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Mordechay, Kfir; Ayscue, Jennifer B. – Education and Urban Society, 2024
College-educated White households have increasingly opted to live in central urban neighborhoods, transforming many parts of the urban core. While there is emerging evidence that schools may play a key part in this process, little is known about the extent of racial contract between children of gentrifier households and original residents. This…
Descriptors: Diversity, Racial Composition, Neighborhoods, Change
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Gilblom, Elizabeth A.; Sang, Hilla I. – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2019
This study contributes to the growing body of research concerning the strategic geographic positioning of traditional charter schools (TCS) in urban areas and their segregative effect by considering economist Michael Porter's concept of business clusters, in which businesses 'cluster' to maximize their potential profit and to gain access to a…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Location, Geographic Location, Urban Schools
Ciurczak, Peter; Marinova, Antoniya; Schuster, Luc – Boston Foundation, 2020
Diversity is core to what makes many cities vibrant, dynamic, adaptive and strong. Recently, Boston has gotten much more racially diverse, evolving from being only 20 percent people of color back in 1970 to 56 percent of color today. However, there's a way in which the rich tapestry of the city has eroded: Boston is rapidly losing families with…
Descriptors: Population Trends, Urban Population, Children, Public Schools
Hunting, Dan – Morrison Institute for Public Policy, 2018
As downtown Phoenix experiences a wave of new residential and commercial construction, Phoenix Elementary School District #1 (Phoenix #1) is at the center of the largest local demographic change in decades. Phoenix #1 educates more than 6,000 students at 14 schools, from preschool through eighth grade, with many families living in older, historic…
Descriptors: School Districts, Educational Change, Environmental Influences, Urban Schools
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Ellen, Ingrid Gould; O'Regan, Katherine; Conger, Dylan – Education and Urban Society, 2009
The authors use a rich data set on New York City public elementary schools to explore how changes in immigrant representation have played out at the school level, providing a set of stylistic facts about the magnitude and nature of demographic changes in urban schools. They find that while the city experienced an overall increase in its immigrant…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Elementary Schools, Immigrants, Immigration
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Paris, Django – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2010
How do youth view Spanish in our changing multiethnic urban schools and communities? In this article I explore this question by analyzing the perspectives and social interactions of students in an urban charter high school located in a community undergoing dramatic demographic shift from a predominantly African American city to a predominantly…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Pacific Islanders, Second Language Learning, Spanish
National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NJ1), 2009
This report compares the demand for public education in St. Louis during the 2007-08 school year with both the supply and location of public schools operated by St. Louis Public Schools and charter schools. The geographic areas of analysis are the city of St. Louis and its zip codes. The first four sections of this report contain background…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Urban Schools, School Location, Charter Schools
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Mark, Jonathan H.; Anderson, Barry D. – Urban Review, 1984
Describes the urban decay and deconcentration process in the St. Louis metropolitan area and its relationship to changes in local public schools. Offers evidence suggesting that schools are as much victims of urban decay as causes of it. (CMG)
Descriptors: Community Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Schools, Urban Demography
American School Board Journal, 1973
Describes how renovation and a little imagination can convert a city's older commercial buildings into sensitive, supportive quarters for education. The demographic changes within New York are offered as an example to other cities of the need for new kinds of facilities, rather than the need for new additional structures. (Author/WM)
Descriptors: Building Conversion, Cost Effectiveness, Dropouts, School Buildings
Hashe, Janis – Crisis, 1990
Los Angeles is rapidly becoming more diverse. Its future depends upon whether educational needs can be met and whether public transportation can be developed that ends the isolation of the many "villages" that make up the area and enables them to work together. (EVL)
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Blacks, Employment, Ethnic Groups
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Stevens, Leonard B. – Education and Urban Society, 1990
Discusses the increasing proportion of minority enrollments in urban schools and the ensuing social isolation of Black and Hispanic American students. Reviews four models of metropolitan school desegregation plans. Suggests a federal initiative that would require states to develop plans involving multiple school districts. (FMW)
Descriptors: Desegregation Plans, Federal Programs, Minority Groups, Models
Jones, Robin; And Others – 1995
This paper is part of a larger project comparing civic capacity and urban education in 11 American cities. The paper is divided into four sections. The first section attempts to explain why civic capacity and public education in Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania), Boston (Massachusetts), and St. Louis (Missouri), evolved from different paths, although they…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, City Government, Civics, Community
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Ward, James G. – Journal of Educational Equity and Leadership, 1987
Explores underlying factors and trends that make the attainment of educational equity difficult in urban schools and presents empirical evidence that may suggest some policy directions toward solutions to urban school district problems. (LHW)
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Policy, Equal Education, Government School Relationship
Chase, William W. – 1964
Undertaken to identify, compile, and describe characteristic problems of school facilities planning in metropolitan areas, this study included the fifty largest cities in the United States. The study analyzes the effects on school planning of social, economic, and cultural changes caused by population movement and land use, and controls.…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Community Relations, Cooperative Planning, Educational Planning
Farmer, James – 1968
The author, a nationally known civil rights leader, declares that while racial integration must be the ultimate objective in a multiracial society, current urban demographic realities preclude the possibility of large scale desegregation. School decentralization and community control are seen as necessary, forerunners and ultimate partners for…
Descriptors: Black Community, Black Power, Community Involvement, De Facto Segregation
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