Abstract
Southern desegregated high schools with high levels of black or white student extracurricular participation have students who report more interracial contact, higher self-esteem, more positive attitudes toward school, more parent visits to schools, and more personal contact with teachers. The results are derived from regression equations based on responses from 10,000 students in 200 schools, controlling on student and school background factors. The author recommends that secondary schools place high priority on encouraging extracurricular participation and argues that this enhances the school's ability to teach because it increases student attachment to the school, reduces student alienation, provides alternative channels for students to develop self-esteem, and increases the opportunity for positive interracial contact.
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References
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Crain, R. L., Mahard, R. E., & Narot, R. E.Making Desegregation Work: How Schools Create Social Climates (in press).
Forehand, G., & Ragosta, M.A Handbook for Integrated Schooling. Princeton, N.J.: Educational Testing Service, 1976.
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Crain, R.L. Making desegregation work: Extracurricular activities. Urban Rev 13, 121–127 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01956013
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01956013