Women were not allowed to participate in decision making in the colonial times. They might have influenced their husbands, but could not directly participate.
Do you have any answer choices ?
The right options are: Jamestown – colony that prospered after the introduction of tobacco as a cash crop; and Rhode Island – colony formed to escape the harsh Puritan religion of Massachusetts.
The roanoke colony got its name after a native word that meant “things rubbed smooth by hand” or “to rub, smooth, or polish". Meaning a type of shell that was used as currency by the Native.
Massachusetts was exactly the opposite as the statements says, that's why Puritans fled to found the Rhode Island colony and the Connecticut colony.
The Puritans fled Britain to practice their religion freely, arriving to Massachusetts. They left this colony to found a colony where all religions were respected and free.
Answer:
1. the struggle for voting rights
2. de facto school segregation
3. quality of public schools in black neighborhood
Explanation:
1. the struggle for voting right: this was a struggle between de jure segregation that existed in just one part of the country (the states of the old south). but the problem of de facto segregation was one that existed throughout the country, and its effects perhaps seen most clearly in nation's public schools
2. de facto school segregation: several supreme court cases in the early 1960s made it clear that de facto school segregation was unlawful and that segregated schools would be integrated by court order if necessary. in early 1970s, court began requiring school plans, which would send African-American students to largely white schools and send withe students to largely African-American schools, as a means of achieving greater racial balance
3. quality of public schools in black neighborhood: in Boston, African-American community began protesting the quality of public schools in largely black neighborhoods in the early 1960s. in 1965, in response to federal investigation of possible segregation in the Boston public schools, the Massachusetts legislature passed a Racial imbalance act. the new law outlawed segregation in Massachusetts schools and threatened to cut off state funding for any school district that did not comply.