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Marissa E. Thompson; Sam Trejo – Sociology of Education, 2024
U.S. public schools are increasingly segregated by income, resulting in substantial educational inequality among U.S. schoolchildren. We conducted a nationally representative survey to explore the relationship between parental beliefs about and preferences regarding school segregation. Using experimental manipulation, we tested if learning about…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Preferences, School Segregation, School Policy
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Haber, Jaren R. – Sociology of Education, 2021
Research shows charter schools are more segregated by race and class than are traditional public schools. I investigate an underexamined mechanism for this segregation: Charter schools project identities corresponding to parents' race- and class-specific parenting styles and educational values. I use computational text analysis to detect the…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Segregation, Race, Social Class
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Billingham, Chase M.; Hunt, Matthew O. – Sociology of Education, 2016
Racial segregation remains a persistent problem in U.S. schools. In this article, we examine how social psychological factors--in particular, individuals' perceptions of schools with varying demographic characteristics--may contribute to the ongoing structural problem of school segregation. We investigate the effects of school racial composition…
Descriptors: Racial Composition, Preferences, Whites, Parent Attitudes
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Bygren, Magnus – Sociology of Education, 2016
To test the effect of ability grouping on grades and the attainment of higher education, this study examines a naturally occurring experiment--an admission reform that dramatically increased ability sorting between schools in the municipality of Stockholm. Following six cohorts of students (N = 79,020) from the age of 16 to 26, I find a mean…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Grades (Scholastic), College Admission, Admission Criteria
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Cobb, Jessica S. – Sociology of Education, 2017
This paper examines how public school teachers take up, modify, or resist the dominant ideology of color-blind racism. This examination is based on in-depth interviews with 60 teachers at three segregated schools: one was race/class privileged and two were disadvantaged. Inductive coding revealed that teachers at each school articulated a shared…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Racial Attitudes, Ideology
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Logan, John R.; Minca, Elisabeta; Adar, Sinem – Sociology of Education, 2012
Persistent school segregation means not only that children of different racial and ethnic backgrounds attend different schools but also that their schools are unequal in performance. This study documents the extent of disparities nationally in school performance between schools attended by whites and Asians compared with those attended by blacks,…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, School Segregation, Racial Composition, Academic Achievement
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Van Houtte, Mieke; Stevens, Peter A. J. – Sociology of Education, 2009
To advance social integration, policy makers strive for the educational desegregation of immigrant students in Flemish schools. Given the lack of empirical research supporting this policy, this article examines the association between the ethnic composition of schools and native and immigrant students' interethnic friendships, social…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Friendship, Immigrants, Foreign Countries
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Riegle-Crumb, Catherine; Grodsky, Eric – Sociology of Education, 2010
Despite increases in the representation of African American and Hispanic youth in advanced math courses in high school over the past two decades, recent national reports indicate that substantial inequality in achievement remains. These inequalities can temper one's optimism about the degree to which the United States has made real progress toward…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Calculus, Low Income Groups, Racial Differences