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Showing 1 to 15 of 45 results Save | Export
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Andrene Castro; Genevieve Siegel-Hawley; Kimberly Bridges; Shenita E. Williams – Review of Educational Research, 2024
School rezoning is the process of drawing and redrawing school attendance boundaries (SABs). However, studies explicitly focused on changing SABs through rezoning or other mechanisms are spread across multiple bodies of literature. Rezoning is also a politically contentious issue governed by local school boards, tying it to conceptual work on the…
Descriptors: School Districts, School District Reorganization, Board of Education Policy, Literature Reviews
Kayla M. Bill – ProQuest LLC, 2023
School desegregation policies aim to redistribute educational resources and opportunities more equitably, but they have not always done so. Evidence indicates that political factors, including resistance from White parents and legal constraints, have undermined desegregation policies' potential to fulfill their aims. Yet, a few studies suggest…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Politics of Education, School Desegregation, Educational Change
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Castro, Andrene J.; Siegel-Hawley, Genevieve; Bridges, Kimberly; Williams, Shenita E. – AERA Open, 2022
School rezoning, or redistricting, is the process by which school boards draw and redraw school attendance boundaries. These boundaries are key drivers of racial and economic school segregation but can also work to ameliorate it. Using a critical orientation to narrative policy analysis, this study examined the cultural politics of race and…
Descriptors: Race, Racism, Zoning, Politics of Education
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Sampson, Carrie; Diem, Sarah – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2022
Leaders of education policy continue to decentralize school districts, particularly in predominately large urban districts, despite mixed results from this reform. In this article, we seek to explain how decentralization came to fruition through the policymaking process in one of the largest and most diverse districts in the United States that…
Descriptors: School Districts, Administrative Organization, Leadership Training, Educational Policy
Richards, Meredith P. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2017
"Gerrymandering" is known best as a tool to manipulate boundaries for voting districts, but school districts have long used the same tool to manipulate school boundaries. The author used geospatial techniques--mapping various kinds of demographic data onto school boundaries--to examine public school attendance zones and their effect on…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Racial Segregation, School Districts, Geographic Location
Paul Charles Humbert-Fisk – ProQuest LLC, 2018
People "shopping for schools," which is paying a premium for homes that are in areas within the attendance zones of prestigious schools, routinely do not consider test scores, curriculum, or teachers when defining what is a "good school." This dissertation argues that suburban mayors use incorporation frameworks and operate out…
Descriptors: Suburban Schools, School Districts, Municipalities, School Choice
Alberghini, John R. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Facing a declining K-12 student population and rising education costs, Vermont lawmakers approved Act 46 in 2015. This legislation has the potential to consolidate school districts that have fewer than 900 students. The law aims to significantly reduce the number of districts in the state by using tax incentives as a carrot and forced…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, School Districts, School District Reorganization, Case Studies
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Diem, Sarah; Sampson, Carrie; Browning, Laura Gavornik – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2018
Policymakers and educational leaders continue to use school district decentralization as a reform effort that attempts to shift power and authority from central office administration to school-level leadership. In 2015, the Nevada Legislature passed legislation to restructure the Clark County School District (CCSD), the state's largest school…
Descriptors: County School Districts, Administrative Organization, School District Reorganization, Politics of Education
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Siegel-Hawley, Genevieve; Diem, Sarah; Frankenberg, Erica – American Educational Research Journal, 2018
In this qualitative case study, we explore the political impulses behind suburban secession from the 2013 Memphis-Shelby County merger, the largest school district consolidation in recent history. Decades removed from the Civil Rights Movement, during a period of stark inequality, colorblind law and policymaking, and a diminished understanding of…
Descriptors: School Districts, Case Studies, Qualitative Research, Suburban Schools
Arsen, David – Education Policy Center at Michigan State University, 2011
School district consolidation enjoys a unique status among strategies to reduce education costs. It promises to cut spending, without lowering service quality, by improving the efficiency of service delivery. In contrast to strategies aimed at lowering employee salaries or benefits--which are hard to avoid when cutting spending in any labor…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, School Districts, Cost Effectiveness, School District Reorganization
Samuels, Christina A. – Education Week, 2011
The author discusses how an assignment plan intended to keep schools socioeconomically balanced spurs a bitter debate in suburban Eden Prairie. The boundary debate in the 9,700-student Eden Prairie, Minnesota, district has been bruising. Eden Prairie adopted new school attendance boundaries this year based on socioeconomic balance, ensuring for…
Descriptors: Hearings, School Districts, Foreign Countries, Immigrants
Zeng, Jie – School Administrator, 2009
For the last five years, the lives of New York City (NYC) public school educators have been governed by constant change. With certainty, every January or June heralded something new--restructured departments and offices, staff changes and new initiatives. One of the most interesting chapters in the history of the NYC school system unfolded in the…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Educational Change, Politics of Education, Superintendents
Strange, Marty – Phi Delta Kappan, 2011
High-poverty schools in rural areas and small towns are under attack from state policy makers who want to consolidate these schools in order to save money. In addition to calls for consolidation, rural schools also are threatened by unfair and inadequate funding formulas.
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Rural Areas, Rural Education, Disadvantaged
Cronin, Joseph M. – School Administrator, 2010
Several New England states have been rethinking the system whereby small towns make the key decisions about school budgets and staffing under the banner of local control. Maine already has mandated a reduction in the number of local school districts from 290 to 80, allowing localities to vote on the larger districts. This consolidation, unpopular…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, School District Reorganization, Rural Areas, Case Studies
Duncombe, William D.; Yinger, John M. – School Administrator, 2010
School district consolidation is a striking phenomenon. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 117,108 school districts provided elementary and secondary education in 1939-1940. By 2006-2007, the number of districts had dropped to 13,862, a decline of 88 percent. The rate of consolidation has slowed in recent years, but at…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, School District Reorganization, Elementary Secondary Education, State Aid
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