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Jeremy Singer – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
Socioeconomic differences among low-income and racially minoritized students may be consequential for understanding the dynamics of school choice--especially in high-poverty and racially segregated urban contexts that are often targeted by school choice policies. Yet school choice research largely focuses on differences between groups and relies…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Low Income Students, Minority Group Students, Learner Engagement
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Jeremy Singer – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
In education, low-income and racially minoritized students in urban districts are often constructed as 'dependent' -- weak in their social positions but deserving of educational opportunity. This social construction of 'urban' students has been central to school choice politics and policymaking in the United States. In this study, I interrogate…
Descriptors: Urban Education, School Choice, Urban Schools, Low Income Students
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Voltz, Deborah L.; Loder-Jackson, Tondra L.; Sims, Michele Jean; Simmons, Elizabeth – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2021
Available evidence suggests that inequities exist in the distribution of qualified teachers within high-poverty urban schools, and further, that such inequities adversely affect student achievement in these schools. This paper highlights the role of teacher education in addressing this challenge by describing the findings of a study of the…
Descriptors: Urban Teaching, Urban Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers
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Ijeoma Opara; Daneele Thorpe; David T. Lardier Jr. – Urban Education, 2024
Leveraging publicly available data about schools" absenteeism from the New Jersey Department of Education, the present study examined how neighborhood-level resource deprivation and violent crime related to chronic absenteeism in Passaic County's elementary, middle, and high schools. Results highlighted geographic disparities in Passaic…
Descriptors: Attendance, Neighborhoods, Socioeconomic Status, Violence
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Martin, Jennifer L.; Magoulias, Christie M. Hill; Akbar, N. J.; Rebelsky, Dayle – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2022
In this pilot study, we examine the realities of differential funding structures across the US, which disproportionately disadvantage historically marginalized communities (Black and Brown students) and students living in poverty, contributing to an intractable opportunity gap. Prior research indicates that equitable funding can, in fact, decrease…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Evidence Based Practice, Educational Equity (Finance), Equal Education
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Edwards, Danielle Sanderson – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2021
Research concerning family preferences for schooling indicates that they value proximity to home as much as academic quality when choosing schools. However, preferences for proximity likely represent inability to access schools farther away from home, especially for disadvantaged students. I test whether distance and district boundaries constrain…
Descriptors: Access to Education, School Effectiveness, Academic Achievement, Proximity
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Davis, Jonathan Ryan; Warner, Nathan – Urban Education, 2018
This article investigates the link between school climate and student academic progress in New York City Department of Education (NYCDOE) high schools. Using a data set compiled from 2010-2011 NYCDOE school-level aggregated demographic, survey, and progress report achievement data, the authors ran ordinary least squares regressions where they…
Descriptors: Correlation, Academic Achievement, Educational Environment, High School Students
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Warren, Chezare A.; Marciano, Joanne E. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
CC Vision -- an urban education reform effort launched to strengthen the cradle-to-career education pipeline in Central City -- provides the impetus for our use of youth participatory action research (YPAR) to gather and activate student voice in the fight for education justice. Student voice can significantly enhance the quality of policy…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Action Research, Urban Education, Educational Change
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White, Meg; Brown, Corine Meredith; Viator, Martha Graham; Byrne, Laurel L.; Ricchezza, Lorraine C. – Educational Forum, 2017
To be an effective urban educator requires teachers to understand the contextual factors of students, the school, and the community, and their cumulative effects on learning. Urban teacher academies support a better understanding of urban classrooms and challenge stereotypes of the urban context. The focus of this study was to compare…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Educational Attitudes, Secondary School Teachers, High School Students
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Compton-Lilly, Catherine – Urban Education, 2020
This article reveals inequity as a longitudinal construction involving the cumulation of micro/macroaggressions for children who live in high-poverty communities and attend poorly funded schools. Drawing on critical race theory and empirical research that documents forms of micro/macroaggression, a longitudinal analysis is used to identify forms…
Descriptors: Aggression, Poverty, Disadvantaged Schools, Longitudinal Studies
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Boucher, Michael Lee, Jr. – Urban Education, 2016
This qualitative case study provides a counternarrative to the literature of White teachers who are unsuccessful in bridging the achievement gap and disrupts the assumed meaning of solidarity between successful White teachers and their African American students. As part of successful classroom practice, this teacher interrogated his own whiteness…
Descriptors: Whites, Males, Qualitative Research, Case Studies
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Schultz, Lyndsie Marie – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2014
The No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001 required all schools, including those located in historically disadvantaged areas, to employ highly qualified teachers. Schools in areas with higher levels of poverty and students of color have historically employed a higher percentage of less qualified teachers (Clotfelter, Ladd, & Vidgor, 2005,…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Elementary Schools, Elementary School Teachers, Urban Schools
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Dell'Angelo, Tabitha – Education and Urban Society, 2016
Race and class often marginalize students in impoverished urban neighborhoods, and this reality is evident in consistently low student achievement in many of the schools in these neighborhoods. This study examines how a teacher's sense of agency can help mediate the detrimental impact of poverty on student achievement. Teachers in a large…
Descriptors: High School Students, Urban Schools, Poverty, Academic Achievement
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Ellis, Addie Lucille; Geller, Kathy D. – Education and Urban Society, 2016
This narrative study is based on stories told by African American adolescents experiencing homelessness. It offers insights into their lived experiences and describes the challenges faced in negotiating the urban education system. African American youth are disproportionately represented in the adolescent homeless demographic. "Unheard and…
Descriptors: Housing, African American Students, Adolescents, Disproportionate Representation
Grant, Julia – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014
America's educational system has a problem with boys, and it's nothing new. The question of what to do with boys--the "boy problem"--has vexed educators and social commentators for more than a century. Contemporary debates about poor academic performance of boys, especially those of color, point to a myriad of reasons: inadequate and…
Descriptors: Males, Children, Urban Education, Academic Achievement
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