McIver, Joel. Erykah Badu: The First Lady Of Neo-Soul. SMT Publishing, 1 de diciembre de 2010. ISBN 0857124498, 9780857124494. Google BooksPT35. "[...]an example of this was a so-called 'super' high school called Skyline High, which opened in 1971. The Skyline curriculum was based on the idea of career strands (rather than isolated subject studies) and attracted students from all ethnic groups around the city, as well as providing adult evening classes."
dallasobserver.com
Schutze, Jim. "Dwaine Caraway Scared DISD Away From Skyline." Dallas Observer. Jueves 7 de febrero de 2008. Consultado el 1 de enero de 2016. "According to Skyline lore, it is the oldest and biggest magnet school in the nation. Maybe the universe. I don't know if that's true, having visited only a limited portion of the universe myself. But I do know from covering decades of Dallas desegregation litigation that Dallas played a key role in developing the concept of magnets in the late 1960s. Skyline opened its doors in 1970. It has always been a sort of hybrid—half-magnet, half-regular neighborhood school. Today about 2,500 students are scattered in two dozen magnet programs, and the same number are in the general neighborhood or "comprehensive" part of the school."
hpl.lib.tx.us
Barta, Carolyn. "Plans OK'd For Big New Dallas School." The Dallas Morning News. 15 de diciembre de 1966. Página 1. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "The Dallas School Board approved architects' preliminary plans Wednesday for the huge new Science-Technical Center to be located on Forney Road near Loop 12. The budgeted estimate for construction of the school, which will have a capacity of 4,000 day students and an additional 4,000 in evening school, is $11,250,000. Robert D. Goodwin of Goodwin & Cavitt, architects,[...]"
Wiessler, Judy. "Science Technical Center: School Getting New Image." The Dallas Morning News. 15 de diciembre de 1969. Página 1. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "Temporarily, principal Bill Stamps is calling it Skyline High School because of the striking view of Downtown Dallas from the site at Forney Road and Loop 1."
"Super Highs Sought Estes Unveils Plan for Specialty Schools." The Dallas Morning News. 29 de agosto de 1971. Página 37. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "Supt. Nolan Estes unveiled an ambitious and expensive plan to revolutionize high school education in Dallas Friday when he proposed what he called "magnet schools."[...]The present Skyline High School and Career Development Center with its emphasis on career education would be the first such "magnet school.""
web.archive.org
Barta, Carolyn. "Plans OK'd For Big New Dallas School." The Dallas Morning News. 15 de diciembre de 1966. Página 1. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "The Dallas School Board approved architects' preliminary plans Wednesday for the huge new Science-Technical Center to be located on Forney Road near Loop 12. The budgeted estimate for construction of the school, which will have a capacity of 4,000 day students and an additional 4,000 in evening school, is $11,250,000. Robert D. Goodwin of Goodwin & Cavitt, architects,[...]"
Wiessler, Judy. "Science Technical Center: School Getting New Image." The Dallas Morning News. 15 de diciembre de 1969. Página 1. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "Temporarily, principal Bill Stamps is calling it Skyline High School because of the striking view of Downtown Dallas from the site at Forney Road and Loop 1."
"Super Highs Sought Estes Unveils Plan for Specialty Schools." The Dallas Morning News. 29 de agosto de 1971. Página 37. Disponible a partir de NewsBank, accesible desde la Biblioteca Pública de Houstoncon una tarjeta HPLArchivado el 7 de septiembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine. - "Supt. Nolan Estes unveiled an ambitious and expensive plan to revolutionize high school education in Dallas Friday when he proposed what he called "magnet schools."[...]The present Skyline High School and Career Development Center with its emphasis on career education would be the first such "magnet school.""