Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 2 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 8 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 13 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 39 |
Descriptor
Middle Class | 50 |
Working Class | 10 |
Parent Participation | 9 |
Academic Achievement | 8 |
Social Class | 8 |
Equal Education | 7 |
Parent Attitudes | 7 |
Whites | 7 |
African American Students | 6 |
Charter Schools | 6 |
Public Schools | 6 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Fuller, Bruce | 2 |
Gast, Melanie Jones | 2 |
Abels, Monika | 1 |
Bai, Sunhye | 1 |
Bancroft, Kim | 1 |
Bayley, Robert | 1 |
Berg, Nancy Eisenberg | 1 |
Blakely, Karen B. | 1 |
Boen, Jennifer | 1 |
Bonacich, Edna | 1 |
Borke, Jorn | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Policymakers | 5 |
Community | 2 |
Teachers | 2 |
Administrators | 1 |
Parents | 1 |
Location
California | 50 |
United States | 5 |
Massachusetts | 3 |
Connecticut | 2 |
District of Columbia | 2 |
Illinois | 2 |
New York | 2 |
New York (New York) | 2 |
Texas | 2 |
Alabama | 1 |
Arkansas | 1 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Deferred Action for Childhood… | 1 |
Higher Education Act 1965 | 1 |
No Child Left Behind Act 2001 | 1 |
Pell Grant Program | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Landon Fichtner – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This research focuses on the social pressures experienced by parents at schools identified as middle class across southern California. The literature review of school finances, the LCFF, funding levels, and studies stretches all the way back to the Coleman report. Within this vast body of prior research remained a void in the data. This missing…
Descriptors: Expectation, Middle Class, Parents, Social Influences
Gast, Melanie Jones – Sociology of Education, 2022
Past work and college-access programs often treat college knowledge as discrete pieces of information and focus on the amount of available college information. I use ethnographic and multiwave interview data to compare college-aspiring working- and middle-class black 9th and 11th graders across almost two years in high school along with their…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, Academic Aspiration, Middle Class, African Americans
Kretchmar, Kerry – Educational Forum, 2023
Parents make choices about their children's education within a neoliberal, racist system. Measurable metrics are used to evaluate school quality within a competitive, market-based system, yet those indicators often do not align with parents' definitions of a good school, and they obscure the role of race. This paper examines how white, privileged…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Whites, Advantaged, Decision Making
James, Brian K. – Online Submission, 2023
An ongoing struggle for affordable housing in Southern California has led many predominately White, middle, and upper middle- class families to seek home ownership in divested urban communities. This phenomenon, known as gentrification, can benefit a community by increasing property values, but often comes at a cost to longstanding, Black and…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Land Acquisition, Urban Renewal, Housing
The Hurricane Network: District Takeover and Neoliberal Reconstruction in the Emerging 'Global City'
Nirali Jani – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
This article traces the state takeover and neoliberal reconstruction of a mid-size urban school district in the California Bay Area. Aligning with research on social networks in school reform, it identifies three organizational nodes of power operating within the takeover and post-takeover landscape: venture-philanthropic capital, the Teach for…
Descriptors: School Districts, Neoliberalism, States Powers, Educational Change
Gast, Melanie Jones – Urban Education, 2021
How do educators reconcile the growing college-for-all norm--the notion that all students should pursue college--with the diverse needs of students in urban settings? What is the impact on Black students across social-class background? Using interviews and fieldwork with teachers, counselors, and diverse Black students in a large Californian high…
Descriptors: African American Students, High School Students, Working Class, Educational Counseling
Institute for College Access & Success, 2023
State need-based financial aid programs are a key driver of college access and completion for lower-income students and racially marginalized students in California, most of whom attend public two- and four-year colleges and universities and come from families with annual incomes of less than $40,000. As the state's largest need-based financial…
Descriptors: State Programs, Access to Education, Minority Group Students, Student Financial Aid
Rall, Raquel M.; Holman, Alea R. – School Community Journal, 2021
The authors investigated cultural resourcefulness among seven Black middle-class families who proactively collaborated to ensure their children's academic excellence in a highly racialized suburban community in southern California. Their children achieved high grades and successfully entered and completed higher education at elite U.S.…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Attitudes, Parent Influence, African American Attitudes
Drake, Sean J. – Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk, 2020
Previous research in middle-class school districts has focused on "within-school" segregation but not "between-school" segregation. Drawing on two years of ethnographic fieldwork and 122 in-depth interviews with students, parents, and faculty in an affluent suburban school district, I find that students who struggle…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Advantaged, Suburban Schools, Academic Failure
Whitmire, Richard – Education Next, 2015
The rise in middle-class students attending charter schools is largely masked by the overall growth of charter schools: over the last five years, the number of charter schools has grown nationally from 4,690 to just over 6,000. There are now 43 communities where at least 20 percent of the students attend charters, reports the National Alliance for…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Middle Class, School Choice, Politics of Education
Mitchel, Ashley Libetti; Mead, Sara – Education Next, 2017
Over the past 20 years, both charter schools and pre-kindergarten education have taken on increasingly prominent roles in the schooling of America's children. Charter schools in 43 states now serve more than 2.6 million students--roughly six percent of all students attending public schools. More than two-thirds of four-year-olds attend some form…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Preschool Education, Low Income, Educational Benefits
Lapayese, Yvette V. – CATESOL Journal, 2016
In this qualitative study, I examine the intersections of learner identity, power, and language through the experiences and insights of Latina/o 2nd-generation middle-class children who occupy a unique positionality between the discourses surrounding bilingual education. Through narrative inquiry, emerging bilingual middle-class students actualize…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Bilingual Students, Qualitative Research, Middle Class
Bai, Sunhye; Repetti, Rena L.; Sperling, Jacqueline B. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Research on family socialization of positive emotion has primarily focused on the infant and toddler stages of development, and relied on observations of parent-child interactions in highly structured laboratory environments. Little is known about how children's spontaneous expressions of positive emotion are maintained in the uncontrolled…
Descriptors: Children, Emotional Response, Affective Behavior, Child Behavior
Brymner, Jake – Campaign for College Opportunity, 2020
The COVID-19 health crisis has laid bare the structural inequity in the financial aid system. The pandemic has hit the lowest-income students hardest, with many struggling to afford the basic technology for online learning on top of new or exacerbated food and housing insecurity. Federal and state dollars predicated on Pell Grant eligibility, time…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Student Financial Aid, Community Colleges, Two Year College Students
Posey-Maddox, Linn – American Journal of Education, 2013
A growing number of parents--particularly middle- and upper-middle-class parents--are working to fill budgetary gaps through their fundraising, grant writing, and volunteerism in urban public schools. Yet little is known about how this may shape norms and practices related to parental engagement within particular schools. Drawing from a case study…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Urban Schools, Public Schools, Race