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Young African American and Latino Children in High-Poverty Urban Schools: How They Perceive School Climate
1996
The Journal of Negro education
This article reports findings of a study of third-graders' perceptions of school climate, a key variable of the Comer School Development Program. A self-report survey was individually administered to 1,000 African American and 260 Latino children participating in an evaluation of the Comer process; data were factoranalyzed. African American children viewed teacher-child relations as the most important dimension of school climate. For them, besides acknowledging best efforts, caring teachers
doi:10.2307/2967368
fatcat:6gyqwnfhyfhjxauw6erj4fqzwq