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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Douglas D. Ready; Jeanne L. Reid – American Educational Research Journal, 2023
New York City's Pre-K for All (PKA) is the nation's largest universal early childhood initiative, serving over 64,000 four-year-olds annually. Stemming from the program's choice architecture as well as the city's stark residential segregation, PKA programs are extremely segregated by child race/ethnicity. Our current study explores the complex…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Access to Education, Racial Segregation, Ethnicity
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Carlson, Deven; Bell, Elizabeth; Lenard, Matthew A.; Cowen, Joshua M.; McEachin, Andrew – American Educational Research Journal, 2020
In the wake of political and legal challenges facing race-based integration, districts have turned to socioeconomic integration initiatives in an attempt to achieve greater racial balance across schools. Empirically, the extent to which these initiatives generate such balance is an open question. In this article, we leverage the school assignment…
Descriptors: County School Districts, Public Schools, Educational Policy, Socioeconomic Status
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Blatt, Lorraine; Votruba-Drzal, Elizabeth – American Educational Research Journal, 2021
The rapid expansion of school choice is restructuring public education in the United States. This study examines associations between charter and magnet school enrollment, White-Black and White-Hispanic segregation, and test score gaps at the district level from 2009 to 2015 in third to eighth grade using the Stanford Education Data Archive and…
Descriptors: School Choice, Achievement Gap, Racial Differences, Scores
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Owens, Ann; Reardon, Sean F.; Jencks, Christopher – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
Although trends in the racial segregation of schools are well documented, less is known about trends in income segregation. We use multiple data sources to document trends in income segregation between schools and school districts. Between-district income segregation of families with children enrolled in public school increased by over 15% from…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Districts, School Segregation, Family Income
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Anderson, James – American Educational Research Journal, 2017
The Centennial article by Ruben Donato and Jarrod Hanson demonstrates the critical importance of writing the history of America's variegated ethnicity not only for a comprehensive understanding of the past but also to inform future struggles to overturn segregation and inequality in America's schools (see e.g., Ball, 2006). Donato and Hanson…
Descriptors: Equal Education, School Segregation, Mexican Americans, Mexicans
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Sugrue, Erin P. – American Educational Research Journal, 2020
This article presents the quantitative portion of a mixed methods study of moral injury among professionals in K-12 public education. Using a cross-sectional correlational survey design, 218 licensed K-12 professionals from 68 schools in one urban school district in the Midwest completed an on-line survey that included measures of moral injury and…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Urban Schools
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Garver, Rachel – American Educational Research Journal, 2022
Educators in economically and racially segregated schools enact subgroup entitlement policies, such as Title III and IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act), as they negotiate the diverse and underserved needs throughout the student body. How do subgroup entitlement policies for English learners and students with disabilities shape…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Federal Legislation, Equal Education, Educational Legislation
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Wilson, Terri S. – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
Although technically open to all, charter schools often emphasize distinctive missions that appeal to particular groups of students and families. These missions, especially ones focusing on ethnic, linguistic, and cultural differences, also contribute to segregation between schools. Such schools raise normative questions about the aims of…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Charter Schools, Case Studies, School Segregation
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Frankenberg, Erica – American Educational Research Journal, 2017
Student assignment policies (SAPs) in K-12 schools can either reproduce or help ameliorate existing inequality. Some districts are trying to maintain voluntarily adopted integration policies despite the Supreme Court's recent 2007 decision in "Parents Involved," which prohibited most race-conscious school choice policies that were…
Descriptors: Student Placement, School Choice, Elementary Secondary Education, School Segregation
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Donato, Rubén; Hanson, Jarrod – American Educational Research Journal, 2017
This article examines the emergence of Mexican American school segregation from 1915 to 1935 in Kansas, the state that gave rise to "Brown v. Board of Education" in 1954. Even though Mexicans were not referenced in Kansas's school segregation laws, they were seen and treated as a racially distinct group. White parents and civic…
Descriptors: Educational History, Mexican Americans, Racial Bias, School Segregation
Richards, Meredith P. – American Educational Research Journal, 2014
In this study, I employ geospatial techniques to assess the impact of school attendance zone "gerrymandering" on the racial/ethnic segregation of schools, using a large national sample of 15,290 attendance zones in 663 districts. I estimate the effect of gerrymandering on school diversity and school district segregation by comparing the…
Descriptors: Attendance, School Districts, School Segregation, Racial Segregation
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Mickelson, Roslyn Arlin – American Educational Research Journal, 2015
Middle schools are important because they launch students on trajectories that they are likely to follow throughout their formal educations. This study explored the relationship of first-generation segregation (elementary and middle school racial composition) and second-generation segregation (racially correlated academic tracks) to reading and…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Academic Achievement, School Segregation, Racial Composition
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Goldsmith, Pat Rubio – American Educational Research Journal, 2011
Students from minority segregated schools tend to achieve and attain less than similar students from White segregated schools. This study examines whether peer effects can explain this relationship using normative models and frog-pond models. Normative models (where peers become alike) suggest that minority schoolmates are a liability. Frog-pond…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Peer Influence, Minority Groups, Academic Achievement
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Kliewer, Christopher; Biklen, Douglas; Kasa-Hendrickson, Christi – American Educational Research Journal, 2006
Through a critical interpretivist frame, the authors use ethnography and archives to examine themes associated with society's ongoing denial of literate citizenship for people with perceived intellectual disabilities. They link this denial to the experiences of other devalued and marginalized groups to challenge the common perception that…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Competence, Literacy, School Segregation
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Brantlinger, Ellen; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1996
Results of a study in 20 middle-class households indicate that middle-class mothers, perceived as liberals who believe in integrated and inclusive education, still support segregated and stratified school structures that mainly benefit the middle class. The study illustrates how ideology allows parents to deal with these contradictions. (SLD)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ideology, Liberalism, Middle Class Parents
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