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  1. 10 de may. de 2024 · Many people know about the 'Jim Crow' laws in the United States that enforced racial segregation in public schools. But what may be less well known is the role that two Black psychologists – Mamie Phipps Clark and her husband, Kenneth B. Clark – played in desegregating schools.

  2. 17 de may. de 2024 · In 1940, Drs. Kenneth and Mamie Phipps Clark used a grant to study Black pupils’ dawning sense of racial identity in the nominally integrated North – Springfield, Massachusetts – and in the strictly segregated South, Mamie’s hometown of Hot Springs, Arkansas.

  3. 16 de may. de 2024 · Drs. Kenneth and Mamie Phipps Clark, Northside’s founders, played a crucial role in arguing that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional in 1954. The Clarks were Black...

  4. 1 de may. de 2024 · Along with Kenneth Clark he developed one of the most classic experiments of psychology on the development of racial consciousness: the test of the dolls. We'll see now a biography of Mamie Phipps Clark, one of the pioneers in the consolidation of American social psychology of the twentieth century.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PsychologyPsychology - Wikipedia

    Hace 5 días · An example of the contribution of psychologists to social change involves the research of Kenneth and Mamie Phipps Clark. These two African American psychologists studied segregation's adverse psychological impact on Black children.

  6. 21 de may. de 2024 · Please join us for a presentation by historian Tom Spofford about "The Doll You Like Best," an important test created in the 1960s by Mamie Phipps and Kenneth Clark who used dolls to prove the value of racial integration.

  7. Hace 1 día · (Courtesy of the Garland County Historical Society) Mamie Phipps Clark’s 1934 graduation photo from the former Langston High School in Hot Springs. (Courtesy of the Garland County Historical Society) Mamie Phipps Clark, left, and her husband, Kenneth, are shown at the home of her parents, Harold Phipps and Kate Smith Phipps, at 302 Garden St., in December 1940.