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  1. A split-screen tour of the same streets in New York City, from the nineteen-thirties and today.Still haven’t subscribed to The New Yorker on YouTube http:...

    • 9 min
    • 955K
    • The New Yorker
  2. In New York City, with its more cosmopolitan population, many alternative forms of schooling were created. Anglican, Dutch, and Jewish groups established "charity" schools, teaching reading, writing, and arithmetic, primarily to poor children.

  3. In 1853 the Free School Society became part of the new public school system when it was absorbed by the New York City Board of Education. [ 5 ] In 1829 there were 43,000 children ages 5 to 15 in a city of 200,000.

  4. Sep 3, 2024 · Is there a role for charter schools? How should teachers be evaluated? During the 18th century, the only schools available to New York kids were private schools run by churches. One...

  5. Jun 4, 1997 · Phyllis Barr of Barr Consulting Services talked about the state of religion in New York and how different it was from France in the 1830s. The Chairman for the Departments of American Art at...

    • 4 min
    • 1006
  6. 1847-1945 The First Century of Public Higher Education in NYC. A dozen years before the Civil War the city of New York made a unique commitment nationally. It embraced the concept of public, tuition-free, and municipal taxpayer-supported higher education for its citizens.

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  8. Aug 1, 2016 · Fed up with overcrowded, under-resourced schools and token integration plans, Black and Puerto Rican parents issued a new kind of demand, calling for "community control" of the newly built –- and newly segregated -- Intermediate School 201 in Harlem. Their demand sparked a citywide uprising.

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