
%0 Journal Article
%T Mixed Feelings About Mixed Schools: Superintendents on the Complex Legacy of School Desegregation
%J Educational administration quarterly
%D 2010
%A Horsford, Sonya Douglass
%V 46
%N 3
%P 287-321
%X Purpose: This article considers the perspectives of superintendents who attended all-Black segregated schools and examines how their lived experiences informed their views on desegregation policy, programs, and practices. Research Design: This empirical, qualitative study used critical race theory as a methodological and analytical framework for collecting and interpreting participant narratives acquired through in-depth, semistructured interviews and autobiographical and biographical documents and artifacts. Findings: Study findings are presented as counterstories to (a) the inferior all-Black school, (b) equal education, access, and opportunity, and (c) integration, diversity, and inclusion, with implications for the perceived viability of school desegregation in the post- Brown era. Collectively, they reflect what one participant described as “mixed feelings” about school desegregation. Conclusions: The article concludes with implications for educational policy and practice to include support for racial literacy in educational leadership and policy and recommendations for promoting a proper education no matter the school context, separate or mixed.<p />
%G 
%I SAGE Publishing
%@ 0013-161X
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013161X10365825