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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
I want to divide this essay into two sections, one indicating things I might have added to a few earlier works, and a second indicating a project or two that I did not do but would like to have done.
1 Wayne J. Urban, More than the Facts: The Research Division of the National Education Association, 1922–1997 (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1998) and Urban, Gender, Race and the National Education Association: Exceptionalism and Its Limitations (New York/London: Routledge Falmer, 2000).Google Scholar
2 Urban, “The Effects of Ideology and Power on a Teacher Walkout: Florida, 1968,” Journal of Collective Negotiations in the Public Sector 3 (Fall 1973): 133–47 and Urban, Why Teachers Organized (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1982); chapters 2, 3, and 4 on Atlanta, Chicago, and New York, respectively.Google Scholar
3 Urban, “History of Education: A Southern Exposure,” History of Education Quarterly 21 (Summer 1981): 131–45.Google Scholar
4 Urban, review of Don Cameron, “Educational Conflict in the Sunshine State: The Story of the 1968 Statewide Teacher Walkout in Florida,” History of Education Quarterly 50 (August 2010): 396–98.Google Scholar
5 Joseph W. Newman, “A History of the Atlanta Public School Teachers’ Association, Local 89 of the American Federation of Teachers, 1919–1956” (PhD dissertation, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, 1978).Google Scholar
6 John F. Lyons, Teachers and Reform: Chicago Public Education, 1918–1970 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2008).Google Scholar
7 Urban, Black Scholar: Horace Mann Bond, 1904–1972 (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1992).Google Scholar
8 Urban, “Black Scholar, White Biographer,” in Writing Educational Biography: Explorations in Qualitative Research, ed C. Kridel (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998), 103–11.Google Scholar
9 Urban, “Wayne's World: Growing Up in Cleveland, Ohio, 1942–1963,” Educational Studies 26 (Winter 1995): 301–20; Urban, “A View from the Provinces,” in Leaders in the Historical Study of American Education, ed. Urban (Amsterdam/New York: Sense Publishers, 2011); Urban, “Autobiography and Biographical Research in Higher Education,” in The History of U. S. Higher Education: Methods for Understanding the Past, ed. Marybeth Gasman (New York and London: Routledge, 2010), 30–43.Google Scholar
10 I dealt with these mergers in a chapter in Race, Gender and the National Education Association. Google Scholar
11 Alas, since this was written, both AEA leaders have retired and the state has been taken over by Republicans who seem bent on taming the teachers’ association and have taken some successful steps along that path.Google Scholar