    The revision of the immigration and nationality laws has allowed more foreigners to enter the United States, which has increased the diversity of education in the United States because more different cultures have flowed into the United States.
  • Civil Rights Project means Challenge!!!!

    Civil Rights Project  means Challenge!!!!
    a decline in non-Hispanic Caucasian students, a large increase in Latino students, and the growth of segregation, both by race and poverty, particularly among Latinos in central cities and suburbs of the largest metropolitan areas.